Abstract

This study examined the role language plays in mediating the influence of verbal descriptions of persons on trait ratings of those persons. Subjects were given written descriptions of the behavior of fictitious persons in a work situation and were asked to rate them on fifteen trait- adjective scales. In one condition of the experiment, specific information about certain traits was withheld, forcing subjects to rate persons on traits for which they had no direct behavioral clues. In the other two conditions, the specific information was provided. Providing specific information about a trait directly influenced ratings on that trait even when sufficient general information on that trait was given. In one condition, the influence on the ratings of the additional behavioral clues was such that a new latent variable representing an additional component of meaning was called for in the structural equation model.

Keywords

TraitPsychologyMeaning (existential)Social psychologyLatent variableCognitive psychologyStructural equation modelingForcing (mathematics)Component (thermodynamics)StatisticsMathematicsComputer science

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Publication Info

Year
1993
Type
article
Volume
28
Issue
1
Pages
111-159
Citations
77
Access
Closed

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Marianne Carlson, Stanley A. Mulaik (1993). Trait Ratings from Descriptions of Behavior As Mediated by Components of Meaning. Multivariate Behavioral Research , 28 (1) , 111-159. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327906mbr2801_7

Identifiers

DOI
10.1207/s15327906mbr2801_7