The Vertical Dimension of Social Relations and Accurate Interpersonal Perception: A Meta-Analysis

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Abstract

There is little consensus regarding how verticality (social power, dominance, and status) is related to accurate interpersonal perception. The relation could be either positive or negative, and there could be many causal processes at play. The present article discusses the theoretical possibilities and presents a meta-analysis of this question. In studies using a standard test of interpersonal accuracy, higher socioeconomic status (SES) predicted higher accuracy defined as accurate inference about the meanings of cues; also, higher experimentally manipulated vertical position predicted higher accuracy defined as accurate recall of others’ words. In addition, although personality dominance did not predict accurate inference overall, the type of personality dominance did, such that empathic/responsible dominance had a positive relation and egoistic/aggressive dominance had a negative relation to accuracy. In studies involving live interaction, higher experimentally manipulated vertical position produced lower accuracy defined as accurate inference about cues; however, methodological problems place this result in doubt.

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Hall, J. A., Schmid Mast, M., & Latu, I. M. (2015, June 1). The Vertical Dimension of Social Relations and Accurate Interpersonal Perception: A Meta-Analysis. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior. Springer New York LLC. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10919-014-0205-1

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