scholarly journals Does It Take Two to Tango? Examining How Applicants and Interviewers Adapt Their Impression Management to Each Other

Author(s):  
Annika Wilhelmy ◽  
Nicolas Roulin ◽  
Timothy G. Wingate

Abstract Although research has long examined applicants’ use of impression management (IM) behaviors in the interview, interviewers’ IM has only been recently investigated, and no research has attempted to combine both. The aim of this research was to examine whether and how applicants and interviewers adapt their IM to one another. To answer this question, we bring together IM, signaling theory, and the concept of adjacency pairs from linguistics, and carried out two studies. Study 1 was an observational study with field data (N = 30 interviews including a total of 6290 turns of speech by interviewers and applicants). Results showed that both applicants and interviewers are more likely to engage in IM in a way that can be considered as a “preferred” (vs. “dispreferred”) response pattern. That is, self-focused IM is particularly likely to occur as a response to other-focused IM, other-focused IM as a response to self-focused IM, and job/organization-focused IM as a response to job/organization-focused IM. In study 2, we used a within-subjects design to experimentally manipulate interviewer IM and examine its impact on (N = 120) applicants’ IM behaviors during the interview. Applicants who engaged more in “preferred” IM responses were evaluated as performing better in the interview by external raters. However, “preferred” IM responses were not associated with any other interview outcomes. Altogether, our findings highlight the adaptive nature of interpersonal influence in employment interviews, and call for more research examining the dynamic interactions between interviewers and applicants.

2017 ◽  
Vol 32 (3) ◽  
pp. 28-35 ◽  
Author(s):  
Chengyao Chen ◽  
Wenjie Li ◽  
Dehong Gao ◽  
Yuexian Hou

2020 ◽  
Author(s):  
Oliver Genschow ◽  
Hans Alves

Past research has shown that mimicry has a number of pro-social consequences for interaction partners. However, such research has almost exclusively focused on its effects among interaction dyads. As social interactions are often witnessed by third-party observers, the question arises which inferences perceivers draw from observing mimicry. In the present work, we apply a third-party perspective to mimicry and test whether observers perceive mimicking individuals as submissive. Experiment 1 confirmed our prediction and found that observers perceived a mimicking person as less dominant, and thus more submissive, than a mimicked person. Experiment 2 replicated this finding and ruled out possible demand effects. Experiment 3 showed that when an interaction partner does not mimic the movements initiated by another person, the interaction partner gains dominance in the eye of the observer. Experiment 4 demonstrates that the inferences that perceivers draw from observing mimicry partly rely on a mere action-response pattern. These findings have not only important implications for mimicry as a genuinely social phenomenon, but also for research on impression management and person perception.


2015 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ali Daneshy

Abstract Interaction between adjacent fractures in horizontal wells has been recognized and discussed for some time. However, the scope of these discussions has been narrow and covers a limited number of actual field situations. In this paper, effects of dynamic interactions between multiple fractures are analyzed for different operational scenarios. These include effects of passive (previously fractured), active (being fractured) and multiple active fractures. A new aspect of this study, not previously covered in the literature, is examination of fracture inclination with respect to the wellbore. Paper will show that; The effect of dynamic interaction between adjacent fractures is largest when there is small difference between magnitudes of the two horizontal principal stresses, high net fracturing pressure, and short spacing between fractures.Dynamic fracture interaction is most significant when multiple fractures are created simultaneously (e. g., in Plug & Perf completions with limited entry design).There are important basic differences between dynamic interactions caused by transverse and inclined fractures. The influence is larger with inclined fractures.In multiple fracturing treatments based on limited entry, if the created fractures are transverse, dynamic interaction may cause shorter fractures to deflect and coalesce with longer adjacent fractures, thus further accelerating their growth.Compared to a single fracture, multiple limited entry fractures in horizontal wells require higher extension pressure. However, interaction between fractures is not likely to cause a significantly higher pressure in successive pumping stages in the same well.Dynamic interaction between multiple simultaneous fractures has little impact on ISIP values between successive pumping stages.In cases of small difference between the two horizontal principal stresses and high net fracturing pressure dynamic interaction can cause fracture deviations of more than 45°. This will increase the possibility of linkage between shorter fractures with longer adjacent fractures and accelerating their growth.The results presented here are in line with actual field data. The analysis presented here differs from some existing solutions in certain critical assumptions regarding the effect of a passive fracture on the propagation of an active fracture. However, the present results are in line with actual field data trends.


2018 ◽  
Vol 71 (4) ◽  
pp. 597-632 ◽  
Author(s):  
Joshua S. Bourdage ◽  
Nicolas Roulin ◽  
Rima Tarraf

2005 ◽  
Vol 31 (1) ◽  
pp. 108-125 ◽  
Author(s):  
Wei-Chi Tsai ◽  
Chien-Cheng Chen ◽  
Su-Fen Chiu

Applicant impression management tactics have been shown to positively influence interviewer evaluations. This study extends previous research by examining the moderating roles of interview structure, customer-contact requirement, and interview length in real employment interviews for actual job openings. Results from 151 applicants of 25 firms showed that the more structured the interview, the weaker the relationship between applicant nonverbal tactics and interviewer evaluation. In addition, when the extent of customer contact required for a job was relatively low, the influence of applicant self-focused tactics on interviewer evaluation was minimized. Furthermore, when the interview was of longer duration, the effects of applicant self-focused tactics became insignificant.


Geophysics ◽  
2014 ◽  
Vol 79 (6) ◽  
pp. P21-P29 ◽  
Author(s):  
Marcus Landschulze ◽  
Rolf Mjelde

Inconsistent horizontal receiver coupling to the seafloor causes measured signal differences on both horizontal receiver components. To explain this inconsistency, we considered distinct coupling parameters, the damping ratio and resonance frequency, for the receiver inline and crossline directions. Our approach combined these coupling parameters with the azimuth angle between an airgun shot and the receiver geometrically and used two visualization methods to show spatially dependent receiver coupling, based on correlation and root-mean-square amplitudes. We developed finite-element method simulation results together with field data from one ocean bottom cable (OBC) in very soft biosediment. The simulations provided an insight to the difference between perfectly coupled ideal receiver response and poor coupling. From the field data, we compared OBC receiver coupling for trenched and untrenched cable. Our results revealed that the field data had an azimuth-dependent response pattern with amplitude decay and time shift on the untrenched inline component, which we can reproduce with our simulations. Azimuth-dependent receiver coupling indicated that the inline and crossline receiver components were connected by the direction of the traveling wave, and trenching the cable will reduce the azimuth-dependent coupling effects.


2019 ◽  
Vol 30 (10) ◽  
pp. 1424-1433 ◽  
Author(s):  
Nathalie klein Selle ◽  
Naama Agari ◽  
Gershon Ben-Shakhar

The process of information concealment is more relevant than ever in this day and age. Using a modified concealed-information test (CIT), we aimed to unmask this process by investigating both the decision and the attempt to conceal information in 38 students. The attempt to conceal (vs. reveal) information induced a differential physiological response pattern within subjects—whereas skin conductance increased in both conditions, respiration and heart rate were suppressed only in the conceal condition—confirming the idea that these measures reflect different underlying mechanisms. The decision to conceal (vs. reveal) information induced enhanced anticipatory skin conductance responses. To our knowledge, this is the first study that observed such anticipatory responses in an information-concealment paradigm. Together, these findings imply that our physiological responses reflect, to some degree, both the decision and the attempt to conceal information. In addition to strengthening CIT theory, this knowledge sheds novel light on anticipatory responding in decision making.


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