학술논문

Implications of fear of negative evaluation, state anxiety, and implied level of target-dominance on perceptions of personality traits.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Social Psychology. Nov/Dec2016, Vol. 156 Issue 6, p581-593. 13p. 1 Chart, 2 Graphs.
Subject
*PERSONALITY & society
*SOCIAL skills
*ANXIETY
*FIVE-factor model of personality
*SOCIAL dominance
Language
ISSN
0022-4545
Abstract
Fear of negative evaluation (FNE), state anxiety (SA), and dominance have consequences for social functioning. The present study assessed how FNE, SA, and a target’s dominance-relevant label are related to perceptions of personality. One hundred seventy-eight participants who scored high or low on FNE underwent a laboratory manipulation of SA, viewed a photograph of a target with a high or low dominance-relevant label, and rated the target on the Big Five personality traits and dominance. FNE and SA were unrelated to perceptions, but the high-dominance label was associated with perceptions of higher dominance, conscientiousness, and openness. In conclusion, judges did use information about others when making initial judgments of personality, but these judgments were not impacted by trait or state psychological distress. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]