It looks like your excerpt got cut off at the end. From what you’ve shared so far, here is a summary and some guidance regarding the study and its findings:
Overview of Study 2a: Nonverbal Expression of Arrogance
- Objective: To examine whether specific nonverbal expressions modeled by actors are reliably perceived as arrogance compared to related constructs such as dominance, pride, contempt, and a neutral state.
- Key Constructs Defined for Participants:
- Arrogance: Behaviors communicating an exaggerated sense of superiority.
- Dominance: Use of intimidation or force to gain power.
- Pride: A positive self-regard without social comparison.
- Contempt: A feeling that another is beneath consideration/scorn.
- Stimuli: 16 photo categories (11 arrogant expressions, 2 contempt, 1 dominance, 1 pride, 1 neutral state) shown by two actors in controlled conditions.
- Procedure: Participants match posed photos to these constructs, with a subset removed for misunderstanding definitions.
- Sample: N=158, balanced gender and nationality from the UK and US.
Theoretical Background for Arrogance Expression
- Arrogance is expressed via two primary nonverbal cues:
- Vertical head tilt (noncompetitive), specifically exposing the neck rather than protecting it, signaling superiority without overt aggression.
- Downward gaze, indicating a social comparison and superiority.
- Two orientations of arrogance:
- Approach-oriented arrogance: Facing interlocutor directly with these cues.
- Avoidance-oriented arrogance: Averting gaze/head/trunk but maintaining the key nonverbal cues.
Results (Partial)
- Four expressions of arrogance were identified with recognition rates (51%-54%) above chance levels (25%).
- The study compared perceived arrogance with closely related states like dominance, pride, and contempt to demonstrate discriminant validity.
Potential Next Steps / Additional Context
- Since your excerpt truncated before presenting the precise results or next Studies 2b and 2c, here are some points typically relevant:
- Confirmatory factor analysis (CFA) or similar statistical methods would be used to confirm if the eight sub-dimensions of arrogance can be aggregated under higher-order dimensions consistent with approach- versus avoidance-oriented arrogance.
- Validity assessments (convergent, discriminant, nomological, and known-group validity) typically follow to ensure the construct and scale are psychometrically sound.
- The higher recognition rates for some posed arrogant expressions suggest that nonverbal cues can reliably differentiate arrogance from other similar social emotions or traits.
- Studies 2b and 2c likely leverage participant ratings of arrogant expressions on the items developed in Study 1 to further validate the scale.
If you have questions about:
- How to interpret the nonverbal cues used to model arrogance,
- The implications of approach-oriented vs avoidance-oriented arrogance,
- How the scale validation was carried out using these stimuli,
- Or the meaning and measurement of various types of validity,
feel free to ask! I can also help draft a summary or review the implications for future research or practical applications based on this work.
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