Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions
Objective: We investigated whether men's social confidence in an initial, opposite-sex chatting context can be improved through a video tutorial and the extent to which being perceived as socially confident results in being seen as more romantically desirable and worthy of future contact. Metho...
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sg-smu-ink.soss_research-44852024-08-13T08:57:38Z Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions LI, Norman P. YONG, Jose C. TSAI, Ming-hong LAI, Mark H. C. LIM, Amy J. Y. ACKERMAN, Joshua M. Objective: We investigated whether men's social confidence in an initial, opposite-sex chatting context can be improved through a video tutorial and the extent to which being perceived as socially confident results in being seen as more romantically desirable and worthy of future contact. Method: Women chatted with men who had received or not received a tutorial on how to handle speed-dating chats (Study 1: N = 129; Study 2: N = 60) or with male targets selected for having high versus moderate confidence in handling initial, opposite-sex encounters (Study 3: N = 46). Results: Tutorial-trained men felt more confident going into the chats and they, as well as male targets selected for their confidence, were perceived by female chat partners to be higher in social confidence, status, and dominance. However, only perceptions of social confidence were further associated with being perceived as more romantically desirable (as a short-term mate) and worthy of future contact. Conclusions: Findings indicate that social confidence is trainable and that other-perceived social confidence can impact the outcomes of social interactions. 2020-12-01T08:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3228 info:doi/10.1111/jopy.12568 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4485/viewcontent/Confidence_2020_sv.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection School of Social Sciences eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University attraction evolutionary psychology mate selection short-term mating social confidence Applied Behavior Analysis Social Psychology |
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attraction evolutionary psychology mate selection short-term mating social confidence Applied Behavior Analysis Social Psychology LI, Norman P. YONG, Jose C. TSAI, Ming-hong LAI, Mark H. C. LIM, Amy J. Y. ACKERMAN, Joshua M. Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
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Objective: We investigated whether men's social confidence in an initial, opposite-sex chatting context can be improved through a video tutorial and the extent to which being perceived as socially confident results in being seen as more romantically desirable and worthy of future contact. Method: Women chatted with men who had received or not received a tutorial on how to handle speed-dating chats (Study 1: N = 129; Study 2: N = 60) or with male targets selected for having high versus moderate confidence in handling initial, opposite-sex encounters (Study 3: N = 46). Results: Tutorial-trained men felt more confident going into the chats and they, as well as male targets selected for their confidence, were perceived by female chat partners to be higher in social confidence, status, and dominance. However, only perceptions of social confidence were further associated with being perceived as more romantically desirable (as a short-term mate) and worthy of future contact. Conclusions: Findings indicate that social confidence is trainable and that other-perceived social confidence can impact the outcomes of social interactions. |
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LI, Norman P. YONG, Jose C. TSAI, Ming-hong LAI, Mark H. C. LIM, Amy J. Y. ACKERMAN, Joshua M. |
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LI, Norman P. YONG, Jose C. TSAI, Ming-hong LAI, Mark H. C. LIM, Amy J. Y. ACKERMAN, Joshua M. |
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LI, Norman P. |
title |
Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
title_short |
Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
title_full |
Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
title_fullStr |
Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
title_full_unstemmed |
Confidence is sexy and it can be trained: Examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
title_sort |
confidence is sexy and it can be trained: examining male social confidence in initial, opposite-sex interactions |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2020 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/soss_research/3228 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/soss_research/article/4485/viewcontent/Confidence_2020_sv.pdf |
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