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Assessment, enhancement, and verification determinants of the self-evaluation process

Assessment, enhancement, and verification determinants of the self-evaluation process
Assessment, enhancement, and verification determinants of the self-evaluation process
The 3 major self-evaluation motives were compared: self-assessment (people pursue accurate self-knowledge), self-enhancement (people pursue favorable self-knowledge), and self-verification (people pursue highly certain self-knowledge). Ss considered the possession of personality traits that were either positive or negative and either central or peripheral by asking themselves questions that varied in diagnosticity (the extent to which the questions could discriminate between a trait and its alternative) and in confirmation value (the extent to which the questions confirmed possession of a trait). Ss selected higher diagnosticity questions when evaluating themselves on central positive rather than central negative traits and confirmed possession of their central positive rather than central negative traits. The self-enhancement motive emerged as the most powerful determinant of the self-evaluation process, followed by the self-verification motive.
self, self-evaluation, self-enhancement
0022-3514
317–338
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2
Sedikides, Constantine
9d45e66d-75bb-44de-87d7-21fd553812c2

Sedikides, Constantine (1993) Assessment, enhancement, and verification determinants of the self-evaluation process. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 65 (2), 317–338.

Record type: Article

Abstract

The 3 major self-evaluation motives were compared: self-assessment (people pursue accurate self-knowledge), self-enhancement (people pursue favorable self-knowledge), and self-verification (people pursue highly certain self-knowledge). Ss considered the possession of personality traits that were either positive or negative and either central or peripheral by asking themselves questions that varied in diagnosticity (the extent to which the questions could discriminate between a trait and its alternative) and in confirmation value (the extent to which the questions confirmed possession of a trait). Ss selected higher diagnosticity questions when evaluating themselves on central positive rather than central negative traits and confirmed possession of their central positive rather than central negative traits. The self-enhancement motive emerged as the most powerful determinant of the self-evaluation process, followed by the self-verification motive.

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More information

Published date: 15 June 1993
Keywords: self, self-evaluation, self-enhancement

Identifiers

Local EPrints ID: 510988
URI: http://eprints.soton.ac.uk/id/eprint/510988
ISSN: 0022-3514
PURE UUID: 9ceb19bb-dfc9-4516-98dd-e66e36f249d7
ORCID for Constantine Sedikides: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4036-889X

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Date deposited: 28 Apr 2026 16:55
Last modified: 29 Apr 2026 01:37

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