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- Message-ID: <PSYCGRAD%93012616011576@ACADVM1.UOTTAWA.CA>
- Newsgroups: bit.listserv.psycgrad
- Date: Tue, 26 Jan 1993 14:58:46 -0800
- Sender: Psychology Graduate Students Discussion Group List
- <PSYCGRAD@UOTTAWA.BITNET>
- From: Tor Neilands <tbn@UTXVM.CC.UTEXAS.EDU>
- Subject: Re: Attractiveness
- Lines: 31
-
- >Does the matching hypothesis explain why people look
- >like their dogs? Are we copying our dogs' facial
- >expressions, or are they copying ours'? Or is it just
- >that dogs who don't look like their owners experience
- >less satisfaction with the relationship and run away?
- >:) :) :) :) Can you tell I'm in a goofy mood?
- > Jennifer at USC
-
- Harold Kelley would argue that it's P-O interchange (A P-D interchange in
- this case?) where the owner's behavior influences the dog's outcomes and
- thus the dog's behaviors are in turn affected, thereby influencing the
- owner again, and so on and so forth...:-)
-
- jokingly yours,
-
- Tor
-
- Tor Neilands Computation Center
- Systems Analyst University of Texas at Austin
- Statistical Services Group Internet: TBN@Utxvm.cc.utexas.edu
-
- ______________________________________________________________________
- "Academic politics is the most vicious and bitter form of politics,
- because the stakes are so low". --- Wallace Sayre
-
- "Two roads diverged in a yellow wood and I, I took the road less traveled
- by, and that has made all the difference". --- Robert Frost
- ______________________________________________________________________
- Disclaimer: All of the views expressed above are solely those of the
- author and not necessarily those of the University of Texas or the
- University of Texas Computation Center.
-