• Title of article

    Self-enhancement and belief perseverance

  • Author/Authors

    Guenther، نويسنده , , Corey L. and Alicke، نويسنده , , Mark D.، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    ماهنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    7
  • From page
    706
  • To page
    712
  • Abstract
    Belief perseverance—the tendency to make use of invalidated information—is one of social psychology’s most reliable phenomena. Virtually all of the explanations proffered for the effect, as well as the conditions that delimit it, involve the way people think about or explain the discredited feedback. But it seems reasonable to assume that the importance of the feedback for the actor’s self-image would also influence the tendency to persevere on invalidated feedback. From a self-enhancement perspective, one might ask: Why would people persist in negative self-beliefs, especially when the basis for those beliefs has been discredited? In the present study, actors and observers completed a word-identification task and were given bogus success or failure feedback. After success feedback was discredited, actors and observers persevered equally in beliefs about the actor’s abilities. However, following invalidation of failure feedback, actors provided significantly higher performance evaluations than observers, thus exhibiting less perseverance on the negative feedback. These results suggest that the motivation to maintain a relatively favorable self-image may attenuate perseverance when discredited feedback threatens an important aspect of the self-concept.
  • Keywords
    Self-enhancement , Belief perseverance , motivation , Self-perception , self-evaluation , Failure feedback , Task-importance
  • Journal title
    Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
  • Record number

    1958307