Perceptions of public mobile phone conversations and conversationalists |
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Authors: | Nate Sutter Thomas Holtgraves |
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Affiliation: | Department of Psychological Science, Ball State University, United States |
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Abstract: | This research examined perceptions of public mobile phone conversations and conversationalists. Participants viewed a staged video of a public conversation and later rated their perceptions of the conversation and target speaker. Two variables were manipulated: whether the conversation took place over a mobile phone or was face-to-face, and whether participants could hear both sides or only one side of the conversation. In general, participants rated the one side mobile phone conversation as more noticeable, intrusive, and annoying than the other conditions. Additionally, the target speaker in this condition was less well-liked than the speaker in the other conditions. Perceptions of the target’s extraversion varied as a function of whether the conversation occurred on a mobile phone or not. Overall, the results suggest the existence of negative views toward mobile phones and exposure to one side of a conversation. |
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Keywords: | Mobile phone Communication Annoyance Person perception |
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