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The impact of confederate responsivity on social skills assessment
Authors:P. C. Moisan-Thomas  Judith Cohen Conger  Margaret Monroe Zellinger  Elizabeth A. Firth
Affiliation:(1) Department of Psychological Sciences, Purdue University, 47907 West Lafayette, Indiana
Abstract:The current investigation examined the degree to which judges' ratings of skill, anxiety, and attractiveness are influenced by the responsivity of the confederate. High-, medium-, and low-skilled subject-pool groupings, as well as self-referred clinical groups, were exposed to either a moderately or a minimally responsive confederate. Results indicated that subjects were rated as more skillful when interacting with a moderately responsive confederate than when interacting with a minimally responsive confederate. Further, there was a groups × condition interaction for anxiety ratings such that both the high- and the medium-skilled groups appeared more anxious under the minimal condition, whereas the low-skilled and self-referred groups did not. Self-referred subjects received significantly lower attractiveness ratings than did the high- or medium-skilled groups. Implications of these results and future directions for research are discussed.This research is based on a M.S. thesis carried out by the first author under direction of the second author.
Keywords:social skills  anxiety  attractiveness  role playing  confederate responsivity
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