search query: @indexterm SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY / total: 330
reference: 85 / 330
Author: | Alicke, M. |
Title: | Personal contact, individuation, and the better-than-average effect |
Journal: | Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
1995 : MAY, VOL. 68:5, p. 804-825 |
Index terms: | GROUPS SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY HUMAN RELATIONS |
Language: | eng |
Abstract: | Research in which people compare themselves with an average peer has consistently shown that people evaluate themselves more favourably than they evaluate others. Seven studies were conducted to demonstrate that the magnitude of this better-than-average effect depends on the level of abstraction in the comparison. These studies showed that people were less biased when they compared themselves with an individuated target than when they compared themselves with a nonindividuated target, namely, the average college student. |
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