A TEST OF NONVERBAL RECEIVING ABILITY: PRELIMINARY STUDIES1
R Buck - Human Communication Research, 1976 - Wiley Online Library
Human Communication Research, 1976•Wiley Online Library
This paper describes the development and preliminary studies of a test of the ability to
decode affect in others. Items are videotaped sequences showing spontaneous unposed
facial expressions and gestures of college student “senders” to emotionally‐loaded color
slides. Subjects make judgments about what kind of slide elicited the affect and how
pleasant or unpleasant the sender's subjective response was. Satisfactory test‐retest
reliability was demonstrated for the former kind of judgment but not the latter. There was …
decode affect in others. Items are videotaped sequences showing spontaneous unposed
facial expressions and gestures of college student “senders” to emotionally‐loaded color
slides. Subjects make judgments about what kind of slide elicited the affect and how
pleasant or unpleasant the sender's subjective response was. Satisfactory test‐retest
reliability was demonstrated for the former kind of judgment but not the latter. There was …
This paper describes the development and preliminary studies of a test of the ability to decode affect in others. Items are videotaped sequences showing spontaneous unposed facial expressions and gestures of college student “senders” to emotionally‐loaded color slides. Subjects make judgments about what kind of slide elicited the affect and how pleasant or unpleasant the sender's subjective response was. Satisfactory test‐retest reliability was demonstrated for the former kind of judgment but not the latter. There was evidence that females are slightly better receivers than males, and business and fine arts majors are relatively good receivers while science majors are relatively poor.
Wiley Online Library
以上显示的是最相近的搜索结果。 查看全部搜索结果