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Ward, Winona; Strong, Carolyn – Research Management Review, 2016
The most difficult aspect of financial conflict of interest (FCOI) and compliance with federal regulations involves the assessment and management of identified FCOIs. While some federal agencies provide examples of the structure and content of management plans, it is up to institutions to evaluate FCOI to determine whether and how research may be…
Descriptors: Conflict of Interest, Money Management, Research Administration, Disclosure
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Berger, Stephen E.; And Others – Small Group Behavior, 1978
It was found that women disclose more than men; that self-reports of prior disclosing behavior are complexly related to actual confiding behavior; and that in order to be confided in, one must disclose about oneself noncontingently and without regard to the disclosing behavior of others. (Author)
Descriptors: Disclosure, Research Projects, Sex Differences
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Goldstein, Mark J.; And Others – Small Group Behavior, 1978
An experiment was conducted to verify two basic assumptions of the risk-responsibility conceptual framework. Results suggest the necessity of considering the positive or negative evaluative content in the statement when talking about the risk associated with modes of communication in group psychotherapy. (Author)
Descriptors: Disclosure, Group Therapy, Interpersonal Relationship, Research Projects
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Bean, Bruce W.; Houston, B. Kent – Small Group Behavior, 1978
Indicates that self-concept is related to self-disclosure in encounter groups, but the nature of the relationship changes over time. Early in group interactions, low self-concept subjects disclosed less; but as they became more comfortable, they increased in self-disclosure until they equaled, or possibly exceeded, initially high self-concept…
Descriptors: Disclosure, Group Dynamics, Research Projects, Self Concept
Andersen, Peter A.; Leibowitz, Kenneth – Environmental Psychology and Nonverbal Behavior, 1978
Touch avoidance is a nonverbal communication predisposition that consists of same sex touch avoidance and opposite sex touch avoidance. It is related to communication apprehension, self-disclosure, self-esteem, and a series of cultural role variables. These seem to have the greatest relationship with the measures of touch avoidance. (Author)
Descriptors: Cultural Influences, Disclosure, Nonverbal Communication, Research Projects
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DeWine, Sue; And Others – Small Group Behavior, 1978
Two experimental conditions were compared: groups with higher teacher self-disclosure and groups with low teacher self-disclosure. These groups were compared across five different categories of self-disclosure: attitudes and opinions, tastes and interests, work and studies, personality, and emotions. Results were significant in four cases. (Author)
Descriptors: College Students, Disclosure, Higher Education, Modeling (Psychology)
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Anchor, Kenneth N. – Small Group Behavior, 1979
Findings indicate that it is both feasible and important to draw a distinction between high- and low-risk self-revelation in group psychotherapy. Vulnerability of members appears to be perceived as a function of the amount and quality of their own self-disclosing utterances. Institutionalized patients may be less capable of appropriate…
Descriptors: Communication (Thought Transfer), Disclosure, Group Therapy, Psychotherapy
McCutcheon, Lynn – 1978
One hundred four college students completed the Forty-Item Self-Disclosure Questionnaire (FISDQ) and neuroticism and social desirability subscales from the Comrey Personality Scales. Two weeks later, 76 of them volunteered for a study of handwriting analysis. The handwriting analysis was actually an attempt to obtain a behavioral measure of…
Descriptors: Disclosure, Handwriting, Mental Health, Neurosis
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Schneider, Lawrence J.; Lankford, Charles P. – College Student Journal, 1978
A sample of 108 high- and 109 low-disclosing college females rated risk individuals should take in revealing personal information to six helpers and perceptions of each helper's characteristics. High-disclosure females thought clients should take greater risks with more trained helpers. (Author)
Descriptors: College Students, Counseling, Counselor Characteristics, Disclosure
Lombardo, John P.; Lavine, Linda O. – 1977
Sex role differences in self disclosure are more clearly defined than are gender differences. Students filled out a Bem Sex Role Inventory (BSRI) as part of an introductory course requirement. Males and females who scored as either androgynous or stereotyped were selected for four targets: mother, father, male best friend, female best friend. Some…
Descriptors: Androgyny, Attitude Change, Disclosure, Family Relationship
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Moss, Carolyn J.; Harren, Vincent A. – Small Group Behavior, 1978
This research explores the impact of leader behavior on individual group members in growth groups. Affect of message was found to be the only predictor of member-disclosure. Effects of leader-disclosure on member self-disclosure is difficult to interpret. (MFD)
Descriptors: Disclosure, Evaluation, Group Dynamics, Higher Education
Archer, Richard L.; And Others – 1978
The effects of an instigator's and a respondent's disclosure on impressions of the revealing respondent were examined in a pair of experiments. The first experiment assessed the effects of both own and other's disclosure on a participant perceiver. After meeting a confederate partner, female undergraduate subjects (N=83) were induced to make an…
Descriptors: College Students, Communication Problems, Disclosure, Emotional Response
O'Hare, Christopher – 1978
The effects of first-session interviewer self-disclosures that differed in three levels of intimacy--low, medium and high--and three kinds of temporal focus--historical (past tense and external to the interview process), current (present tense and external to the interview process), and existential in which the interviewer disclosed immediate…
Descriptors: Behavior Patterns, College Students, Counselor Performance, Disclosure
Pellegrini, Robert J.; And Others – 1977
Male and female subjects identified as very attractive or very unattractive worked in an interview-like situation with a listener of the opposite sex who was presented so as to maximize or minimize his or her natural attractiveness. Intimacy of self-disclosure was found to be significantly greater for females than for males, significantly greater…
Descriptors: Disclosure, Interaction Process Analysis, Interpersonal Relationship, Physical Characteristics
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Adler, Judith Lowitz – Columbia Journal of Law and Social Problems, 1981
The Freedom of Information Act and related decisions protect some but not all materials generated by scientists receiving federal grants. Interests affected by disclosure and nondisclosure are analyzed and solutions are suggested. (Available from: Box 7, Columbia University School of Law, 435 W. 116th St., New York, NY 10027, $6.00.) (MSE)
Descriptors: Confidentiality, Disclosure, Federal Aid, Federal Legislation
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