ScholarGate
Asistent
Latent structureSelf-presentation / personality

Self-Monitoring Scale

The Self-Monitoring Scale, introduced by Mark Snyder in 1974, measures the extent to which people observe and control their expressive behavior and self-presentation in response to situational and interpersonal cues. High self-monitors are sensitive to social context and skilled at adjusting how they come across, behaving like social chameleons whose conduct varies across situations; low self-monitors express their inner attitudes and dispositions more consistently regardless of audience. The original 25-item true/false scale was designed to be internally consistent and temporally stable, validated through laboratory and field studies of expressive control. The construct became influential in person-situation debates, attitude-behavior consistency, and research on impression management, persuasion, and relationships, although the scale's dimensionality and revisions have been the subject of ongoing discussion.

Otvoriť v MethodMindČoskoroPoužiť, porovnať, získať usmernenie
Nástroje a zdroje
Stiahnuť snímky
Učiť sa a objavovať
VideoČoskoro

Prečítať celú metódu

Len pre členov

Ak si chcete prečítať túto sekciu, prihláste sa s bezplatným účtom.

Prihlásiť sa

Mapa metód

Okolie príbuzných metód — vyberte uzol na preskúmanie.

Zdroje

  1. Snyder, M. (1974). Self-monitoring of expressive behavior. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 30(4), 526-537. DOI: 10.1037/h0037039

Ako citovať túto stránku

ScholarGate. (2026, June 23). Self-Monitoring Scale (SM). ScholarGate. https://scholargate.app/sk/social-psychology/self-monitoring-scale

Ktorá metóda?

Postavte túto metódu vedľa jej najbližších príbuzných a čítajte ich vedľa seba — knižnica vám knihy položí na stôl; voľba je na vás.

Porovnať vedľa seba

Odkazujú sem

ScholarGateSelf-Monitoring Scale (Self-Monitoring Scale (SM)). Získané 2026-06-24 z https://scholargate.app/sk/social-psychology/self-monitoring-scale · Dátová sada: https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.20539026