Authors
Fabiola H Gerpott, Daniel Balliet, Simon Columbus, Catherine Molho, Reinout E de Vries
Publication date
2018/10
Journal
Journal of Personality and Social Pyschology
Volume
115
Issue
4
Pages
716-742
Description
Interdependence is a fundamental characteristic of social interactions. Interdependence Theory states that 6 dimensions describe differences between social situations. Here we examine if these 6 dimensions describe how people think about their interdependence with others in a situation. We find that people (in situ and ex situ) can reliably differentiate situations according to 5, but not 6, dimensions of interdependence:(a) mutual dependence,(b) power,(c) conflict,(d) future interdependence, and (e) information certainty. This model offers a unique framework for understanding how people think about social situations compared to another recent model of situation construal (DIAMONDS). Furthermore, we examine factors that are theorized to shape perceptions of interdependence, such as situational cues (eg, nonverbal behavior) and personality (eg, HEXACO and Social Value Orientation). We also study the …
Total citations
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Scholar articles
FH Gerpott, D Balliet, S Columbus, C Molho… - Journal of personality and social psychology, 2018