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We propose that the tendency to anthropomorphize nonhuman agents is determined primarily by three factors (Epley, Waytz, & Cacioppo, 2007), two of which we test here: sociality motivation and effectance motivation. This theory makes unique predictions about dispositional, situational, cultural, and developmental variability in anthropomorphism, and we test two predictions about dispositional and situational influences stemming from both of these motivations. In particular, we test whether those who are dispositionally lonely (sociality motivation) are more likely to anthropomorphize well–known pets (Study 1), and whether those who have a stable need for control (effectance motivation) are more likely to anthropomorphize apparently unpredictable animals (Study 2). Both studies are consistent with our predictions. We suggest that this theory of anthropomorphism can help to explain when people are likely to attribute humanlike traits to nonhuman agents, and provides insight into the inverse process of dehumanization in which people fail to attribute human characteristics to other humans.
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Nicholas Epley
University of Chicago
Adam Waytz
Boston College
Scott Akalis
Harvard University
Social Cognition
University of Chicago
Harvard University Press
Art Institute of Chicago
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Epley et al. (Tue,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/69de84bf741e97d2d4e93cca — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1521/soco.2008.26.2.143