Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries
This article investigated the dimensionality, measurement invariance, and cross-cultural variations of social desirability. A total of 3,471 university students from 20 countries completed an adapted version of the Marlowe–Crowne scale. A two-dimensional structure was revealed in the pooled sample,...
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sg-smu-ink.lkcsb_research-53622020-01-14T13:49:16Z Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries HE, Jia van de Vijver, F.J. Espinosa, A.D. Abubakar, A. Dimitrova, R. Adams, B.G. REB, Jochen SIM, Samantha This article investigated the dimensionality, measurement invariance, and cross-cultural variations of social desirability. A total of 3,471 university students from 20 countries completed an adapted version of the Marlowe–Crowne scale. A two-dimensional structure was revealed in the pooled sample, distinguishing enhancement (endorsement of positive self-description) and denial (rejection of negative self-description). The factor structure was supported in most countries; medium-sized item bias was found in two denial items. In a multilevel analysis, we found that (a) there was more cross-cultural variation in denial than enhancement; (b) females tended to score higher on enhancement whereas males tended to score higher on denial; (c) the Human Development Index, an indicator of country socioeconomic development, was the best (negative) predictor of denial; and (d) both enhancement and denial seemed to be associated with country-level values and personality pertinent to “fitting in.” We conclude that social desirability has a positive and a negative impression management dimension that are meaningfully associated with country-level characteristics, and we argue that social desirability is better interpreted as culturally regulated response amplification. 2015-07-01T07:00:00Z text application/pdf https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4363 info:doi/10.1177/1069397114552781 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5362/viewcontent/SociallyDesirableResponding_2015.pdf http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/ Research Collection Lee Kong Chian School Of Business eng Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University social desirability cultures values personality multilevel analysis Multicultural Psychology Organizational Behavior and Theory |
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social desirability cultures values personality multilevel analysis Multicultural Psychology Organizational Behavior and Theory HE, Jia van de Vijver, F.J. Espinosa, A.D. Abubakar, A. Dimitrova, R. Adams, B.G. REB, Jochen SIM, Samantha Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
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This article investigated the dimensionality, measurement invariance, and cross-cultural variations of social desirability. A total of 3,471 university students from 20 countries completed an adapted version of the Marlowe–Crowne scale. A two-dimensional structure was revealed in the pooled sample, distinguishing enhancement (endorsement of positive self-description) and denial (rejection of negative self-description). The factor structure was supported in most countries; medium-sized item bias was found in two denial items. In a multilevel analysis, we found that (a) there was more cross-cultural variation in denial than enhancement; (b) females tended to score higher on enhancement whereas males tended to score higher on denial; (c) the Human Development Index, an indicator of country socioeconomic development, was the best (negative) predictor of denial; and (d) both enhancement and denial seemed to be associated with country-level values and personality pertinent to “fitting in.” We conclude that social desirability has a positive and a negative impression management dimension that are meaningfully associated with country-level characteristics, and we argue that social desirability is better interpreted as culturally regulated response amplification. |
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HE, Jia van de Vijver, F.J. Espinosa, A.D. Abubakar, A. Dimitrova, R. Adams, B.G. REB, Jochen SIM, Samantha |
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HE, Jia van de Vijver, F.J. Espinosa, A.D. Abubakar, A. Dimitrova, R. Adams, B.G. REB, Jochen SIM, Samantha |
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HE, Jia |
title |
Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
title_short |
Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
title_full |
Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
title_fullStr |
Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
title_full_unstemmed |
Socially desirable responding: Enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
title_sort |
socially desirable responding: enhancement and denial in 20 countries |
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Institutional Knowledge at Singapore Management University |
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2015 |
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https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/lkcsb_research/4363 https://ink.library.smu.edu.sg/context/lkcsb_research/article/5362/viewcontent/SociallyDesirableResponding_2015.pdf |
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