Diener M B, Milich R
Department of Psychology, University of Kentucky, Lexington 40506, USA.
J Clin Child Psychol. 1997 Sep;26(3):256-65. doi: 10.1207/s15374424jccp2603_4.
Tested the hypothesis that inflated self-assessments offered by children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) serve a self-protective function. This was accomplished by examining the effects of positive feedback on self-perceptions and social interactions of boys with ADHD and comparison boys. Boys with ADHD and comparison boys, 8 to 11 years old, were paired in 60 dyads and interacted in two unstructured cooperative tasks. Following the first interaction, 1 boy in half of the dyads received positive feedback, supposedly from his partner, concerning his performance. Results indicated that following the first interaction, but prior to feedback, boys with ADHD had an overly positive view of how much their partner liked them. However, following the second interaction, boys with ADHD who received positive feedback actually showed a significant decrease in their self-perceptions, whereas comparison boys who received feedback showed an increase. These results are seen as supportive of the self-protective hypothesis that children with ADHD offer inflated self-perceptions to counter feelings of inadequacy. When presented with positive feedback, they are able to relax this defensive posture and offer more realistic self-assessments.
患有注意力缺陷多动障碍(ADHD)的儿童给出的夸大自我评估具有自我保护功能。这是通过研究积极反馈对患有ADHD的男孩和对照男孩的自我认知及社交互动的影响来实现的。8至11岁的患有ADHD的男孩和对照男孩被配对成60个二元组,并在两项非结构化合作任务中进行互动。在第一次互动之后,一半二元组中的1名男孩收到了关于其表现的积极反馈,据说是来自他的伙伴。结果表明,在第一次互动之后但在反馈之前,患有ADHD的男孩对其伙伴有多喜欢他们有过度积极的看法。然而,在第二次互动之后,收到积极反馈的患有ADHD的男孩实际上在自我认知上有显著下降,而收到反馈的对照男孩则有所增加。这些结果被视为支持了自我保护假设,即患有ADHD的儿童给出夸大的自我认知以应对不足感。当收到积极反馈时,他们能够放松这种防御姿态并给出更现实的自我评估。