Cj. Lutz et B. Lakey, How people make support judgments: Individual differences in the traits used to infer supportiveness in others, J PERS SOC, 81(6), 2001, pp. 1070-1079
Social support and other social judgments are composed of several distinct
components, of which relationship effects are an important part. With regar
d to support judgments, relationship effects refer to the fact that when ju
dging the same targets, people differ systematically in whom they see as su
pportive. One explanation for this effect is that people differ in how they
combine information about targets to judge supportiveness. Participants ra
ted the supportiveness of hypothetical targets and targets from their own s
ocial networks. Multilevel modeling identified the traits participants used
to make support judgments. There were significant differences in the exten
t to which participants used different target personality traits to judge s
upportiveness. In addition, participant neuroticism predicted the extent to
which participants used target neuroticism and agreeableness to judge supp
ortiveness.