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Difference between revisions of "Hoodoo Meatbucket"

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(Created page with "Band from a psychological study! Wendi L. Gardner, Cynthia L. Pickett and Marilynn B. Brewer "Social Exclusion and Selective Memory: How the Need to belong Influences Memory...")
 
 
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Band from a psychological study!  
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Band from a psychological study! They were studying getting snubbed in online chat rooms:
  
Wendi L. Gardner, Cynthia L. Pickett and Marilynn B. Brewer "Social Exclusion and Selective Memory: How the Need to belong Influences Memory for Social Events," ''Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin'', April 2000.
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<blockquote>
 +
Participants assigned to the interpersonal rejection
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condition experienced a chat room in which the four
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confederates broke off into dyads based on common
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interests that could not be shared by the participant
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(e.g., one dyad shared a love for the imaginary band
 +
“Hoodoo Meatbucket”). Dyads directed their comments
 +
to one another using initials so it was obvious that no one
 +
was addressing the real participants.
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</blockquote>
  
https://www.researchgate.net/publication/200008809_Social_Exclusion_and_Selective_Memory_How_the_Need_to_belong_Influences_Memory_for_Social_Events
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==External Links==
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*Wendi L. Gardner, Cynthia L. Pickett and Marilynn B. Brewer "[https://www.researchgate.net/publication/200008809_Social_Exclusion_and_Selective_Memory_How_the_Need_to_belong_Influences_Memory_for_Social_Events Social Exclusion and Selective Memory: How the Need to belong Influences Memory for Social Events]," ''Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin'', April 2000.
  
 
[[Category:2000]]
 
[[Category:2000]]
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[[Category:Nonfiction]]

Latest revision as of 10:12, 16 April 2018

Band from a psychological study! They were studying getting snubbed in online chat rooms:

Participants assigned to the interpersonal rejection condition experienced a chat room in which the four confederates broke off into dyads based on common interests that could not be shared by the participant (e.g., one dyad shared a love for the imaginary band “Hoodoo Meatbucket”). Dyads directed their comments to one another using initials so it was obvious that no one was addressing the real participants.


External Links