2016
DOI: 10.2139/ssrn.2742395
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Seeing Social Structure: Assessing the Accuracy of Interpersonal Judgments About Social Networks

Abstract: 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… Show more

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References 119 publications
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