Title: A Point Can Be Defined By
1(No Transcript)
2Project V Using Studies on the Internet
3- Numerous internet pages have psychology
experiments that you can use! - http//jonathan.mueller.faculty.noctrl.edu/crow/ac
tivities.htm - http//www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/mind/index_
surveys.shtml
4How good are you a judging the meaning of a
behavior?
- 1) complete an online questionnaire
- http//www.queendom.com/
- Click Communication Tests
- Under relationship tests
5- 2) complete smile experiment
- http//www.bbc.co.uk/science/humanbody/mind/survey
s/smiles/index.shtml
6How good are you at judging the meaning of a
behavior?
- 1) complete questionnaire
- 2) complete smile experiment
- 3) enter and analyze data
7Just for fun
- http//viscog.beckman.uiuc.edu/grafs/demos/15.html
8(No Transcript)
9Naturalistic Observations
- Pros
- Get to observe person in the natural world
- Very real
- Cons
- No control
10Interpersonal Theory
- Learys complementarity
- Interpersonal behaviors tend to initiate or
invite reciprocal interpersonal behaviors from
the other person in the interaction - Act the same on warmth
- Warmth encourages warmth
- Coldness encourages coldness
- Act the opposite on dominance
- Dominance encourages submission
- Submission encourages dominance
11Moving Outside the Lab
- Does complementarity continue to occur in a more
naturalistic environment?
12Moving Outside the Lab
- Limitations of lab research
- Unrealistic situations
13Moving Outside the Lab
- Limitations of lab research
- Very little noise
14Moving Outside the Lab
- Limitations of lab research
- Behavior across a limited number of interactions
- Interpersonal style might be more important than
the behavioral patterns expressed in a few
interactions
15Moving Outside the Lab
- A more naturalistic setting would be desirable
- However, still need. . . .
- 1) Dyads that are randomly created
- 2) A way to measure each persons interpersonal
style
16Random Dyads
- The dorms at Villanova
- Freshman year students are randomly paired
together
17Measuring Interpersonal Styles in a Natural
Environment
- Persons A interpersonal style when interacting
with person B - Persons B interpersonal style when interacting
with person A
Person A describes the interpersonal style of
person B
Person B describes the interpersonal style of
person A
A B
18Do the interpersonal styles of roommates
complement each other at the beginning of their
relationship?
19Do the interpersonal styles of roommates
complement each other after living together for
15 weeks?
20Method
- Participants
- 204 females (102 roommates)
- All roommates were randomly paired together by
Villanova University
21Procedure
- During the second week of living together and
again after living together for 15 weeks - Participants described their roommates
interpersonal style by completing the
Interpersonal Adjective Scale (IAS-R)
22(No Transcript)
23(No Transcript)
24(No Transcript)
25- An animal resting or passing by leaves crushed
grass, footprints, and perhaps droppings, but a
human occupying a room for one night prints his
character, his biography, his recent history, and
sometimes his future plans and hopes. I further
believe that personality seeps into walls and is
slowly released. . . . As I sat in this unmade
room, Lonesome Harry began to take shape and
dimension. I could feel that recently departed
guest in the bits and pieces of himself he had
left behind. --John Steinbeck, Travels With
Charlie
26(No Transcript)
27Question
- Can the appearance of someones room tell us
anything about their personality?
28Method
- 83 Bedrooms were examined
- Occupants of the bedrooms completed a measure of
the Big Five - 7 Judges rated the bedrooms
29What does your room look like?
- 1)____ Strong (vs. weak)odor
- 2)____ Noisy (vs. quiet)
- 3)____ Well lit (vs. dark)
- 4)____ Drafty (vs. stuffy)
- 5)____ Hot (vs. cold)
- 6)____ Good (vs. poor)condition
- 7)____ Decorated (vs. undecorated)
- 8)____ Cheerful (vs. gloomy)
- 9)____ Colorful (vs. drab)
- 10)____ Clean (vs.dirty)
- 11)____ Organized (vs.disorganized)
- 12)____ Neat (vs. messy)
- 13)____ Cluttered (vs. uncluttered)
- 14)____ Full (vs.empty)
- 15)____ Roomy (vs.cramped)
- 16)____ Expensive (vs. cheap)
- 17)____ Comfortable (vs. uncomfortable)
- 18)____ Inviting (vs. repelling)
- 19)____ Large (vs. small)
- 22)____ Modern (vs. old fashioned)
- 23)____ New (vs. old)
- 24)____ Multiple (vs. single)purpose
- 25)____ Public (vs. private)
- 26)____ Formal (vs. informal)
- 27)____ Conventional (vs. unconventional)
- 28)____ High (vs. low) traffic area
- 29)____ Good (vs. poor) use of space
- 30)____ Matched (vs. mismatched)contents
- 31)____ Many (vs. few)books
- 32)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)books
- 33)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)books
- 34)____ Many (vs. few)magazines
- 35)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)magazines
- 36)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)magazines
- 37)____ Many (vs. few) CDs
- 38)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)CDs
- 39)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)CDs
- 40)____ Many (vs. few) items of stationery
30Extraversion
- 1)____ Strong (vs. weak)odor
- 2)____ Noisy (vs. quiet)
- 3)____ Well lit (vs. dark)
- 4)____ Drafty (vs. stuffy)
- 5)____ Hot (vs. cold)
- 6)____ Good (vs. poor)condition
- 7)___ Decorated (vs. undecorated)
- 8)____ Cheerful (vs. gloomy)
- 9)____ Colorful (vs. drab)
- 10)____ Clean (vs.dirty)
- 11)____ Organized (vs.disorganized)
- 12)____ Neat (vs. messy)
- 13)___ Cluttered (vs. uncluttered)
- 14)____ Full (vs.empty)
- 15)____ Roomy (vs.cramped)
- 16)____ Expensive (vs. cheap)
- 17)____ Comfortable (vs. uncomfortable)
- 18)____ Inviting (vs. repelling)
- 19)____ Large (vs. small)
- 22)____ Modern (vs. old fashioned)
- 23)____ New (vs. old)
- 24)____ Multiple (vs. single)purpose
- 25)____ Public (vs. private)
- 26)____ Formal (vs. informal)
- 27)____ Conventional (vs. unconventional)
- 28)____ High (vs. low) traffic area
- 29)____ Good (vs. poor) use of space
- 30)____ Matched (vs. mismatched)contents
- 31)____ Many (vs. few)books
- 32)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)books
- 33)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)books
- 34)____ Many (vs. few)magazines
- 35)___ Organized (vs. disorganized)magazines
- 36)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)magazines
- 37)____ Many (vs. few) CDs
- 38)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)CDs
- 39)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)CDs
- 40)____ Many (vs. few) items of stationery
31Conscientiousness
- 1)____ Strong (vs. weak)odor
- 2)____ Noisy (vs. quiet)
- 3)____ Well lit (vs. dark)
- 4)____ Drafty (vs. stuffy)
- 5)____ Hot (vs. cold)
- 6)___ Good (vs. poor)condition
- 7)____ Decorated (vs. undecorated)
- 8)___ Cheerful (vs. gloomy)
- 9)___ Colorful (vs. drab)
- 10)___ Clean (vs.dirty)
- 11)___ Organized (vs.disorganized)
- 12)___ Neat (vs. messy)
- 13)__-_ Cluttered (vs. uncluttered)
- 14)__-_ Full (vs.empty)
- 15)___ Roomy (vs.cramped)
- 16)___ Expensive (vs. cheap)
- 17)___ Comfortable (vs. uncomfortable)
- 18)___ Inviting (vs. repelling)
- 19)____ Large (vs. small)
- 22)___ Modern (vs. old fashioned)
- 23)___ New (vs. old)
- 24)____ Multiple (vs. single)purpose
- 25)____ Public (vs. private)
- 26)____ Formal (vs. informal)
- 27)____ Conventional (vs. unconventional)
- 28)____ High (vs. low) traffic area
- 29)____ Good (vs. poor) use of space
- 30)____ Matched (vs. mismatched)contents
- 31)____ Many (vs. few)books
- 32)___ Organized (vs. disorganized)books
- 33)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)books
- 34)____ Many (vs. few)magazines
- 35)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)magazines
- 36)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)magazines
- 37)____ Many (vs. few) CDs
- 38)___ Organized (vs. disorganized)CDs
- 39)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)CDs
- 40)__-_ Many (vs. few) items of stationery
32Openness
- 1)____ Strong (vs. weak)odor
- 2)____ Noisy (vs. quiet)
- 3)____ Well lit (vs. dark)
- 4)____ Drafty (vs. stuffy)
- 5)____ Hot (vs. cold)
- 6)____ Good (vs. poor)condition
- 7)___ Decorated (vs. undecorated)
- 8)____ Cheerful (vs. gloomy)
- 9)____ Colorful (vs. drab)
- 10)____ Clean (vs.dirty)
- 11)____ Organized (vs.disorganized)
- 12)____ Neat (vs. messy)
- 13)___ Cluttered (vs. uncluttered)
- 14)___ Full (vs.empty)
- 15)____ Roomy (vs.cramped)
- 16)____ Expensive (vs. cheap)
- 17)____ Comfortable (vs. uncomfortable)
- 18)____ Inviting (vs. repelling)
- 19)____ Large (vs. small)
- 22)____ Modern (vs. old fashioned)
- 23)____ New (vs. old)
- 24)___ Multiple (vs. single)purpose
- 25)____ Public (vs. private)
- 26)____ Formal (vs. informal)
- 27)____ Conventional (vs. unconventional)
- 28)____ High (vs. low) traffic area
- 29)____ Good (vs. poor) use of space
- 30)____ Matched (vs. mismatched)contents
- 31)___ Many (vs. few)books
- 32)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)books
- 33)___ Varied (vs. homogenous)books
- 34)____ Many (vs. few)magazines
- 35)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)magazines
- 36)___ Varied (vs. homogenous)magazines
- 37)___ Many (vs. few) CDs
- 38)____ Organized (vs. disorganized)CDs
- 39)____ Varied (vs. homogenous)CDs
- 40)____ Many (vs. few) items of stationery
33(No Transcript)
34Naturalistic Observation
35Starbucks!
36- Are men or women more likely to order specialty
drinks? - Are men or women more likely to stay after
ordering their coffee? - Are faculty or students more likely to order
specialty drinks? - Are faculty or students more likely to stay after
ordering their coffee?
37Method
- Make groups
- Each group will go to Starbucks for 15 minutes.
- Must NOT interact with the subjects
- Only observe
- Sit at a side table and pretend you are doing
something other than making observations
38Gender Faculty or Student Specialty Drink or Regular Stay or to go
39Codes
- Gender
- Male 0
- Female 1
- Faculty vs. Student
- Faculty 0
- Student 1
- Specially Drink vs. Regular Coffee
- Specialty 0
- Regular 1
- Stay vs. Go
- Stay 0
- Go 1
40Starbucks!
41Current study
- 1) Limit your observations
- I wonder how coffee drinking habits are related
to gender/occupation, etc. - 2) Figure out how to code your observations
- I think I will watch people ordering coffee at
starbucks - 3) Collect your data
- Just do it!
- 4) Create a coding system
- Use a simple coding system
- 5) Analyze your data
- What did the data tell us?
42Enter and Analyze Data in Excel
43(No Transcript)
44Zimbardo
45Review
- Naturalistic / Observational Research
- Demonstrated how to conduct observational
research in order to examine various issues. - Statistics related to Observational research
- Interpreting and computing correlations
- On the Internet
- Personality perception in Internet chat rooms
- Linking Internet homepages to persoanlity
- Examining the foot-in-the-door effect using
email - Examining the bystander effect in chat rooms
- Used Internet personal ads to examine
characteristics of smokers - Used the Internet as a tool
46Review
- In the Lab
- Interpersonal behaviors in the lab
- Examined which behaviors are related to openness
and other traitsExamine if acting behavior was
linked to self-monitoring - In the Natural Environment
- Roommate behavior
- Using a persons room to examine personality
- Went to Starbucks to examine characteristics of
coffee drinkers - Easy and cheap!
- All the tools you need to collect and analyze the
data you already have. - Flexible
- Can use these same methods to examine other
issues!