Počet záznamů: 1
How people see others is different from how people see themselves: A replicable pattern across cultures
- 1.0349768 - PSÚ 2011 RIV US eng J - Článek v odborném periodiku
Allik, J. - Realo, A. - Mottus, R. - Borkenau, P. - Kuppens, P. - Hřebíčková, Martina
How people see others is different from how people see themselves: A replicable pattern across cultures.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. Roč. 99, č. 5 (2010), s. 870-882. ISSN 0022-3514. E-ISSN 1939-1315
Grant CEP: GA ČR GAP407/10/2394
Výzkumný záměr: CEZ:AV0Z70250504
Klíčová slova: personality ratings * internal and external perspective * cross-cultural comparison * self-enhancement * the actor– observer hypothesis
Kód oboru RIV: AN - Psychologie
Impakt faktor: 5.205, rok: 2010
Consensus studies from 4 cultures—in Belgium, the Czech Republic, Estonia, and Germany—as well as secondary analyses of self- and observer-reported NEO PI-R data from 29 cultures suggest that there is a cross-culturally replicable pattern of difference between internal and external perspectives for the Big Five personality traits. As a rule, people think that they have more positive emotions and excitement seeking but much less assertiveness than it seems from the vantage point of an external observer. This cross-culturally replicable disparity between internal and external perspectives was not consistent with predictions based on the actor– observer hypothesis because the size of the disparity was unrelated to the visibility of personality traits. A relatively strong negative correlation (r=.53) between the average self-minus-observer profile and social desirability ratings suggests that people in most studied cultures view themselves less favorably than they are perceived by others.
Trvalý link: http://hdl.handle.net/11104/0189920
Název souboru Staženo Velikost Komentář Verze Přístup Allik Realo Mõttus et al JPSP2010.pdf 7 1.8 MB Vydavatelský postprint vyžádat
Počet záznamů: 1