Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals

Self-appraisals of performance are traditionally lenient and inaccurate, hampering their practical utility in applied settings. The purpose of the current study is to examine the underlying processes, namely self-deception and impression management, which contribute to this leniency and inaccuracy....

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Main Author: Williams, Joshua Holbrook
Other Authors: Psychology
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: Virginia Tech 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44336
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222008-063252/
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spelling ndltd-VTETD-oai-vtechworks.lib.vt.edu-10919-443362021-06-22T05:29:09Z Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals Williams, Joshua Holbrook Psychology self-appraisals impression management context self-monitoring self-deception LD5655.V855 1996.W5548 Self-appraisals of performance are traditionally lenient and inaccurate, hampering their practical utility in applied settings. The purpose of the current study is to examine the underlying processes, namely self-deception and impression management, which contribute to this leniency and inaccuracy. Because self-ratings are inflated regardless of environmental affordances, self-deception is said to occur. However, when environmental contingencies that reward positive self-evaluations exist, leniency and inaccuracy increases. This suggests that impression management processes also contribute to inflated and inaccurate self-appraisals. The environmental affordances associated with self-ratings are often couched in terms of reward and nonreward purposes of appraisal (POA). The occurrence of leniency and inaccuracy in reward purposes of appraisal are potentially moderated by personality variables such as self-monitoring (SM). Consequently, POA and SM were examined in the current study. Participants completed a model building task in both non-reward and reward POAs, with self-appraisals following each task. They also completed surveys which assessed their levels of self-monitoring, self-deception, and impression management. It was predicted that self-rated performance would be lenient across conditions, reflecting self-deception. It was further predicted that participants would be more lenient and less accurate in the reward POA than in the non-reward POA, reflecting impression management processes. This would suggest an additive effect in which impression management leads to increased inflation beyond the level of inflation attributed to self-deception. Finally, it was predicted that self-rating leniency in the reward POA would be moderated by self-monitoring, such that only high self-monitors would be significantly more lenient in the reward POA in terms of their self-rated performance. Repeated measure ANOVAS using four accuracy and four leniency measures yielded limited support for the hypotheses. Implications for future research are discussed. Master of Science 2014-03-14T21:43:11Z 2014-03-14T21:43:11Z 1996 2008-08-22 2008-08-22 2008-08-22 Thesis Text etd-08222008-063252 http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44336 http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222008-063252/ en OCLC# 37002213 LD5655.V855_1996.W5548.pdf In Copyright http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC/1.0/ vii, 79 leaves BTD application/pdf application/pdf Virginia Tech
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic self-appraisals
impression management context
self-monitoring
self-deception
LD5655.V855 1996.W5548
spellingShingle self-appraisals
impression management context
self-monitoring
self-deception
LD5655.V855 1996.W5548
Williams, Joshua Holbrook
Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
description Self-appraisals of performance are traditionally lenient and inaccurate, hampering their practical utility in applied settings. The purpose of the current study is to examine the underlying processes, namely self-deception and impression management, which contribute to this leniency and inaccuracy. Because self-ratings are inflated regardless of environmental affordances, self-deception is said to occur. However, when environmental contingencies that reward positive self-evaluations exist, leniency and inaccuracy increases. This suggests that impression management processes also contribute to inflated and inaccurate self-appraisals. The environmental affordances associated with self-ratings are often couched in terms of reward and nonreward purposes of appraisal (POA). The occurrence of leniency and inaccuracy in reward purposes of appraisal are potentially moderated by personality variables such as self-monitoring (SM). Consequently, POA and SM were examined in the current study. Participants completed a model building task in both non-reward and reward POAs, with self-appraisals following each task. They also completed surveys which assessed their levels of self-monitoring, self-deception, and impression management. It was predicted that self-rated performance would be lenient across conditions, reflecting self-deception. It was further predicted that participants would be more lenient and less accurate in the reward POA than in the non-reward POA, reflecting impression management processes. This would suggest an additive effect in which impression management leads to increased inflation beyond the level of inflation attributed to self-deception. Finally, it was predicted that self-rating leniency in the reward POA would be moderated by self-monitoring, such that only high self-monitors would be significantly more lenient in the reward POA in terms of their self-rated performance. Repeated measure ANOVAS using four accuracy and four leniency measures yielded limited support for the hypotheses. Implications for future research are discussed. === Master of Science
author2 Psychology
author_facet Psychology
Williams, Joshua Holbrook
author Williams, Joshua Holbrook
author_sort Williams, Joshua Holbrook
title Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
title_short Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
title_full Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
title_fullStr Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
title_full_unstemmed Examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
title_sort examining the impact of impression management context and self-monitoring on the leniency and accuracy of self-appraisals
publisher Virginia Tech
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/10919/44336
http://scholar.lib.vt.edu/theses/available/etd-08222008-063252/
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