Synapse
Active member
- Joined
- Dec 29, 2007
- Messages
- 3,450
- MBTI Type
- INFP
- Enneagram
- 4
Interpersonal perception examines the beliefs that interacting people have about each other. This area differs from social cognition and person perception by being interpersonal rather than intrapersonal, and thus requiring the interaction of at least two actual people.
Person Perception - The mental processes we use to form judgments and draw conclusions about the characteristics and motives of other people.
Social cognition - how people process social information, especially its encoding, storage, retrieval, and application to social situations.
Going for a job interview it is said that it takes about the first 5 seconds to determine a persons acceptance or not. Whether they are neatly dressed or scruffy, prepared or not etc, confident body language or not etc. that usually the first person will be remember most as the standard for the rest of the interview and the last person will be remembered most while the middle people will be all kinds of fuzz.
Finding David Kenny's ideas helpful.
Accuracy - the correctness of A's beliefs about B
Self-other agreement - whether A's beliefs about B matches B's beliefs about himself
Similarity - whether A's and B's beliefs match
projection/assumed similarity - whether A's beliefs about B match A's beliefs about herself
Reciprocity - the similarity of A's and B's beliefs about each other
Meta-accuracy - whether A knows how others see her
Assumed projection - whether A thinks others see her as she sees them
In the every day first impressions are more about body language than actual speak sense and tone. say 70-75% of communication is non verbal so what creates the impressions, to perceive or judge situations according to how you feel, think, sense or intuit another person and the vibe you get. Would this be different for P's and J's, say. J's like value statements, P's like discernible statements?
Person Perception - The mental processes we use to form judgments and draw conclusions about the characteristics and motives of other people.
Social cognition - how people process social information, especially its encoding, storage, retrieval, and application to social situations.
Going for a job interview it is said that it takes about the first 5 seconds to determine a persons acceptance or not. Whether they are neatly dressed or scruffy, prepared or not etc, confident body language or not etc. that usually the first person will be remember most as the standard for the rest of the interview and the last person will be remembered most while the middle people will be all kinds of fuzz.
Finding David Kenny's ideas helpful.
Accuracy - the correctness of A's beliefs about B
Self-other agreement - whether A's beliefs about B matches B's beliefs about himself
Similarity - whether A's and B's beliefs match
projection/assumed similarity - whether A's beliefs about B match A's beliefs about herself
Reciprocity - the similarity of A's and B's beliefs about each other
Meta-accuracy - whether A knows how others see her
Assumed projection - whether A thinks others see her as she sees them
In the every day first impressions are more about body language than actual speak sense and tone. say 70-75% of communication is non verbal so what creates the impressions, to perceive or judge situations according to how you feel, think, sense or intuit another person and the vibe you get. Would this be different for P's and J's, say. J's like value statements, P's like discernible statements?