Literature DB >> 8326470

Personality effects on children's speech in everyday life: sociability-mediated exposure and shyness-mediated reactivity to social situations.

J B Asendorpf1, G H Meier.   

Abstract

Speech and heart rate were continuously monitored during 7 days from morning to evening in 41 Grade 2 children selected for high or low parental judgments of sociability and shyness. Children attended school in the mornings and were free in the afternoons; the child's social situations in the afternoon were reconstructed with the child and a caretaker. During the afternoons sociable children spent more time in conversations than unsociable children, but the groups did not differ in their verbal participation within conversations. Shy children spent as much time in conversations and spoke as much in familiar situations as nonshy children but spoke less in moderately unfamiliar situations. Neither sociability nor shyness had an effect on heart rate reactivity. The results show that sociability affects the exposure, and shyness the reactivity, to situations and that these traits are clearly distinct despite some similarity in lay judgments of personality.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Year:  1993        PMID: 8326470     DOI: 10.1037//0022-3514.64.6.1072

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Pers Soc Psychol        ISSN: 0022-3514


  12 in total

1.  Young Children's Affective Responses to Acceptance and Rejection From Peers: A Computer-based Task Sensitive to Variation in Temperamental Shyness and Gender.

Authors:  Grace Z Howarth; Amanda E Guyer; Koraly Pérez-Edgar
Journal:  Soc Dev       Date:  2013-02

2.  Characterizing and comparing the friendships of anxious-solitary and unsociable preadolescents.

Authors:  Gary W Ladd; Becky Kochenderfer-Ladd; Natalie D Eggum; Karen P Kochel; Erin M McConnell
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2011-08-29

3.  Psychosocial outcomes of anxious first graders: a seven-year follow-up.

Authors:  Rachel L Grover; Golda S Ginsburg; Nick Ialongo
Journal:  Depress Anxiety       Date:  2007       Impact factor: 6.505

4.  Lasting associations between early-childhood temperament and late-adolescent reward-circuitry response to peer feedback.

Authors:  Amanda E Guyer; Brenda Benson; Victoria R Choate; Yair Bar-Haim; Koraly Perez-Edgar; Johanna M Jarcho; Daniel S Pine; Monique Ernst; Nathan A Fox; Eric E Nelson
Journal:  Dev Psychopathol       Date:  2014-02

5.  Who should report abnormal behavior at preschool age? The case of behavioral inhibition.

Authors:  Sergi Ballespí; M Claustre Jané; M Dolors Riba
Journal:  Child Psychiatry Hum Dev       Date:  2012-02

6.  A multimethod exploration of the friendships of children considered socially withdrawn by their school peers.

Authors:  B H Schneider
Journal:  J Abnorm Child Psychol       Date:  1999-04

Review 7.  Social withdrawal in childhood.

Authors:  Kenneth H Rubin; Robert J Coplan; Julie C Bowker
Journal:  Annu Rev Psychol       Date:  2009       Impact factor: 24.137

8.  Temperament and Social Problem Solving Competence in Preschool: Influences on Academic Skills in Early Elementary School.

Authors:  Olga L Walker; Heather A Henderson
Journal:  Soc Dev       Date:  2012-02-15

9.  Testing alternative hypotheses regarding the association between behavioral inhibition and language development in toddlerhood.

Authors:  Ashley K Smith Watts; Deepika Patel; Robin P Corley; Naomi P Friedman; John K Hewitt; JoAnn L Robinson; Soo H Rhee
Journal:  Child Dev       Date:  2014-02-05

10.  Social Problem-Solving in Early Childhood: Developmental Change and the Influence of Shyness.

Authors:  Olga L Walker; Kathryn A Degnan; Nathan A Fox; Heather A Henderson
Journal:  J Appl Dev Psychol       Date:  2013
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