Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right
Our research posits that decision-making is particularly distressing for individuals with high assessment tendencies. Assessment involves truth concerns about making the "right" decision. We hypothesize that people with high assessment experience greater distress during decision-making bec...
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sg-ntu-dr.10356-1393302023-05-19T07:31:18Z Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right Chen, Charlene Yijun Rossignac-Milon, Maya Higgins, Edward Tory Nanyang Business School Social sciences::Psychology Decision-making Distress Our research posits that decision-making is particularly distressing for individuals with high assessment tendencies. Assessment involves truth concerns about making the "right" decision. We hypothesize that people with high assessment experience greater distress during decision-making because of their concerns about making a wrong decision. In four studies of chronic assessment conducted across four different decision contexts, we found assessment to be positively associated with distress, with this relation being mediated by concerns with being wrong. A meta-analysis of these results provided support for the robustness of this positive association. Finally, a fifth experimental study that induced assessment found the same association with distress. Moreover, an implicit measure of truth concerns mediated this positive association. Given the prevalence of decision-making activities in everyday life, our findings about how truth concerns can cause distress have important implications for the psychological well-being of assessment-oriented individuals. 2020-05-19T02:09:36Z 2020-05-19T02:09:36Z 2018 Journal Article Chen, C. Y., Rossignac-Milon, M., & Higgins, E. T. (2018). Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors’ need to be right. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 115(4), 743-761. doi:10.1037/pspp0000181 0022-3514 https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139330 10.1037/pspp0000181 29431459 2-s2.0-85049284882 4 115 743 761 en Journal of Personality and Social Psychology © 2018 American Psychological Association. All rights reserved. |
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Social sciences::Psychology Decision-making Distress Chen, Charlene Yijun Rossignac-Milon, Maya Higgins, Edward Tory Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
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Our research posits that decision-making is particularly distressing for individuals with high assessment tendencies. Assessment involves truth concerns about making the "right" decision. We hypothesize that people with high assessment experience greater distress during decision-making because of their concerns about making a wrong decision. In four studies of chronic assessment conducted across four different decision contexts, we found assessment to be positively associated with distress, with this relation being mediated by concerns with being wrong. A meta-analysis of these results provided support for the robustness of this positive association. Finally, a fifth experimental study that induced assessment found the same association with distress. Moreover, an implicit measure of truth concerns mediated this positive association. Given the prevalence of decision-making activities in everyday life, our findings about how truth concerns can cause distress have important implications for the psychological well-being of assessment-oriented individuals. |
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Nanyang Business School |
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Nanyang Business School Chen, Charlene Yijun Rossignac-Milon, Maya Higgins, Edward Tory |
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Article |
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Chen, Charlene Yijun Rossignac-Milon, Maya Higgins, Edward Tory |
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Chen, Charlene Yijun |
title |
Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
title_short |
Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
title_full |
Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
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Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
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Feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
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feeling distressed from making decisions : assessors' need to be right |
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2020 |
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https://hdl.handle.net/10356/139330 |
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1772828528934387712 |