quiet-the-power-of-introverts-in-a-world-that-cant-stop-talking-susan-cain
920/929Negotiations,” Group Decision and Negotiation17, no. 1 (2008): 65–77.11. In her book Anger: Carol Tavris, Anger: TheMisunderstood Emotion (New York: Touchstone,1982).12. catharsis hypothesis is a myth: RussellGeen et al., “The Facilitation of Aggressionby Aggression: Evidence against the CatharsisHypothesis,” Journal of Personality andSocial Psychology 31, no. 4 (1975): 721–26.See also Tavris, Anger.13. people who use Botox: Carl Zimmer, “WhyDarwin Would Have Loved Botox,” Discover,October 15, 2009. See also Joshua IanDavis et al., “The Effects of BOTOX Injectionson Emotional Experience,” Emotion10, no. 3 (2010): 433–40.14. thirty-two pairs of introverts and extroverts:Matthew D. Lieberman and RobertRosenthal, “Why Introverts Can’t AlwaysTell Who Likes Them: Multitasking and
921/929Nonverbal Decoding,” Journal of Personalityand Social Psychology 80, no. 2 (2006):294–310.15. It requires a kind of mental multitasking:Gerald Matthews and Lisa Dorn, “Cognitiveand Attentional Processes in Personalityand Intelligence,” in InternationalHandbook of Personality and Intelligence, editedby Donald H. Saklofske and MosheZeidner (New York: Plenum, 1995),367–96.16. interpreting what the other person issaying: Lieberman and Rosenthal, “Why IntrovertsCan’t Always Tell Who LikesThem.”17. experiment by the developmental psychologistAvril Thorne: Avril Thorne,“The Press of Personality: A Study of ConversationsBetween Introverts and Extraverts,”Journal of Personality and Social Psychology53, no. 4 (1987): 718–26.
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921/929
Nonverbal Decoding,” Journal of Personality
and Social Psychology 80, no. 2 (2006):
294–310.
15. It requires a kind of mental multitasking:
Gerald Matthews and Lisa Dorn, “Cognitive
and Attentional Processes in Personality
and Intelligence,” in International
Handbook of Personality and Intelligence, edited
by Donald H. Saklofske and Moshe
Zeidner (New York: Plenum, 1995),
367–96.
16. interpreting what the other person is
saying: Lieberman and Rosenthal, “Why Introverts
Can’t Always Tell Who Likes
Them.”
17. experiment by the developmental psychologist
Avril Thorne: Avril Thorne,
“The Press of Personality: A Study of Conversations
Between Introverts and Extraverts,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
53, no. 4 (1987): 718–26.