Department of Psychology, University of Koblenz-Landau.
Department of Psychology, University of Copenhagen.
J Pers Soc Psychol. 2020 Jan;118(1):172-198. doi: 10.1037/pspp0000222. Epub 2018 Oct 15.
A recurrent observation in personality judgments is that individuals' ratings of others' personalities are positively linked to their self-description, and that such "assumed similarity" effects appear to be trait-specific. However, the extent of and explanations for assumed similarity have been addressed only insufficiently. To close this gap, we first provide a meta-analytic summary of evidence on assumed similarity of basic personality traits. More importantly, we then critically test different theoretical accounts of assumed similarity (i.e., lack of information, relation to personal values, and known/spurious similarity) in nine studies. Specifically, we investigated assumed similarity of the HEXACO personality traits among strangers, using tailored experimental tests tackling the different theoretical accounts. Across studies, we consistently found the strongest assumed similarity effects for those traits being most strongly linked to personal values: Honesty-Humility and (albeit somewhat weaker) Openness to Experience. For the remaining traits, no consistent evidence for assumed similarity occurred, even when raters had very limited information about the target person. This contradicts that assumed similarity reflects a lack-of-information effect. In turn, the findings could also neither be accounted for by actual similarity, nor by a shared group membership (i.e., spurious similarity) between rater and target. Overall, our studies support the idea that assumed similarity of basic traits is closely tied to personal values and suggest that this finding is attributable to the high personal relevance of value-related traits. This implies that assumed similarity reflects the assumption that others share basic parts of one's identity, even if these others are complete strangers. (PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2019 APA, all rights reserved).
人格判断中一个反复出现的现象是,个体对他人人格的评价与他们对自己的描述呈正相关,而这种“假定相似性”效应似乎是特质特异性的。然而,假定相似性的程度和解释仅得到了不足的探讨。为了弥补这一差距,我们首先对基本人格特质假定相似性的证据进行了元分析总结。更重要的是,然后我们在九个研究中批判性地检验了假定相似性的不同理论解释(即信息缺乏、与个人价值观的关系以及已知/虚假相似性)。具体来说,我们使用专门的实验测试,在陌生人之间调查了 HEXACO 人格特质的假定相似性,以解决不同的理论解释。在所有研究中,我们一致发现,与个人价值观联系最紧密的特质(即诚实-谦逊和(尽管稍弱一些)开放性)具有最强的假定相似性效应。对于其余的特质,即使评分者对目标人物的了解非常有限,也没有一致的假定相似性证据。这与假定相似性反映信息缺乏效应的观点相矛盾。反过来,这些发现也不能用实际相似性或评分者和目标之间的共同群体成员身份(即虚假相似性)来解释。总的来说,我们的研究支持了基本特质的假定相似性与个人价值观密切相关的观点,并表明这一发现归因于与价值观相关的特质对个人具有高度的相关性。这意味着假定相似性反映了这样一种假设,即即使是完全陌生的人,他人也分享了一个人基本的身份认同。(PsycINFO 数据库记录(c)2019 APA,保留所有权利)。