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Self-enhancement: Conceptualization and Assessment
Author(s) -
Joachim I. Krueger,
Patrick R. Heck,
Jens B. Asendorpf
Publication year - 2017
Publication title -
collabra. psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.444
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2474-7394
DOI - 10.1525/collabra.91
Subject(s) - self enhancement , conceptualization , psychology , trait , social psychology , excellence , personality , perception , self , cognitive psychology , computer science , artificial intelligence , epistemology , philosophy , neuroscience , programming language
Self-enhancement bias is conventionally construed as an unwarranted social comparison in social psychology and a misperception of social reality in personality psychology. Researchers in both fields rely heavily on discrepancy scores to represent self-enhancement and fail to distinguish between a general tendency or bias to self-enhance and a self-enhancement error, or 'false' perception of own excellence. We critically review prominent discrepancy measures and then propose a decision-theoretic alternative that [a] mitigates confounds between self-positivity and self-superiority, [b] separates error from bias, and [c] discourages reliance on measures that reify self-enhancement as a stable personality trait. To evaluate our hypotheses, we re-analyze data collected in our laboratory and perform a series of simulation studies. We share these materials with interested researchers

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