Spontaneous Skepticism: The Interplay of Motivation and Expectation in Responses to Favorable and Unfavorable Medical Diagnoses
- 1 September 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
- Vol. 29 (9) , 1120-1132
- https://doi.org/10.1177/0146167203254536
Abstract
The quantity of processing view of motivated reasoning predicts that individuals are more likely to spontaneously question the validity of unfavorable than favorable feedback even when the objective likelihood of the feedback is equivalent. Participants were videotaped self-administering a bogus medical test revealing either a favorable or an unfavorable result. In Studies 1 and 2, unfavorable result participants required more time to accept the validity of the test result and were more likely to spontaneously recheck its validity than were favorable result participants. However, unfavorable results also were perceived as less expected than were favorable results, even though the information sup-plied about their objective likelihood was identical. Study 3 showed that participants evaluating another student's results perceived favorable and unfavorable outcomes as equally likely, suggesting that the subjective likelihood of positive and negative feedback is also subject to motivational influence.Keywords
This publication has 33 references indexed in Scilit:
- Antecedents to Spontaneous Counterfactual Thinking: Effects of Expectancy Violation and Outcome ValencePersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1996
- Unrealistic Optimism: Self-Enhancement or Person Positivity?Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1995
- Outcome or Expectancy? Antecedent of Spontaneous Causal AttributionPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1992
- Biased Information Search in the Interpersonal DomainPersonality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 1989
- From rarity to evaluative extremity: Effects of prevalence information on evaluations of positive and negative characteristics.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1989
- Development and validation of brief measures of positive and negative affect: The PANAS scales.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1988
- Self-serving biases in the attribution of causality: Fact or fiction?Psychological Bulletin, 1975
- Attribution of responsibility and valence of success and failure in relation to initial confidence and task performance.Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 1969
- THE EFFECT OF PROBABILITY, DESIRABILITY, AND "PRIVILEGE" ON THE STATED EXPECTATIONS OF CHILDREN*Journal of Personality, 1951
- A note on McGinnies' "Emotionality and perceptual defense."Psychological Review, 1950