AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates how women's tendency to suppress their feelings to gain acceptance influences their hostility after experiencing rejection.
  • It examines the relationship between self-silencing and rejection sensitivity, focusing specifically on women in online dating scenarios.
  • Findings indicate that women who self-silence to please a potential partner experience higher levels of hostility post-rejection compared to men, highlighting the complexities of seeking acceptance in relationships.

Article Abstract

An experimental study tests if people's hostility after experiencing rejection is partly explained by the degree to which they had initially suppressed their own feelings and beliefs to please the source of rejection. This hypothesis emerges from the literatures on women's self-silencing and that on rejection-sensitivity, which has documented that rejection-sensitive women show strong responses to rejection, but are also likely to self-silence to please their partners. An online dating paradigm examined if this self-silencing drives post-rejection hostility among women. Participants were given the opportunity to read about a potential dating partner before meeting that person, and were randomly assigned to one of 3 experimental conditions that resulted in rejection from the potential date or from another dater. Self-silencing was captured as the suppression of tastes and opinions that clashed with those of the prospective partner. Self-silencing moderated the effect of rejection on hostility: Self-silencing to the prospective partner was associated with greater post-rejection hostility among women, but not men. Self-silencing to someone other than the rejecter was not predictive of hostility. Women's dispositional rejection-sensitivity predicted greater hostility after rejection, and self-silencing mediated this association. Efforts to secure acceptance through accommodation may help explain the paradoxical tendency of some people to show strong rejection-induced hostility toward those whose acceptance they have sought.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3653329PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jesp.2013.03.009DOI Listing

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