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Conceptualizing and Measuring Global Interpersonal Mistrust-Trust
100
Citations
42
References
2000
Year
Global Interpersonal MistrustPsychosocial DeterminantSocial PsychologyEmpathySocial InfluenceSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyNegative Cognitive OrientationSocial IdentityTrustApplied Social PsychologySocial CognitionTrust MetricInterpersonal CommunicationGlobal Interpersonal Mistrust-trustUnreliable PeopleTrust ManagementArtsSelf-assessment
Global interpersonal mistrust is conceptualized as a general mistrust of the motives of others in situations related to one's well-being: a general tendency to view others as mean, selfish, malevolent, or unreliable people who are, thus, not to be depended on to treat one well. The authors developed an 18-item unidimensional self-report inventory measuring interpersonal mistrust as a negative cognitive orientation toward others. The measure comprises items describing perceptions of specific hypothetical interpersonal situations rather than items asking respondents to describe their own general behavior. The measure was reliable and evidenced construct validity in a heterogeneous sample of Australians.
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