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Article
The Information Used to Judge Supportiveness Depends on Whether the Judgment Reflects the Personality of Perceivers, Objective Characteristics of Targets or Their Unique Relationships
Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology
  • Brian Lakey, Wayne State University
  • Catherine Lutz, University of Dayton
  • Alan Scoboria, University of Connecticut - Storrs
Document Type
Article
Publication Date
12-1-2004
Abstract

People who judge their relationships as more supportive enjoy better mental health than people who judge their relationships more negatively. We investigated how people made these judgments; specifically, how people weighed different types of information about targets under three different conditions: when judgments reflected the personality of perceivers, the objective characteristics of targets, and the unique relationships between perceivers and targets. Participants (i.e., perceivers) judged the same four videotaped targets on personality, similarity to perceivers and likely supportiveness. As in previous research, perceivers based their judgments on perceived target similarity to perceivers, and on target personality. However, how perceivers weighed personality and similarity information varied dramatically depending upon whether the judgment reflected the personality of perceivers, the objective characteristics of targets, or the relationship between perceivers and targets. Implications for understanding how people make support judgments were discussed.

Inclusive pages
817-835
ISBN/ISSN
0736-7236
Document Version
Published Version
Comments

All rights reserved under International Copyright Convention. No part of this text may be reproduced, transmitted, downloaded, or stored in or introduced into any information storage or retrieval system, in any form or by any means, whether electronic or mechanical, now known or hereinafter invented, without the written permission of The Guilford Press.

Article is included in repository with the permission of the publisher. Permission documentation is on file.

Publisher information: Guilford Publications, 370 7th Ave., Ste. 1200. New York, NY 10001 / Phone 212-431-9800 or 800-365-7006 / website: www.guilford.com

Publisher
Guilford Press
Peer Reviewed
Yes
Citation Information
Brian Lakey, Catherine Lutz and Alan Scoboria. "The Information Used to Judge Supportiveness Depends on Whether the Judgment Reflects the Personality of Perceivers, Objective Characteristics of Targets or Their Unique Relationships" Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology Vol. 23 Iss. 6 (2004)
Available at: http://works.bepress.com/catherine_zois/4/