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First published on July 1, 2008, doi:10.1177/0146167208318952

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 2008;34:1276.

A more recent version of this article appeared on September 1, 2008


Article

The TAR Effect: When the Ones Who Dislike Become the Ones Who Are Disliked

Bertram Gawronski1* and Eva Walther2

1 University of Western Ontario
2 University of Trier

* To whom correspondence should be addressed. E-mail: bgawrons{at}uwo.ca.


   Abstract
Four studies tested whether a source’s evaluations of other individuals can recursively transfer to the source, such that people who like others acquire a positive valence, whereas people who dislike others acquire a negative valence (Transfer of Attitudes Recursively; TAR). Experiment 1 provides first evidence for TAR effects, showing recursive transfers of evaluations regardless of whether participants did or did not have prior knowledge about the (dis)liking source. Experiment 2 shows that previously but not subsequently acquired knowledge about targets that were (dis)liked by a source overrode TAR effects in a manner consistent with cognitive balance. Finally, Experiments 3 and 4 demonstrate that TAR effects are mediated by higher order propositional inferences (in contrast to lower order associative processes), in that TAR effects on implicit attitude measures were fully mediated by TAR effects on explicit attitude measures. Commonalities and differences between the TAR effect and previously established phenomena are discussed.


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