Deliberate Faking on Personality and Emotional Intelligence Measures

This study examined the extent the Big Five personality traits and emotional intelligence can be faked. Using a student sample, the equivalence of measurement and theoretical structure of models in a faking and honest condition was tested. Comparisons of the models for the honest and faking groups s...

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Veröffentlicht in:Psychological reports 2011-02, Vol.108 (1), p.120-138
Hauptverfasser: Hartman, Nathan S., Grubb, W. Lee
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description This study examined the extent the Big Five personality traits and emotional intelligence can be faked. Using a student sample, the equivalence of measurement and theoretical structure of models in a faking and honest condition was tested. Comparisons of the models for the honest and faking groups showed the data fit better in the faking condition. These results suggest that faking does change the rank orders of high scoring participants. The personality dimensions most affected by faking were emotional stability and conscientiousness within the Big Five and the general mood and stress management dimensions of Bar-On's Emotional Quotient Inventory–Short Form (1997) measure of emotional intelligence.
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subjects Adolescent
Adult
Deception
Emotional Intelligence
Female
Humans
Job Application
Male
Models, Statistical
Personality Inventory - statistics & numerical data
Personnel Selection
Psychometrics - statistics & numerical data
Reproducibility of Results
Young Adult
title Deliberate Faking on Personality and Emotional Intelligence Measures
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