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Examining the Construct Validity of Enacted Support: A Multitrait-Multimethod Analysis of Three Perspectives for Judging Immediacy and Listening Behaviors

Authors
Bodie, Graham D.Jones, Susanne M.Vickery, Andrea J.Hatcher, LauraCannava, Kaitlin
Issue Date
2-10월-2014
Publisher
ROUTLEDGE JOURNALS, TAYLOR & FRANCIS LTD
Keywords
Perceived Support; Social Support; Active Listening; Comfort; Stress; Judgment Studies
Citation
COMMUNICATION MONOGRAPHS, v.81, no.4, pp.495 - 523
Indexed
SSCI
SCOPUS
Journal Title
COMMUNICATION MONOGRAPHS
Volume
81
Number
4
Start Page
495
End Page
523
URI
https://scholar.korea.ac.kr/handle/2021.sw.korea/97122
DOI
10.1080/03637751.2014.957223
ISSN
0363-7751
Abstract
Scholars of supportive communication are primarily concerned with how variations in the quality of enacted support affect individual and relational health and well-being. But who gets to determine what counts as enacted support? There is a large degree of operational heterogeneity for what gets called enacted support, but little attention has been afforded to the issue of whether these assessments are substitutable. In two studies we use self-reports, conversational partner-reports, and third-party ratings of two quintessential behavioral support indicators, namely, listening and immediacy. Using a multitrait-multimethod (MTMM) design, Study 1 found (1) little association between the enacted support assessments and (2) a high degree of common method variance. A second study found moderate-to-high degrees of effective reliability (i.e., consistency of judgments within a set of judgments, or mean judgments) for enacted support evaluations from the perspective of unacquainted and untrained third-party judges. In general, our data provide cautionary evidence that when scholars examine evaluations of enacted support, perspective matters and might ultimately contribute differently to well-being and health.
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