Even in brief or routine interactions, people constantly make judgments about others’ social worlds and their positions in social structure. These inferences matter in contexts as diverse as hiring, venture capital funding, and courtship encounters. Yet it remains unclear whether people are accurate in assessing the social networks in which others are embedded and, if so, which behavioral cues perceivers use to form these impressions. Drawing on the “thin-slicing” paradigm in social psychology and data on over 4,276 judgments made by 586 perceivers about 23 strangers, we find that people can accurately infer the size and composition of others’ networks. They are not, however, accurate in “seeing” the structure of relationships surrounding a...
Understanding the way individuals are interconnected in social networks is of prime significance to ...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...
To glean information from social networks, people must be adept at distinguishing real evidence from...
Social scientists have long been interested in understanding what makes some respondents more accura...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
Social scientists have long been interested in understanding what makes some respondents more accura...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
Everyday social activities take place within an environment peopled by a specific set of individuals...
Given that studying both task and social relationships between and among group members is an inheren...
This paper introduces and tests a novel methodology for measuring networks. Rather than collecting d...
Recent research into ‘The Social Brain Hypothesis’ has found variation in human social group size to...
Understanding the way individuals are interconnected in social networks is of prime significance to ...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...
To glean information from social networks, people must be adept at distinguishing real evidence from...
Social scientists have long been interested in understanding what makes some respondents more accura...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
Social scientists have long been interested in understanding what makes some respondents more accura...
This paper investigates how we infer the status of others from their social relationships. In a seri...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
Everyday social activities take place within an environment peopled by a specific set of individuals...
Given that studying both task and social relationships between and among group members is an inheren...
This paper introduces and tests a novel methodology for measuring networks. Rather than collecting d...
Recent research into ‘The Social Brain Hypothesis’ has found variation in human social group size to...
Understanding the way individuals are interconnected in social networks is of prime significance to ...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...
Structural analysis of social networks using statistical techniques has been evolving into sophistic...