5 research outputs found
Trends. Warranted Dogmatism against the Closed Mind: Preliminary Look at the Intelligence Agency\u27s (CIA) Groat Case
In this article, the author analyzes the arrest of former CIA employee, Douglas F. Groat
Similar advisers are more persuasive when advice-takers rely on their feelings
We propose that an advice-takerâs perceived similarity with an adviser creates a momentary subjective âfeels rightâ experience towards the advice. The advice-taker incorporates this feeling, as information, into a judgment about topics of advice. Thus, persuasiveness of the advice is increased. Across six studies, we show that reliance on feelings moderates the effect of perceived similarity on advice persuasiveness. A similar adviser is more persuasive when advice-takers are instructed to use their feelings (vs. logic), when they have experiential (vs. functional) motives, when they are making a decision for near future (vs. distant future), when they see the topic of the advice as being more (vs. less) within reach, and when their cognitive resources are limited (vs. not limited). Moreover, we show that participantsâ self-reported âfeels rightâ experience while receiving the advice mediates this moderation.nrpages: 49status: publishe