Identifying the situational triggers underlying avoidance of communication situations and individual differences therein |
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Authors: | Sofie Frederickx Iven Van Mechelen |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychology, University of Leuven, Belgium |
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Abstract: | People are actively involved in the selection and avoidance of the situations they face during everyday life. Moreover, such selection/avoidance behavior is subject to sizeable individual differences. Yet, to a large extent this phenomenon has been underinvestigated, and a full understanding of selection/avoidance remains lacking. In the present paper, we take a first step to a more in-depth understanding of situation avoidance, which is conceptualized in terms of individual profiles or signatures across situations. Two key objectives with regard to those signatures are being addressed, that is: (a) identifying the critical situational triggers that elicit avoidance behavior, and (b) identifying the most important individual differences in the link between these situational triggers and avoidance, along with their underlying process dynamics. To achieve these objectives, we performed an empirical study on avoidance of communication situations. This study revealed a set of person types that meaningfully differ in sensitivity to a few key situational features. These person types further appeared to differ from one another on several dispositional cognitive/affective forecast variables. |
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Keywords: | Personality Individual differences Situation selection/avoidance Avoidance signatures Cognitive/affective forecasts |
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