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      Personality and Metaphor Use: How Extraverted and Introverted Young Adults Experience Becoming Friends

      1 , 1
      European Journal of Personality
      Wiley

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          Abstract

          Competing theories have viewed relationship formation as a gradual process or as an instant development, with little attention to differences in individual perceptions of the same relationship. In the present study, conceptual metaphors concerning relationship formation were identified and coded from interviews with each friend in 59 same–sex, white, college–age, US dyads (57% female). Friends were extreme and either very similar or different from one other with regard to extraversion–introversion. An actor–partner analysis found that friends paired with an extravert used more Force–Impact metaphors that conveyed an explosive ‘friends–at–first–sight’ experience, whereas friends paired with an introvert used more Journey–Organism metaphors that reflected a gradual transition into friendship. Regardless of their partner's personality, extraverts and female friends used more Joint–Proximity metaphors that emphasised the development of intimacy. Results are interpreted using the Social Relations Model and the PERSOC approach to show how personality can serve both as an environment (partner) and as a cognitive schema (actor) to distinctly shape impressions of how a friendship develops. Copyright © 2012 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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          Experiencing physical warmth promotes interpersonal warmth.

          "Warmth" is the most powerful personality trait in social judgment, and attachment theorists have stressed the importance of warm physical contact with caregivers during infancy for healthy relationships in adulthood. Intriguingly, recent research in humans points to the involvement of the insula in the processing of both physical temperature and interpersonal warmth (trust) information. Accordingly, we hypothesized that experiences of physical warmth (or coldness) would increase feelings of interpersonal warmth (or coldness), without the person's awareness of this influence. In study 1, participants who briefly held a cup of hot (versus iced) coffee judged a target person as having a "warmer" personality (generous, caring); in study 2, participants holding a hot (versus cold) therapeutic pad were more likely to choose a gift for a friend instead of for themselves.
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            Trait-names: A psycho-lexical study.

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              The Actor-Partner Interdependence Model: A model of bidirectional effects in developmental studies

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                Author and article information

                Journal
                European Journal of Personality
                Eur J Pers
                Wiley
                0890-2070
                1099-0984
                November 2012
                November 01 2012
                November 2012
                : 26
                : 6
                : 600-612
                Affiliations
                [1 ]Psychology, University of California, Santa Cruz, Santa Cruz, CA, USA
                Article
                10.1002/per.1839
                f4440a0f-d157-45d8-8376-e11fa4a5b1ef
                © 2012

                http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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