AI Article Synopsis

  • Self-enhancement bias is when people think they are better than they actually are, and it's been studied in two main ways: comparing themselves to others and how others see them.
  • Researchers have found two different theories that explain this bias, which has caused some confusion and arguments in the past.
  • A new approach breaks down how people see themselves into three parts, helping to clarify the issue and showing that self-enhancement can be both good and bad depending on the situation.

Article Abstract

Self-enhancement bias has been studied from 2 perspectives: L. Festinger's (1954) social comparison theory (self-enhancers perceive themselves more positively than they perceive others) and G. W. Allport's (1937) self-insight theory (self-enhancers perceive themselves more positively than they are perceived by others). These 2 perspectives are theoretically and empirically distinct, and the failure to recognize their differences has led to a protracted debate. A new interpersonal approach to self-enhancement decomposes self-perception into 3 components: perceiver effect, target effect, and unique self-perception. Both theoretical derivations and an illustrative study suggest that this resulting measure of self-enhancement is less confounded by unwanted components of interpersonal perception than previous social comparison and self-insight measures. Findings help reconcile conflicting views about whether self-enhancement is adaptive or maladaptive.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0033-295X.111.1.94DOI Listing

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