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Journal ArticleDOI

Influence of nonprofessional counselors' physical attractiveness and sex on perceptions of counselor behavior.

Thomas F. Cash, +1 more
- 01 Jul 1978 - 
- Vol. 25, Iss: 4, pp 336-342
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This article is published in Journal of Counseling Psychology.The article was published on 1978-07-01. It has received 52 citations till now. The article focuses on the topics: Interpersonal attraction & Social perception.

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What is beautiful is good, but…: A meta-analytic review of research on the physical attractiveness stereotype.

TL;DR: The authors showed that the physical attractiveness stereotype established by studies of person perception is not as strong or general as suggested by the often-used summary phrase what is beautiful is good, and that the average magnitude of this beauty-is-good effect was moderate, and the strength of the effect varied considerably from study to study Consistent with their implicit personality theory framework, a substantial portion of this variation was explained by the specific content of the inferences that subjects were asked to make.
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Joan McKay versus John McKay: Do gender stereotypes bias evaluations?

TL;DR: Etude meta-analytique des recherches ayant utilise le paradigme experimental de Goldberg (1968), dans le but d'un examen critique des conclusions sur l'evaluation plus favorable, chez les femmes, des auteurs de sexe masculin this paper.
Journal ArticleDOI

Beauty as Status

TL;DR: In this article, a theoretical explanation for these phenomena links attractiveness effects to other cases of status generalization such as those produced by race or sex, and a test of the proposed explanation shows that attractiveness produces predicted differences in both general and specific expectations.
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Persuasion and healing

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Dimensions of therapist response as causal factors in therapeutic change.

TL;DR: In this article, a preliminary attempt to connect cause and effect in the therapy process is made, based on the theory that therapeutic personality change occurs in proportion to the degree that the client experiences certain qualities in his therapist's response to him.
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