Americans Still Overestimate Social Class Mobility: A Pre-Registered Self-Replication.

Front Psychol

Yale School of Management, Yale University, New Haven CT, USA.

Published: November 2015

AI Article Synopsis

  • Kraus and Tan (2015) suggest that Americans overestimate social class mobility as a way to protect their self-image.
  • A replication study found similar results, confirming that this overestimation is greater when people consider those similar to them and is linked to higher perceived social class.
  • The findings support the idea that these overestimations stem from a belief in the promise of equal opportunities, and the discussion highlights the importance of pre-registered replications for validating research results.

Article Abstract

Kraus and Tan (2015) hypothesized that Americans tend to overestimate social class mobility in society, and do so because they seek to protect the self. This paper reports a pre-registered exact replication of Study 3 from this original paper and finds, consistent with the original study, that Americans substantially overestimate social class mobility, that people provide greater overestimates when made while thinking of similar others, and that high perceived social class is related to greater overestimates. The current results provide additional evidence consistent with the idea that people overestimate class mobility to protect their beliefs in the promise of equality of opportunity. Discussion considers the utility of pre-registered self-replications as one tool for encouraging replication efforts and assessing the robustness of effect sizes.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4637403PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01709DOI Listing

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