Navigating the Noise: an Examination of the Relationship Between Introversion, Family Communication Patterns, Family Satisfaction, and Social Self-efficacy

File(s)
Date
2016-05-01Author
Nicolini, Kristine
Department
Communication
Advisor(s)
Nancy Burrell
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This study examines how introversion, family communication patterns (FCP), and modified communication behaviors relate to perceived levels of social self-efficacy and family satisfaction. Participants (N = 359) were undergraduate students at a large Midwestern urban university. The proposed causal model suggests conversation and conformity levels within a FCP impact whether families employ facilitative or inhibitive communication modification behaviors in interactions with an introverted family member. An Ordinary Least Squares (OLS) method of estimation was used to test the causal model through a comparison of the expected and actual correlation matrix. The results indicated the data were consistent with the proposed theoretical model. The coefficients were all statistically significant at the p
Subject
Family Communication
Family Communication Patterns
Family Satisfaction
Introversion
Social Self-efficacy
Temperament
Permanent Link
http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1793/90989Type
dissertation
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