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Through the Eyes of Others: The Role of Relational Value Cues and Self-Regulatory Resources in Monitoring One's Social Environment

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Abstract:

The present research hypothesized that monitoring the social environment for relational value cues consumes self-regulatory resources, potentially impairing people’s ability to engage in subsequent regulatory activity. Thus, it was predicted that when regulatory resources were depleted because of recent acts of self-regulation people’s capacity to monitor for relational cues would be negatively impacted. In accord with the hypothesis, the data showed that insofar as the self’s resources were depleted by recent acts of self-regulation, people were less effective at monitoring for relational value cues. These findings provide evidence that suggests an integrative relationship between the self’s regulatory resources and people’s capacity to accurately monitor the social environment for cues that indicate their relational value to others.

Most Common Document Word Stems:

relat (145), self (144), monitor (122), social (111), particip (109), peopl (92), cue (83), deplet (78), regulatori (77), behavior (68), other (67), resourc (62), may (58), condit (56), m (47), effect (47), valu (44), non (43), eye (43), regul (41), psycholog (38),

Author's Keywords:

relational value, self-regulatory resources, social monitoring
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MLA Citation:

Tyler, James. "Through the Eyes of Others: The Role of Relational Value Cues and Self-Regulatory Resources in Monitoring One's Social Environment" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA, May 23, 2007 <Not Available>. 2009-05-24 <http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p168456_index.html>

APA Citation:

Tyler, J. M. , 2007-05-23 "Through the Eyes of Others: The Role of Relational Value Cues and Self-Regulatory Resources in Monitoring One's Social Environment" Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Communication Association, TBA, San Francisco, CA Online <APPLICATION/PDF>. 2009-05-24 from http://www.allacademic.com/meta/p168456_index.html

Publication Type: Conference Paper/Unpublished Manuscript
Abstract: The present research hypothesized that monitoring the social environment for relational value cues consumes self-regulatory resources, potentially impairing people’s ability to engage in subsequent regulatory activity. Thus, it was predicted that when regulatory resources were depleted because of recent acts of self-regulation people’s capacity to monitor for relational cues would be negatively impacted. In accord with the hypothesis, the data showed that insofar as the self’s resources were depleted by recent acts of self-regulation, people were less effective at monitoring for relational value cues. These findings provide evidence that suggests an integrative relationship between the self’s regulatory resources and people’s capacity to accurately monitor the social environment for cues that indicate their relational value to others.

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Document Type: application/pdf
Page count: 35
Word count: 9574
Text sample:
Through the eyes 1 Through the eyes of others: The role of relational value cues and self-regulatory resources in monitoring one's social environment. In general people want to know if others like them. Indeed as the cocktail party phenomenon so aptly demonstrates people’s attention quickly gravitates towards the mention of their name likely with the intention to discern the valence of others’ comments. Certainly with relative ease most people can effortlessly recall many overt instances where they viewed such
Subtotal 46.67 (12.69) 42.78 (13.62) 41.11 (13.66) Total 40.28 (15.12) 36.94 (18.18) 34.72 (16.89) Note. Higher values indicate greater accuracy. Through the eyes 34 Figure Captions Figure 1. Accuracy as a function of self-regulation and monitoring. Through the eyes 35 60 Depletion Non-Depletion 50 Average Accuracy 40 30 20 10 0 Relational Non-Relational


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