Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes

Women have previously been found to overestimate how readily apparent their emotions are to a same-sex observer;such a pattern is not evident for male-male interaction partners. The present study was designed to determine whether this effect is due to the sex of the actor, the sex of the observers,...

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Main Author: O'Connell, Gordon Brian
Language:en_US
Published: 2007
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1303
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spelling ndltd-MANITOBA-oai-mspace.lib.umanitoba.ca-1993-13032014-01-31T03:30:38Z Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes O'Connell, Gordon Brian Women have previously been found to overestimate how readily apparent their emotions are to a same-sex observer;such a pattern is not evident for male-male interaction partners. The present study was designed to determine whether this effect is due to the sex of the actor, the sex of the observers, or both. This study was also designed to illuminate the roles played by gender stereotypes (of women as especially expressive and as especially perceptive) in producing the effect. Male and female actors attempted to deceive either same-sex observers or opposite-sex observers about their negative emotional state. Results revealed that having a female rather than a male observer was connected to transparency overestimation; there were no effects associated with actor sex. However, there was no clear evidence that gender stereotypes accounted for individuals' greater likelihood to exhibit transparency overestimation with a female audience. 2007-05-15T19:08:39Z 2007-05-15T19:08:39Z 1998-05-01T00:00:00Z http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1303 en_US
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language en_US
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description Women have previously been found to overestimate how readily apparent their emotions are to a same-sex observer;such a pattern is not evident for male-male interaction partners. The present study was designed to determine whether this effect is due to the sex of the actor, the sex of the observers, or both. This study was also designed to illuminate the roles played by gender stereotypes (of women as especially expressive and as especially perceptive) in producing the effect. Male and female actors attempted to deceive either same-sex observers or opposite-sex observers about their negative emotional state. Results revealed that having a female rather than a male observer was connected to transparency overestimation; there were no effects associated with actor sex. However, there was no clear evidence that gender stereotypes accounted for individuals' greater likelihood to exhibit transparency overestimation with a female audience.
author O'Connell, Gordon Brian
spellingShingle O'Connell, Gordon Brian
Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
author_facet O'Connell, Gordon Brian
author_sort O'Connell, Gordon Brian
title Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
title_short Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
title_full Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
title_fullStr Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
title_full_unstemmed Actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
title_sort actual versus perceived transparency of emotional states in the context of deception, the effects of gender stereotypes
publishDate 2007
url http://hdl.handle.net/1993/1303
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