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Extraversion-Introversion And Sensitivity To Nonverbal Cues, Virginia Seiser
Extraversion-Introversion And Sensitivity To Nonverbal Cues, Virginia Seiser
Dissertations and Theses
Sixty-five college students completed the Profile of Nonverbal Sensitivity (PONS) and the Eysenck Personality Questionnaire. The results did not support the hypothesis that introverts would be found to be relatively more sensitive to negative nonverbal cues than to positive cues, and that this difference would be greater for introverts than for extroverts. The outcome did not support predictions concerning the relationship between sensitivity to nonverbal communication and extroversion- introversion based on either Gray's fear-frustration hypothesis or Eysenck's general conditionability hypothesis of extroversion-introversion.
The results supported findings of earlier researchers that females are more sensitive to nonverbal cues than males, and …