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Can People With Higher Versus Lower Scores on Impression Management or Self-Monitoring Be Identified Through Different Traces Under Faking?
Röhner, Jessica; Thoss, Philipp; Uziel, Liad (2024): Can People With Higher Versus Lower Scores on Impression Management or Self-Monitoring Be Identified Through Different Traces Under Faking?, in: Educational and Psychological Measurement, Thousand Oaks, Calif. [u.a.]: Sage, Jg. 84, Nr. 3, S. 594–631, doi: 10.1177/00131644231182598.
Author:
Title of the Journal:
Educational and Psychological Measurement
ISSN:
1552-3888
Publisher Information:
Year of publication:
2024
Volume:
84
Issue:
3
Pages:
Language:
English
Abstract:
According to faking models, personality variables and faking are related. Most prominently, people’s tendency to try to make an appropriate impression (impression management; IM) and their tendency to adjust the impression they make (self-monitoring; SM) have been suggested to be associated with faking. Nevertheless, empirical findings connecting these personality variables to faking have been contradictory, partly because different studies have given individuals different tests to fake and different faking directions (to fake low vs. high scores). Importantly, whereas past research has focused on faking by examining test scores, recent advances have suggested that the faking process could be better understood by analyzing individuals’ responses at the item level (response pattern). Using machine learning (elastic net and random forest regression), we reanalyzed a data set (N = 260) to investigate whether individuals’ faked response patterns on extraversion (features; i.e., input variables) could reveal their IM and SM scores. We found that individuals had similar response patterns when they faked, irrespective of their IM scores (excluding the faking of high scores when random forest regression was used). Elastic net and random forest regression converged in revealing that individuals higher on SM differed from individuals lower on SM in how they faked. Thus, response patterns were able to reveal individuals’ SM, but not IM. Feature importance analyses showed that whereas some items were faked differently by individuals with higher versus lower SM scores, others were faked similarly. Our results imply that analyses of response patterns offer valuable new insights into the faking process.
Keywords: ; ; ; ;
faking
response patterns
machine learning
impression management
self-monitoring
DDC Classification:
RVK Classification:
Peer Reviewed:
Yes:
International Distribution:
Yes:
Open Access Journal:
Yes:
Type:
Article
Activation date:
July 4, 2023
Project(s):
Versioning
Question on publication
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https://fis.uni-bamberg.de/handle/uniba/59928