Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes

Personality measures were predicted to be susceptible to response distortion above and beyond volitional strategies of impression management. A 2 (Instruction Set) x 2 (Personality Feedback) x 2 (Mortality Salience) factorial design addressed social desirability biases in responding to personality...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Lemmond, Gregory G.
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34692
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222001-123051/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-346922020-09-26T05:36:33Z Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes Lemmond, Gregory G. Psychology Hauenstein, Neil M. A. Donovan, John J. Axsom, Danny K. Unconscious Personality Faking Terror Management Personality measures were predicted to be susceptible to response distortion above and beyond volitional strategies of impression management. A 2 (Instruction Set) x 2 (Personality Feedback) x 2 (Mortality Salience) factorial design addressed social desirability biases in responding to personality measures. There were significant changes in all measures due to volitional (Fake Good) strategies. Thoughts of death lead to decreased distortion, but only on the measures sensitive to social desirability bias. Mortality Salience interacted with personality feedback, such that test responses were distorted in the opposite direction of the feedback, supporting Optimal Distinctiveness Theory. A significant interaction between Mortality Salience and Instruction Set suggests further attention be given to unconscious distortion in personality scores and that Terror Management Theory incorporate further research on individual differences. Master of Science 2014-03-14T20:43:58Z 2014-03-14T20:43:58Z 2001-05-08 2001-08-22 2002-08-27 2001-08-27 Thesis etd-08222001-123051 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34692 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222001-123051/ NonvolitionalFakingThesisGL.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Unconscious
Personality
Faking
Terror Management
spellingShingle Unconscious
Personality
Faking
Terror Management
Lemmond, Gregory G.
Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
description Personality measures were predicted to be susceptible to response distortion above and beyond volitional strategies of impression management. A 2 (Instruction Set) x 2 (Personality Feedback) x 2 (Mortality Salience) factorial design addressed social desirability biases in responding to personality measures. There were significant changes in all measures due to volitional (Fake Good) strategies. Thoughts of death lead to decreased distortion, but only on the measures sensitive to social desirability bias. Mortality Salience interacted with personality feedback, such that test responses were distorted in the opposite direction of the feedback, supporting Optimal Distinctiveness Theory. A significant interaction between Mortality Salience and Instruction Set suggests further attention be given to unconscious distortion in personality scores and that Terror Management Theory incorporate further research on individual differences. === Master of Science
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Lemmond, Gregory G.
author Lemmond, Gregory G.
author_sort Lemmond, Gregory G.
title Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
title_short Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
title_full Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
title_fullStr Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
title_full_unstemmed Nonvolitional Faking on a Personality Measure: Testing the Influence of Unconscious Processes
title_sort nonvolitional faking on a personality measure: testing the influence of unconscious processes
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/34692
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222001-123051/
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