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Hogan, Robert; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1972
This study investigated the relationship between similarity of interests and likability. Consistent with the general hypothesis, a strong positive relationship was found between interest similarity and rated attraction. (Author)
Descriptors: Attitudes, Behavior Patterns, Career Choice, Career Development
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Zimmer, Jules M.; And Others – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1972
The results of the current study, as well as the Zimmer and Cowles (1972) study using quite different procedures, involved a comparison of client-centered, gestalt, and rational therapies and do not support the conclusion that therapeutic relationships tend to be characteristically the same. Theoretical orientation as operationalized by…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Counseling, Counseling Effectiveness, Personality
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Trott, D. Merilee; Morf, Martin E. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1972
The present results confirm the contention that the scales of a new personality inventory, the Differential Personality, exhibit to a satisfactory degree that most desirable of scale properties: factorial simplicity or homogeneity. (Author)
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, Factor Analysis, Individual Characteristics, Personality
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Whittaker, David; Watts, William A. – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1971
This article contrasts with a sample of college students the youthful members of two expressively alienated forms of nonconformity: student activists committed to confrontation tactics to force social change and disaffiliated college dropouts withdrawn from incompatible social conditions. (Author)
Descriptors: Activism, Behavior Patterns, College Students, Personality
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Gitter, A. George; Black, Harvey – Journal of Counseling Psychology, 1976
Based on the factorial analysis of data collected from 260 undergraduates, this study found differences in self-revealing associated with information content, target person, and sex of subject. Gilding was found to be related to self-disclosure and intimate rather than superficial information. Dogmatism did not influence either revealing or…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, College Students, Communication (Thought Transfer), Dogmatism