Monday, December 15, 2025
ADVT 
Life

Anxious, Slow Talkers Often Rejected For Job

Darpan News Desk IANS, 02 Apr, 2015 02:18 PM
    You must exude warmth and be assertive during a job interview if you want to make a good impression, suggests a study.
     
    People who are anxious going into an interview often do not get hired, found the researchers.
     
    The study, published in Springer's Journal of Business and Psychology, found that organisations often reject potential candidates with interview jitters who are otherwise quite capable of doing the job.
     
    Amanda Feiler and Deborah Powell from the University of Guelph, Canada, set out to establish why anxious job candidates receive lower performance ratings during an interview.
     
    They videotaped and transcribed the mock job interviews of 125 undergraduate students from a Canadian university.
     
    Ratings were obtained from 18 interviewers who gauged the interviewees' levels of anxiety and performance.
     
    Trained raters also assessed how the interviewees expressed their anxiety through specific mannerisms, cues and traits. This could be adjusting clothing, fidgeting or averting their gaze.
     
    Feiler and Powell found that the speed at which someone talks is the only cue that both interviewers and interviewees rate as a sign of nervousness or not.
     
    The fewer words per minute people speak, the more nervous they are perceived to be.
     
    Also, anxious prospective job candidates are often rated as being less assertive and exuding less interpersonal warmth.
     
    This often leads to a rejection from interviewers.
     
    "Overall, the results indicated that interviewees should focus less on their nervous tics and more on the broader impressions that they convey," said Feiler.
     
    "Anxious interviewees may want to focus on how assertive and interpersonally warm they appear to interviewers," Feiler added.

    MORE Life ARTICLES

    'Sexting' initiates sexual behaviour among teenagers

    'Sexting' initiates sexual behaviour among teenagers
    Sending sexually explicit images via phones or tablets is now a normal activity among teenagers, leading to increased sexual behaviour among them, found a study....

    'Sexting' initiates sexual behaviour among teenagers

    Man kills friend for 'poking' his girlfriend on Facebook

    Man kills friend for 'poking' his girlfriend on Facebook
    Scott Humphrey, 27, punched 29-year-old Richard Rovetto to death in a cab on their way back from a boys' night out, wtsp.com reported....

    Man kills friend for 'poking' his girlfriend on Facebook

    Women more likely to watch same-sex porn

    Women more likely to watch same-sex porn
    Women are more likely to watch same-sex porn videos than heterosexual porn videos, says an interesting study, adding that women watch more porn than men...

    Women more likely to watch same-sex porn

    Sense of humour changes with age

    Sense of humour changes with age
    Things that you find funny today may not amuse you when you grow older, a study suggests, indicating that with age, our sense of humour also changes....

    Sense of humour changes with age

    Men Of All Ages Fantasise About 20-something Females

    Men Of All Ages Fantasise About 20-something Females
    Men - whether aged 13, 30 or more - fantasise about women who are in their 20s, according to a latest survey.

    Men Of All Ages Fantasise About 20-something Females

    How curiosity drives learning

    How curiosity drives learning
    It is well known that curiosity makes learning easier and a study led by an Indian-origin researcher has now found what happens in our brains when our curiosity is piqued.....

    How curiosity drives learning