Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 31 of
31
with 100 triples per page.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments abstract "A zero-acquaintance situation requires a perceiver to make a judgment about a target with whom the perceiver has had no prior interactions. These judgments can be made using a variety of cues, including brief interactions with the target, video recordings of the target, photographs of the target, and observations of the target’s personal environments, among others. In zero-acquaintance studies, the target’s actual personality is determined through the target’s self-rating and/or ratings from close acquaintance(s) of that target. Consensus in ratings is determined by how consistently perceivers rate the target’s personality when compared to other raters. Accuracy in ratings is determined by how well perceivers’ ratings of a target compare to that target’s self-ratings on the same scale, or to that target’s close acquaintances’ ratings of the target. Zero-acquaintance judgments are regularly made in day-to-day life. Given that these judgments tend to remain stable, even as the length of interaction increases, they can influence important interpersonal outcomes.".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageID "48450078".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageLength "24796".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageOutDegree "33".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageRevisionID "702467275".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Accuracy_and_precision.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Agreeableness.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Big_Five_personality_traits.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Category:Social_psychology.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Conscientiousness.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink David_C._Funder.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Extraversion_and_introversion.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Facial_expression.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink First_impression_(psychology).
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Neuroticism.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Openness_to_experience.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Phrenology.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Reliability_(statistics).
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Self-report_inventory.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Social_networking_service.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Stereotype.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Thin-slicing.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLink Validity_(statistics).
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageWikiLinkText "Zero-Acquaintance Personality Judgments".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Original_research.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Underlinked.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments subject Category:Social_psychology.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments comment "A zero-acquaintance situation requires a perceiver to make a judgment about a target with whom the perceiver has had no prior interactions. These judgments can be made using a variety of cues, including brief interactions with the target, video recordings of the target, photographs of the target, and observations of the target’s personal environments, among others.".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments label "Zero-Acquaintance Personality Judgments".
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments wasDerivedFrom Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments?oldid=702467275.
- Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments isPrimaryTopicOf Zero-Acquaintance_Personality_Judgments.