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The Ordinal Effects of Ostracism: A Meta-Analysis of 120 Cyberball Studies
by
Wicherts, Jelte M.
, Williams, Kipling D.
, van Beest, Ilja
, Hartgerink, Chris H. J.
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Affect
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Child
/ Delayed
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Impact resistance
/ Internet
/ Interpersonal Relations
/ Laboratories
/ Male
/ Measures
/ Medical ethics
/ Meta-analysis
/ Moderation
/ Pain
/ Paradigms
/ Psychology
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resignations
/ Sampling
/ Self Concept
/ Social exclusion
/ Social Isolation
/ Structural aspects
/ Studies
/ Time Factors
2015
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The Ordinal Effects of Ostracism: A Meta-Analysis of 120 Cyberball Studies
by
Wicherts, Jelte M.
, Williams, Kipling D.
, van Beest, Ilja
, Hartgerink, Chris H. J.
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Affect
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Child
/ Delayed
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Impact resistance
/ Internet
/ Interpersonal Relations
/ Laboratories
/ Male
/ Measures
/ Medical ethics
/ Meta-analysis
/ Moderation
/ Pain
/ Paradigms
/ Psychology
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resignations
/ Sampling
/ Self Concept
/ Social exclusion
/ Social Isolation
/ Structural aspects
/ Studies
/ Time Factors
2015
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Do you wish to request the book?
The Ordinal Effects of Ostracism: A Meta-Analysis of 120 Cyberball Studies
by
Wicherts, Jelte M.
, Williams, Kipling D.
, van Beest, Ilja
, Hartgerink, Chris H. J.
in
Adolescent
/ Adult
/ Affect
/ Behavior
/ Bias
/ Child
/ Delayed
/ Experiments
/ Female
/ Games, Experimental
/ Humans
/ Impact resistance
/ Internet
/ Interpersonal Relations
/ Laboratories
/ Male
/ Measures
/ Medical ethics
/ Meta-analysis
/ Moderation
/ Pain
/ Paradigms
/ Psychology
/ Rejection (Psychology)
/ Resignations
/ Sampling
/ Self Concept
/ Social exclusion
/ Social Isolation
/ Structural aspects
/ Studies
/ Time Factors
2015
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The Ordinal Effects of Ostracism: A Meta-Analysis of 120 Cyberball Studies
Journal Article
The Ordinal Effects of Ostracism: A Meta-Analysis of 120 Cyberball Studies
2015
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Overview
We examined 120 Cyberball studies (N = 11,869) to determine the effect size of ostracism and conditions under which the effect may be reversed, eliminated, or small. Our analyses showed that (1) the average ostracism effect is large (d > |1.4|) and (2) generalizes across structural aspects (number of players, ostracism duration, number of tosses, type of needs scale), sampling aspects (gender, age, country), and types of dependent measure (interpersonal, intrapersonal, fundamental needs). Further, we test Williams's (2009) proposition that the immediate impact of ostracism is resistant to moderation, but that moderation is more likely to be observed in delayed measures. Our findings suggest that (3) both first and last measures are susceptible to moderation and (4) time passed since being ostracized does not predict effect sizes of the last measure. Thus, support for this proposition is tenuous and we suggest modifications to the temporal need-threat model of ostracism.
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