Faking Good: An Investigation of Social Desirability and Defensiveness in an Inpatient Sample With Personality Disorder Traits

Accurate interpretations of psychological assessments rely heavily on forthright reporting. However, researchers and practitioners recognize that examinees can easily invalidate their test results by underreporting symptoms or overstating positive attributes. Rogers (2008) delineated two distinct bu...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of personality assessment 2019-05, Vol.101 (3), p.253-263
Hauptverfasser: Williams, Margot M., Rogers, Richard, Sharf, Allyson J., Ross, Colin A.
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container_end_page 263
container_issue 3
container_start_page 253
container_title Journal of personality assessment
container_volume 101
creator Williams, Margot M.
Rogers, Richard
Sharf, Allyson J.
Ross, Colin A.
description Accurate interpretations of psychological assessments rely heavily on forthright reporting. However, researchers and practitioners recognize that examinees can easily invalidate their test results by underreporting symptoms or overstating positive attributes. Rogers (2008) delineated two distinct but related forms of positive impression management (PIM): defensiveness (denying symptoms and psychological impairment) and social desirability (putting forth an exaggeratedly positive image). Although these two have often been combined in past research, this study sought to investigate each separately via a mixed within- and between-subjects simulation design. Simulation scenarios included a special rehabilitation program for the defensiveness (DF) condition and a competitive job for social desirability (SD). The study used the Personality Inventory for DSM-5 (PID-5; Krueger, Derringer, Markon, Watson, & Skodol, 2012) and recruited 106 inpatients from a psychiatric hospital. As expected, inpatients with prominent personality traits substantially suppressed them under both PIM conditions. Having shown the susceptibility of the PID-5 to intentional distortion, two empirically derived and conceptually based validity scales were next developed to address this important concern. Pending further validation, they might contribute to screening PIM presentations, thus promoting the PID-5's clinical utility. Continued research is needed across multiscale inventories for differentiating PIM presentations.
doi_str_mv 10.1080/00223891.2018.1455691
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As expected, inpatients with prominent personality traits substantially suppressed them under both PIM conditions. Having shown the susceptibility of the PID-5 to intentional distortion, two empirically derived and conceptually based validity scales were next developed to address this important concern. Pending further validation, they might contribute to screening PIM presentations, thus promoting the PID-5's clinical utility. 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source Applied Social Sciences Index & Abstracts (ASSIA); MEDLINE; Business Source Complete
subjects Adult
Between-subjects design
Clinical assessment
Clinical research
Deception
Defensiveness
Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders
Distortion
Faking
Female
Humans
Impression management
Inpatient care
Inpatients - psychology
Interpersonal Relations
Male
Medical screening
Mental disorders
Personality
Personality disorders
Personality Disorders - diagnosis
Personality Disorders - psychology
Personality Inventory
Personality tests
Psychiatric Status Rating Scales
Rehabilitation
Reproducibility of Results
Simulation
Social Desirability
Susceptibility
Underreporting
Validity
title Faking Good: An Investigation of Social Desirability and Defensiveness in an Inpatient Sample With Personality Disorder Traits
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