Volume 27, Issue 2 pp. 237-243
Short Note

The effect of interviewer guise upon gender self-report responses as a function of interviewee's self-monitoring position

JOHN L. SMITH

Corresponding Author

JOHN L. SMITH

School of Health Sciences, University of Sunderland, U.K.

School of Health Sciences, University of Sunderland, Fleming Building, Wharncliffe Road, Sunderland SR2 3SD, U.K.Search for more papers by this author
NICKY J. BERRY

NICKY J. BERRY

School of Health Sciences, University of Sunderland, U.K.

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PAUL WHITELEY

PAUL WHITELEY

School of Health Sciences, University of Sunderland, U.K.

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Abstract

Female high and low self-monitors were interviewed by a female experimenter who adopted either an androgynous or a feminine guise. An analysis of responses scored for femininity yielded a significant interaction between self-monitoring and interviewer guise which, when subjected to further analysis, revealed a significant simple effect for high self-monitors but not for low self-monitors. High self-monitors scored significantly higher on femininity when with the feminine guise interviewer, but lower when with the androgynous guise interviewer. © 1997 John Wiley & Sons, Ltd.

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