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  4. Disfluent Responses to Job Interview Questions and What They Entail

Disfluent Responses to Job Interview Questions and What They Entail

Author(s)
Brosy, Julie  
Institut de psychologie du travail et des organisations  
Bangerter, Adrian  
Chaire de psychologie du travail  
Mayor, Eric  
Chaire de psychologie du travail  
Date issued
2016
In
Discourse Processes, Taylor & Francis
Vol
53
From page
371
To page
391
Abstract
Conversation is governed by expectations of timely responding. Violations of these expectations are grounds for inference by other participants. These inferences may be at odds with identities respondents try to project. In job interviews, candidates’ responses are used to make hiring decisions. Candidates trade off between (1) delaying response initiation to search for an appropriate response at the risk of appearing inept and (2) responding quicker but less appropriately. In a corpus of job interviews, response delays predicted the probability of inappropriate initial responses and decreased hireability ratings, illustrating how unintended aspects of conversational delivery can entail social and institutional consequences beyond the conversation itself.
Publication type
journal article
Identifiers
https://libra.unine.ch/handle/20.500.14713/65431
DOI
10.1080/0163853X.2016.1150769
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Brosy_J.-Disfluent_responses-20170816.pdf

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