Even though
our study participants ranked print as their top preference, it is important to note that participants were able to select multiple formats.
In the second,
study participants ranked five same - sex speakers from tallest to shortest after hearing recorded readings.
Not exact matches
The series of
studies led by Haas School of Business professor Laura Kay asked pairs of negotiators to
rank the effectiveness of their partners, then quizzed female
participants about the extent to which they employed social charm.
The
study also asked
participants to
rank others» photos based on four subjective elements: happiness, sadness, likability, and «interestingness.»
The
study participants also
ranked statements to measure their own internal motivation to act with prejudice; the statements included «I attempt to act in a non-prejudiced way toward black people because it's personally important to me» and «I believe using stereotypes about black people is OK.»
The
study, which involved 200,000 people from 53 countries, came to this conclusion by
ranking people's personality preferences and then comparing them.1
Participants were asked to think about the gender that most attracted them, then to choose and
rank that gender's top three attractive personality traits (from twenty - three given options.)
Participants in the
study were asked to
rank the extent to which they agreed with the sentiment «I believe that monogamy is essential in a relationship»; placing themselves on a scale of 1 (do not agree at all) to 7 (agree completely).
Every
participant in this
study either chose the same
ranking on this question from the beginning to the end of the
study, or increased in their agreement.
However, inconsistent participation from the beginning teacher
participants plagued the
study and may be a reason for the lowest
ranking.
The
study employed a 2 (framing: loss vs. foregone - gain) × 3 (social norm: control vs. average - norm vs.
rank - norm) between -
participants design.
These results are consistent with previous research which asked over 300
participants (200 newlyweds and over 100 undergraduates) in heterosexual relationships the traits they wanted in a spouse.2 Participants in that study also reported that they highly valued intelligence, ranking it 4th most important for both men and women behind traits such as warm, reliabl
participants (200 newlyweds and over 100 undergraduates) in heterosexual relationships the traits they wanted in a spouse.2
Participants in that study also reported that they highly valued intelligence, ranking it 4th most important for both men and women behind traits such as warm, reliabl
Participants in that
study also reported that they highly valued intelligence,
ranking it 4th most important for both men and women behind traits such as warm, reliable, and fair.