Effects of Cognitive Complexity on the Perceived Importance of Communication Skills in Friends
- 1 April 1990
- journal article
- research article
- Published by SAGE Publications in Communication Research
- Vol. 17 (2), 165-182
- https://doi.org/10.1177/009365090017002002
Abstract
This study assessed individual differences in the value that college students placed on communication skills exhibited by same-sex peers. Participants (N = 410) rated items tapping eight different communication skills for their importance in same-sex relationships. The skills included ego support, conflict management, comforting, referential ability, conversational skill, regulative skill, narrative ability, and persuasive skill. Interpersonal cognitive complexity was assessed through Crockett's (1965) Role Category Questionnaire. Affectively oriented communication skills such as ego support and comforting were rated as more important than nonaffectively oriented skills such as narrative and persuasive abilities. However, type of communication skill interacted with cognitive complexity such that complex participants rated affectively oriented skills as more important than noncomplex participants did, whereas noncomplex participants rated nonaffectively oriented skills as more important than complex participants did. These results suggest that persons differing in cognitive complexity conceive of the friendship relation in qualitatively different ways.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- More evidence that cognitive complexity isnotloquacity: A reply to Beatty and PayneCommunication Quarterly, 1987
- Strategies for ending relationships: Two studiesWestern Journal of Speech Communication, 1982
- A typology of disengagement strategies and an examination of the role intimacy, reactions to inequity and relational problems play in strategy selectionCommunication Monographs, 1982
- Attribution‐based strategies for initiating and terminating friendshipsCommunication Quarterly, 1982
- A Developmental Exploration of Friendship Functions in WomenPsychology of Women Quarterly, 1981
- IS COGNITIVE COMPLEXITY LOQUACITY? A REPLY TO POWERS, JORDAN, AND STREETHuman Communication Research, 1981
- The content of informal conversations as a function of interactants' interpersonal cognitive complexityCommunication Monographs, 1979
- SELF-DISCLOSURE AS A RELATIONSHIP DISENGAGEMENT STRATEGY: AN EXPLORATORY INVESTIGATIONHuman Communication Research, 1979
- Norms affecting self-disclosure in men and women.Journal of Consulting and Clinical Psychology, 1976
- Attitude toward the disclosure of self‐attributions and the complexity of interpersonal constructsSpeech Monographs, 1974