AndersenS.M.BaumA.B. (1994). Transference in interpersonal relations: Inferences and affect based on siginificant other representations. Journal of Personality, 62, 460–497.
3.
AndersenS.M.BerkM.S. (1998). Transference in everday experience: Implications of experimental research for relevant clinical phenomena. Review of General Psychology, 2, 81–120.
4.
AndersenS.M.ColeS.W. (1990). “Do 1 know you?”: The role of siginificant others in general social perception. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 59, 384–399.
5.
AndersenS.M.ClassmanN.S. (1996). Responding to significant others when they are not there: Effects on interpersonal inference, motivation, and affect. InSorrentinoR.M.HigginsE.T. (Eds.), Handbook of motivation and cognition (Vol. 3, pp262–321). New York: Guilford press.
6.
AndersenS.M.GlassmanN.S.ChenS.ColeS.W. (1995). Transference in social perception: The role of chronic accessibility in significant other representations. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 69, 41–57.
7.
AndersenS.M.GlassmanN.S.GoldD. (1998).Mental representations of the self, significant others and nonsignificant others: Structure and processing of private and public aspects. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 75, 845–861.
8.
AndersenS.M.KlatzkyR.L. (1987). Traits and social stereotypes: Levels of categorization in person perception. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 53. 235–246.
9.
AndersenS.M.ReznikI.ChenS. (1997). The self and others: Cognitive and motivational underpinnings. InSnodgrassJ.G.ThompsonR.L. (Eds.), The self across psychology: Self-recognition, self-awareness, and the self-concept (pp.233–275). New York: New York Academy of Science.
10.
AndersenS.M.ReznikI.ManzellaL.M. (1996) Eliciting facial affect, motivation, and expectancies in transference: Significant other representations in social relations, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 71, 1108–1129.
11.
AronA.AronE. N.TudorM.NelsonG. (1991). Close relationships and including other in the self, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 60, 241–253.
12.
BakanD. (1966). The duality of human existence Chicago. Rand-McNally.
13.
BaldwinM.W. (1992). Relational schemas and the processing of information. Psychological Bulletin, 112, 461–484.
14.
BarghJ.A.BondR.N.LombardW.L.TotaM.E. (1986). The addictive nature of chronic and temporary sources of construct accessibilityJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50, 869–878.
15.
BaumA.AndersenS.M. (in press), Interpersonal roles in transference: Trasient mood effects under the condition of significant other resemblance. Social Cognition..
16.
BaumeisterR.F.LearyM.R. (1995). The need to belong: Desire for interpersonal attachments as fundamental human motivation. Psychological Bulletin, 117, 497–529.
17.
BerkM.S.AndersenS.M. (1990, July). Eliciting behavioral confirmation by activating significant other representations. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Americian Psychological Society, San Francisco.
18.
BowlbyJ. (1969). Attachment and loss Vol. 1 Attachment. New York: Basic Books.
19.
BrunerJ.S. (1957). Going beyond the information givenInGruberH.E.HammondK.R.JessorR. (Eds.), Contemporary approaches to cognition (pp.41–60) Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
20.
BugentalD. (1992). Affective and cognitive process within threat-oriented family systemsInSigelI.E.McGillicuddy-de LisiA.GoodnowJ. (Eds.), Parental belief systems: The psychological consequences for children (pp.219–248). Hillsdale, NJ: Erlbaum.
21.
ChenS.AndersenS.M. (in press) Relationships from the past in the present: Significant other representations and transference in interpersonal life. InZannaM.P. (Ed.), Advances in experimental social psychology (vol. 31). San Diego: Academic Press.
22.
CollinsN.L.ReadS.J. (1990), Adult attachment, working models and relationship quality in dating couples, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 53, 644–663.
23.
EhrenreichJ. H. (1989). Transference: One concept or many? The Psychoanalytic Reveiew76, 37–65.
24.
FiskeA P.HaslamN.FiskeS.T. (1991). Confusing one person with another: What errors reveal about the elementary forms of social relations. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 60, 656–674.
25.
FiskeS.T.PavelchakM. (1986). Category based affective responses: Developments in schema-triggered affectInSorrentinoR.M.HigginsE.T. (Eds.), Handbook of motivation and cognition (vol. 1, pp.167–203). New York: Guilford Press.
26.
FreudS. (1958). The dynamics of transference. InStracheyJ. (Ed. and Trans.), The standard edition of the complete psychological works of Sigmund Freud (Vol. 12, pp.99-1(18). Hogarth Press: London (Original work published 1912).
27.
GlassmanN.S.AndersenS.M. (in press). Transference in social coginition: Persistence and exacerbation of significant-other based inferences over time. Cognitive Therapy and Research..
28.
GreenbergJ.R.MitchellS A. (1983). Object relations in psychoanalytic theory. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press.
29.
HazanC.ShaverP. (1987). Romantic love conceptualized as an attachment process, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 52, 511–524.
30.
HigginsE.T. (1996). Knowledge activation: Accessibility, applicability, and salience. InHigginsE.T.KruglanskiA.W. (Eds.), Social psychology: Handbook of basic principles (pp.133–168). New York: Guilford Press.
31.
HigginsE.T.BrendlC.M. (1995). Accessibility and applicability: Some “activation rules” influencing judgement. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 31, 218–243.
32.
HigginsE T.KingG.A (1981), Accessibility of social constructs: Informations and contextual variability. InCantoN.KhilstromJ.F. (Eds.), Personality, cognition and social interaction (pp.69–121). Hillsdale, NJ. Erlbaum.
33.
HinkleyK.AndersenS.M. (1996). The working self-concept in transference: Significant-other activation and self-change. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 71, 1279–1295.
34.
HomeyK. (1939). New ways in psychoanalysisNew York: Nortion.
35.
KellyG. (1955). The psychology of personal constructs. New York: Norton.
36.
LinvilleP.W.CarlstonD.E. (1994). Social cognition of the self. InDevinePG.HamiltonD.C.OstromT.M. (Eds.), Social cognition: Impact on social psychology (pp143–193). New York: Academic Press.
37.
LuborskyL.Crits-CristophP. (1990). Understanding transference: The CCRT method. New York: Basic Books.
38.
MarkusH.WurfE. (1987). The dynamic self concept: A social psychological perspectiveAnnual Review of Psychology, 38, 299–337.
39.
MillsJ.ClarkM.S. (1993). Communal and exchange relationships: New research and old controeversies. InGilmourR.G.ErberR. (Eds.), Theoretical approaches to new relationships (pp. 29–42) Hillsdale, NJ Erlbaum.
40.
MurrayS.L.HolmesJ.G. (1993). Seeing virtues in faults: Negativity and the transformation of interpersonal narratives in close relationships. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 65707–722.
41.
OgilvieD.M.AshmoreR.D. (1991). Self-with other representation as a unit of analysis in self-concept research. InCurtisR.C. (Ed.), The relational self: Theoretical convergences in psychoanalysis and social psychology (pp.282–314), New York: Guilford Press.
42.
OlsonJ.M.RoeseNJ.ZannaM.P. (1996). Expectancies. InHigginsE.T.KruglanskiA.W. (Eds.), Social psychology: Handbook of basic principles (pp. 211–238). New York: Guilford Press.
43.
SingerJ.L. (1988). Reinterpreting the transference. InTurkD.C.SaloveyP. (Eds.), Reasoning, inference, and judgment in clinical psychology (pp. 182–205). New York: Free Press.
44.
SmithE.R.ZarateM.A.Sr (1992). Exemplar-based model of social judgment. Psychological Review, 99, 3–21.
45.
SullivanH.S. (1953). The interpersonal theory of psychiatry. New York: Nortion.
46.
WachtelP.L. (1981). Transference, schema, and assimilation: The relevance of Piaget to the psychoanalytic theory of transference. The Annual of Psychoanalysis, 8, 59–76.
47.
WestenD. (1988). Transference and information processing. Clinical Psychology Review, 8, 161–179.
48.
WyerR.S.Jr.MartinL.L. (1986). Person memory: The role of traits, group stereotypes and specific behaviors in the cognitive representaion of personsJournal of Personality and Social Psychology, 50, 661–675.