Role played self-disclosure as a function of liking and knowing |
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Authors: | Joseph W Critelli Julian Rappaport Stephen L Golding |
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Affiliation: | North Texas State University at Denton USA;University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign USA |
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Abstract: | ![]() Subjects identified persons from their own lives whom they liked and knew to varying degrees. At a later session, subjects role-played a self-disclosing conversation with each identified person. Verbal behavior was recorded and analyzed with respect to the personalness of disclosure. Analysis of variance results for both self-report and observational measures show significant effects for liking and knowing on personal, but not impersonal, self-disclosure. The pattern of results over all dependent measures indicates that liking has a more specific effect on personal disclosure than does knowing, but that liking and knowing do not differ in relative control over impersonal disclosure. A correlational analysis involving subjects' perceptions of the experimental situation and the dependent disclosure measures supported this interpretation. |
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Keywords: | Requests for reprints should be sent to the first author Psychology Department North Texas State University Denton TX 76203. |
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