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Social behavior and off-target verbosity in elderly people.

Author(s): Pushkar D, Basevitz P, Arbuckle T, Nohara-LeClair M, Lapidus S, Peled M

Psychol Aging. 2000 Jun;15(2):361-74 Authors: Pushkar D, Basevitz P, Arbuckle T, Nohara-LeClair M, Lapidus S, Peled M

Article GUID: 10879589


Title:Social behavior and off-target verbosity in elderly people.
Authors:Pushkar DBasevitz PArbuckle TNohara-LeClair MLapidus SPeled M
Link:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/10879589?dopt=Abstract
Category:Psychol Aging
PMID:10879589
Dept Affiliation: PSYCHOLOGY
1 The Centre for Research in Human Development and Psychology Department, Concordia University, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. pushkar@vax2.concordia.ca

Description:

Social behavior and off-target verbosity in elderly people.

Psychol Aging. 2000 Jun;15(2):361-74

Authors: Pushkar D, Basevitz P, Arbuckle T, Nohara-LeClair M, Lapidus S, Peled M

Abstract

This study investigated social behavior in older adults with varying levels of off-target verbosity (OTV). After screening 455 adults in Phase 1, 198 individuals were selected to participate in both a get-acquainted conversation and an experimental cues situation and to complete social and cognitive measures. Higher OTV participants had lower cognitive inhibitory scores, talked more, were less interested in their partners, and focused more on themselves. Their conversational partners were less satisfied. Age and cognitive functioning were not related to OTV scores or conversational style for low- and mid-range participants. Although high-OTV individuals talked less when exposed to social cues signalling boredom, they spoke more relative to other participants. Self-reported social behavior had little relation with OTV and conversational style, but higher OTV individuals were less accurate in judging videotaped social interactions. Gender differences in conversational behavior are also discussed.

PMID: 10879589 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]