In social recomendation systems, users often publicly rate objects such as photos, news articles or consumer products. When they appear in aggregate, these ratings carry social signals such as the direction and strength of the raters’ average opinion about the product. Using a controlled experiment we manipulated two central social signals – the direction and strength of social ratings of five popular consumer products – and examined their interacting effects on users’ ratings. The results show an asymmetric user behavior, where the direction of perceived social rating has a negative effect on users’ ratings if the direction of perceived social rating is negative, but no effect if the direction is positive. The strength of perceived social ratings did not have a significant effect on users’ ratings. The findings highlight the potential for cascading adverse effects of small number of negative user ratings on subsequent users’ opinions. Categories and Subject Descriptors