Comparing and Being Compared: A Dual Process Framework of Competition
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Published:2021
Patricia Chen, Stephen M. Garcia, Valentino E. Chai, Richard Gonzalez, 2021. "Comparing and Being Compared: A Dual Process Framework of Competition", Advances in Group Processes, Shane R. Thye, Edward J. Lawler
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Abstract
Social comparison literature has long established that drawing comparisons facilitates competitive motivation. Yet, the literature has neglected how the actor may simultaneously become the target of comparison, which can likewise increase competitive motivation. Therefore, competitive motivation increases not only because coacting competitors draw social comparisons but also because they are simultaneously the target of other's social comparison. In this chapter, we build a dual process framework to explain how comparing and being compared each facilitate competitive motivation. We also posit that these processes – comparing and being compared, respectively – are bidirectional and reciprocal, as each process can incite the other. Finally, we discuss the circumstances under which comparing and being compared combine additively versus interactively to drive competitive motivation. Our theoretical framework brings together the disparate literatures on social comparison and evaluation apprehension under one unified theory of competitive motivation, and proposes new directions for competition research.
