Individual Differences in Fear and Self-Distancing Predict Information Processing via Problem Construal
Abstract
In two preregistered online studies (NTotal = 984; Prolific), we examined how individual differences in fear and self-distancing predict information processing in decision-making involving risk in a business scenario. Dispositional fear was positively related to urgent and affective intuitive processing and negatively related to analytical processing. Self-distancing was positively related to analytical processing. These relations occurred indirectly via problem construal. Dispositional fear predicted less concrete problem construal, which in turn predicted more urgent intuitive processing and less analytical processing. In contrast, habitual self-distancing predicted more concrete problem construal, which in turn predicted more analytical processing and less urgent intuitive processing. Overall, these findings suggest that, in contrast to emotionally regulated decision-makers, fearful decision-makers’ tendency to construe problems less concretely (i.e., more abstractly) might hinder their ability to concretize and analyze problems involving risk.
Related Papers
- → The space between us: Stereotype threat and distance in interracial contexts.(2008)394 cited
- → It feels like yesterday: Self-esteem, valence of personal past experiences, and judgments of subjective distance.(2002)329 cited
- → Turning up the contrast: Self-enhancement motives prompt egocentric contrast effects in social judgments.(1998)31 cited
- → Individual differences in fear and self-distancing predict information processing via problem construal(2023)6 cited
- → Individual Differences in Fear and Self-Distancing Predict Information Processing via Problem Construal(2023)