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Nonverbal behavior of the Type A individual

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Abstract

Forty-one health professional students were videotaped during three consecutive conditions: a 5-min wait for a tardy interviewer, the structured interview for determining the Type A behavior pattern, and a 5-min relaxation period. Afterward, subjects were classified as Type A or B based on audiotapes of the interview. The total amount of activity and the frequency or duration of Type A behaviors were compared between Type A and Type B subjects. In all three experimental conditions, Type A subjects moved their arms more than Type B subjects. During both the waiting and the relaxation periods, Type A subjects sat still less and spent more time exploring than did Type B subjects. During the interview, Type A subjects gestured more frequently than Type B subjects. Nonverbal behaviors correctly identified behavior pattern in 71% of the subjects. The addition of nonverbal behaviors improved the discrimination of behavior pattern above that obtained from verbal behavior alone. The greater activity, restlessness, exploratory behavior, and gestures of Type A persons are consistent with the two major etiologies proposed for the Type A behavior pattern.

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This research was supported by NHLBI Grants 5T32 HL07328 (JRH) and 5K04 HL00287 and 1R01H24635 (DRJ).

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Hughes, J.R., Jacobs, D.R., Schucker, B. et al. Nonverbal behavior of the Type A individual. J Behav Med 6, 279–289 (1983). https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01315114

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  • DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/BF01315114

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