Big secrets do not necessarily cause hills to appear steeper

Volume: 21, Issue: 3, Pages: 696 - 700
Published: Nov 16, 2013
Abstract
Slepian, Masicampo, Toosi, and Ambady (Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 141, 619–624, 2012, Study 1) found that individuals recalling and writing about a big, meaningful secret judged a pictured hill as steeper than did those who recalled and wrote about a small, inconsequential secret (with estimates unrelated to physical effort unaffected). From an embodied cognition perspective, this result was interpreted as suggesting that...
Paper Details
Title
Big secrets do not necessarily cause hills to appear steeper
Published Date
Nov 16, 2013
Volume
21
Issue
3
Pages
696 - 700
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