Dispositional Self-Evaluation Motives and Accuracy of Self-Knowledge
Abstrakt
Aim
This laboratory study was the first to investigate the links between four cardinal dispositional self-evaluation motives (self-motives) and accuracy of self-knowledge.
Method. Participants were 178 people (i.e., 89 dyads of acquaintances) at a mean age of 24 years. The used measures were the Self-Motive Items (Gregg, Hepper & Sedikides) and the personality Q-sort QOS (Miciuk).
Results
Accuracy of self-knowledge correlated most strongly and positively with the self-assessment motive. In turn, self-enhancement was a negative correlate of accuracy. Response surface analyses (RSAs) supported hypotheses about discrepancies inside pairs of self-motives being predictors of accurate self-knowledge. Most importantly, compared with the other three motives, the accuracy of self-knowledge was higher in participants who scored lower in self-enhancement. Self-motives and their interconnections explained 22% of accuracy of self-knowledge.
Conclusion
The dispositional motive of self-enhancement is negatively related to the accuracy of self-knowledge. Nonetheless, self-enhancing people can still achieve relatively high levels of accuracy as long as their self-enhancement is not stronger than the other three motives. In general, self-motives are important predictors of accuracy of self-knowledge.
Słowa kluczowe:
accuracy of self-knowledge, self-other agreement, self-enhancement, self-verification, self-assessment, self-improvement, Q-sort, response surface analysisBibliografia
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