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Most empirical research investigating the motivational properties of cognitive dissonance has focused on the arousal component of dissonance rather than on the psychological component explicitly delineated by L. Festinger (1957) . In 2 induced-compliance experiments, a self-report measure of affect was used to demostrate that dissonance is experienced as psychological discomfort and that this psychological discomfort is alleviated on implementation of a dissonance-reduction strategy, attitude change. Experiment 1 yielded supporting evidence for both of these propositions. Experiment 2 replicated the 1st experiment and ruled out a self-perception-based alternative explanation for the dissonance-reduction findings in Experiment 1. Results from the 2 experiments strongly support Festinger's conceptualization of cognitive dissonance as a fundamentally motivational state.
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Andrew J. Elliot
Hospital for Special Surgery
Patricia G. Devine
University of Wisconsin System
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
University of Rochester
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Elliot et al. (Thu,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69da66d6e6ab964fb083656d — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1037/0022-3514.67.3.382