behavioral indicator
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2021 ◽  
pp. 194855062110113
Author(s):  
Nida Latif ◽  
Lauren J. Human ◽  
Francesca Capozzi ◽  
Jelena Ristic

What factors influence how accurately we express our personalities? Here, we investigated the role of targets’ nonverbal expressivity or the intrapersonal coordination between head and body movements. To do so, using a novel movement quantification method, we examined whether variability in a person’s behavioral coordination was related to how accurately their personality was perceived by naive observers. Targets who exhibited greater variability in intrapersonal behavior coordination, indicating more expressive behavior, were perceived more accurately on high observability personality items, such as how energetic and helpful they are. Moreover, these associations held controlling for other indicators of overall movement, self- and perceiver-rated extroversion, as well as how engaging and likable targets were perceived to be. This provides preliminary evidence that variability in intrapersonal behavioral coordination may be a unique behavioral indicator of expressive accuracy, although further research that replicates these findings and examines the causal associations is needed.


2020 ◽  
Vol 11 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kyosuke Kakinuma ◽  
Fumika Nishiguti ◽  
Kotoe Sonoda ◽  
Haruhi Tajiri ◽  
Ayumi Tanaka

Most previous research has demonstrated that receiving ability-focused praise (e.g., “You are smart”) negatively affects intrinsic motivation following failure. Surprisingly, a recent study showed that ability-focused praise affects not only the praisee but also the person offering praise, that is, the praiser. However, evidence of the effects on the praiser is quite limited, despite the utility of praise in education. Therefore, the present study employed face-to-face interaction to advance the knowledge of the effects of praise on the praiser. Two experiments were conducted in which undergraduate participants (n = 39 and n = 51) praised a research confederate. We measured attentional engagement using an eye-tracker as a behavioral indicator of intrinsic motivation, as well as self-reported task enjoyment. To estimate the effect of praise, we combined the results of two experiments and conducted a Bayes factor meta-analysis. The results showed that in the ability praise group, participants’ attentional engagement in a task was significantly lower than in the control group. The present finding indicates that ability-focused praise negatively affects the praiser’s intrinsic motivation and suggests that praise should be used with caution in social and educational contexts.


2020 ◽  
pp. 014616722092682
Author(s):  
Eri Sasaki ◽  
Nickola Overall

Growing evidence indicates that whether critical and hostile behavior harms relationships depends on how partners respond. The current studies test a key behavioral indicator of partners’ responsiveness by examining whether partners’ withdrawal when actors exhibit negative-direct behavior predicts within-person and longitudinal declines in perceived partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. Test of Actors’ negative-direct × Partners’ withdrawal interactions indicated that partners’ withdrawal in the context of actors’ negative-direct behavior when targeted for change during conflict discussions (Study 1, N = 162 dyads) and during daily interactions (Study 2, N = 151 dyads) predicted lower perceived partner responsiveness and relationship satisfaction. This Actor × Partner effect did not emerge when actors were pushing for change during conflict (Study 1) and was more consistent predicting perceived partner responsiveness. These results illustrate the importance of Actor × Partner effects and indicate that actors’ own destructive behavior provides an important context to diagnose partners’ responsiveness.


2020 ◽  
Vol 117 (19) ◽  
pp. 10603-10608 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atsushi Kikumoto ◽  
Ulrich Mayr

People can use abstract rules to flexibly configure and select actions for specific situations, yet how exactly rules shape actions toward specific sensory and/or motor requirements remains unclear. Both research from animal models and human-level theories of action control point to the role of highly integrated, conjunctive representations, sometimes referred to as event files. These representations are thought to combine rules with other, goal-relevant sensory and motor features in a nonlinear manner and represent a necessary condition for action selection. However, so far, no methods exist to track such representations in humans during action selection with adequate temporal resolution. Here, we applied time-resolved representational similarity analysis to the spectral-temporal profiles of electroencephalography signals while participants performed a cued, rule-based action selection task. In two experiments, we found that conjunctive representations were active throughout the entire selection period and were functionally dissociable from the representation of constituent features. Specifically, the strength of conjunctions was a highly robust predictor of trial-by-trial variability in response times and was selectively related to an important behavioral indicator of conjunctive representations, the so-called partial-overlap priming pattern. These results provide direct evidence for conjunctive representations as critical precursors of action selection in humans.


2019 ◽  
Vol 1 (1) ◽  
pp. 35-54
Author(s):  
Anindya Pritanadira

This study aimed at determining the psychometric characteristics of the scale of organizational commitment that was applied to civil servants (PNS) RSUP Dr. Soeradji Tirtonegoro. The preliminary survey stage was carried out by the researcher to create a new behavioral indicator based on the survey results. The SME phase was conducted by researchers to test the validity of the relevance of the item to the behavioral indicators and their dimensions. After conducting an SME analysis, the researchers conducted a field trial. At the time of SME, none of the 72 items had fallen due to Aiken's V 0.5. After the item selection was carried out with three stages, the remaining items were 31. The item reliability score at the end of the item selection was 0, 942 (r 0, 80) so that it could still be used for the advanced data analysis stage.AbstrakPenelitian ini bertujuan untuk mengetahui karakteristik psikometris skala komitmen organisasi yang diterapkan pada pegawai negeri sipil (PNS) RSUP dr. Soeradji Tirtonegoro. Tahap survei pendahuluan dilakukan oleh peneliti untuk membuat indikator perilaku baru berdasarkan hasil survei. Tahap SME dilakukan peneliti untuk menguji validitas berupa relevansi aitem dengan indikator perilaku dan dimensinya. Setelah melakukan analisis SME, peneliti melakukan uji coba lapangan. Pada saat SME, tidak ada satu pun dari 72 aitem yang gugur karena skor Aiken’s V0,5. Setelah dilakukan seleksi aitem dengan tiga tahap, aitem yang tersisa berjumlah 31. Skor reliabilitas aitem pada saat seleksi aitem tahap akhir adalah 0, 942 (r0, 80) sehingga masih tetap dapat digunakan untuk tahap analisis data lanjutan.  


2019 ◽  
Author(s):  
Atsushi Kikumoto ◽  
Ulrich Mayr

AbstractPeople can use abstract rules to flexibly configure and select actions for specific situations. Yet how exactly rules shape actions towards specific sensory and/or motor requirements remains unclear. One possibility is that rules become integrated with sensory/response features in a non-linear, conjunctive manner (e.g., event files; Hommel, 1998) to drive rule-guided action selection. To dynamically track such conjunctive representations during action selection, we applied a time-resolved representational similarity analysis to the spectral-temporal profiles of the EEG signal, while participants selected actions based on varying rules. Across two experiments, we found that action selection engages conjunctive representations binding action rules to specific sensory/motor settings throughout the entire selection period. The strength of conjunctions was the most important predictor of trial-by-trial variability in response times (RTs) and was closely, and selectively, related to an important behavioral indicator of event files—the partial-overlap priming pattern. Thus, conjunctive representations were functionally dissociated from their constituent action features and play a critical role during flexible selection of action.


Author(s):  
Sarah J Neal Webb ◽  
Jann Hau ◽  
Susan P Lambeth ◽  
Steven J Schapiro

The population of NIH-owned or NIH-supported captive research chimpanzees is quickly becoming aged, and the 1998 NIH breeding moratorium has resulted in a skewed age distribution. As such, behavioral management programs aimed at refining the care of an aging captive chimpanzee population have become increasingly important. However, little research exists that addresses the ways in which captive chimpanzee behavior differs as a function of the interaction of age and aspects of the captive environment. We examined overall differences in behavior between elderly (35 y and older) and nonelderly (younger than 35 y) captive chimpanzees. Elderly chimpanzees exhibited significantly more rough scratching (a behavioral indicator of anxiety) and inactivity, less behavioral diversity, and less affiliation than their nonelderly counterparts. We also assessed whether elderly chimpanzee behavior and wounding rates differed as a function of housing in geriatric (group average age, 35 y or older) or nongeriatric (group average age, younger than 35 y) groups. In our program, geriatric social groups were characterized by smaller group size, more females within the group, and higher levels of individual mobility impairment compared with nongeriatric groups. Furthermore, elderly chimpanzees housed in geriatric groups displayed significantly increased rough scratching, decreased locomotion and submission than nongeriatric animals but no difference in wounding. These findings suggest that housing elderly chimpanzees in nongeriatric groups may be beneficial, given that doing so may stimulate locomotion. However, the establishment and maintenance of geriatric groups may be unavoidable as the demographics of the population of captive former research chimpanzees continues to age. Therefore, refinements to captive geriatric care strategies for chimpanzees should focus on methods of evaluating and enhancing functionally appropriate captive environments within geriatric groups.


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