The Social Psychology of Nonverbal Communication
DOI: 10.1057/9781137345868.0017
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The Impact of Nonverbal Behavior in the Job Interview

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Cited by 6 publications
(7 citation statements)
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“…Interviewee Impression Management Blacksmith et al (2016) suggested that one reason for the lower ratings in technology-mediated interviews is that interviewees are restricted in their use of IM tactics (see Chapman & Rowe, 2002, for a similar suggestion). Usually, interviewees can use verbal IM tactics such as emphasizing potential strengths or playing down potential weaknesses or failures or non-verbal IM tactics such as making eye contact, smiling, nodding, and maintaining a specific body posture (Frauendorfer & Schmid Mast, 2015). Previous research repeatedly found that the use of such IM behaviors correlates with better interview performance ratings (Barrick, Shaffer, & DeGrassi, 2009;Burnett & Motowidlo, 1998;Levashina et al, 2014).…”
Section: Ratings Of Interviewees' Performance In Ftf and Technology-mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interviewee Impression Management Blacksmith et al (2016) suggested that one reason for the lower ratings in technology-mediated interviews is that interviewees are restricted in their use of IM tactics (see Chapman & Rowe, 2002, for a similar suggestion). Usually, interviewees can use verbal IM tactics such as emphasizing potential strengths or playing down potential weaknesses or failures or non-verbal IM tactics such as making eye contact, smiling, nodding, and maintaining a specific body posture (Frauendorfer & Schmid Mast, 2015). Previous research repeatedly found that the use of such IM behaviors correlates with better interview performance ratings (Barrick, Shaffer, & DeGrassi, 2009;Burnett & Motowidlo, 1998;Levashina et al, 2014).…”
Section: Ratings Of Interviewees' Performance In Ftf and Technology-mmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Interviewers in telephone interview settings will use verbal indicators to form impressions about a candidate's characteristics. These impressions may be based, in the absence of visual information, on interviewees' vocal fluency, voice intensity and pitch, energy, affect, emotional expressiveness and voice modulation (DeGroot and Gooty, 2009;Frauendorfer and Schmid Mast, 2014;Riggio and Riggio, 2002). Yet many of these verbal indicators are negatively affected by anxiety (Gilboa-Schechtman and Shachar-Lavie, 2013).…”
Section: Absence Of Visual Cues: Anxiety Effects On Ratingsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Because it is important not to confound computer-extracted features with behavioral expressions, the focus should be on using human raters to examine base rates of behaviors (realistically, this can be done only for a small subset of behaviors because humans may not be able to judge large numbers of behaviors reliably). For example, past reviews found that in the interview context, in which ML is increasingly applied (Hickman et al, 2019), females smile and nod more than males (Frauendorfer & Mast, 2015). Significant differences when ground-truth distributions are matched would suggest behavioral expression bias.…”
Section: Identifying Mlmb Sources and Mitigating Mlmb In Psychologica...mentioning
confidence: 99%