Perceiving Others Through a Screen: Are First Impressions of Personality Accurate and Normative via Videoconferencing?

Publication date: Jul 30, 2024

The use of videoconferencing platforms has globally risen to facilitate face-to-face communication since the onset of COVID-19. But how do our first impressions of people we meet on Zoom compare to in-person interactions? Specifically, do we view others’ personalities as accurately (in line with their unique personality) and normatively (in line with the average, desirable personality) as in-person? Across two Zoom first-impression round-robin studies (exploratory study: N = 567, Dyads = 3,053; preregistered replication: N = 371, Dyads = 1,961), which we compared to an in-person round-robin study (N = 306; Dyads = 1,682), people viewed others’ personalities as accurately and as normatively on Zoom as in-person. Moreover, people better liked interaction partners they viewed more accurately and normatively. However, in interactions of poorer audio-video quality, people viewed others less accurately, less normatively, and liked them less. Overall, through a screen, our impressions of others are as accurate and normative as face-to-face, but it depends on the quality of that screen.

Concepts Keywords
Covid first impressions
Personality liking
Poorer online interactions
Videoconferencing personality accuracy
videoconferencing platforms

Semantics

Type Source Name
disease MESH COVID-19
disease IDO replication
drug DRUGBANK Tropicamide
disease IDO quality

Original Article

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