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Subjective confidence in the response to personality questions: Some insight into the construction of people's responses to test items

Koriat, Asher ; Undorf, Monika ; Newman, Eryn J ; Schwarz, Norbert (2020)
Subjective confidence in the response to personality questions: Some insight into the construction of people's responses to test items.
In: Frontiers in Psychology, 11
doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01250
Artikel, Bibliographie

Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract)

Drawing on research on subjective confidence, we examined how the confidence and speed in responding to personality items track the consistency and variability in the response to the same items over repeated administrations. Participants (N = 57) responded to 132 personality items with a true/false response format. The items were presented five times over the course of two sessions. Consistent with the Self-Consistency Model, the confidence and speed with which an item was endorsed at its first presentation predicted the likelihood of repeating that response across the subsequent presentations of the item, thus tracking test-retest reliability. Confidence and speed also predicted the likelihood that others will make the same response, thus tracking inter-person consensus. However, confidence and speed varied more strongly with within-person consistency than with inter-person consensus, suggesting some reliance on idiosyncratic cues in response formation. These results mirror, in part, findings obtained in other domains such as general knowledge, social attitudes, and personal preferences, suggesting some similarity in the decision processes underlying the response to binary items: responses to personality items are not retrieved ready-made from memory but constructed at the time of testing, based on the sampling of a small number of cues from a larger population of cues associated with the item's content. Because confidence is based on the consistency with which the cues support a response, it is prognostic of within-person consistency and cross-person consensus. Theoretical and methodological implications are discussed.

Typ des Eintrags: Artikel
Erschienen: 2020
Autor(en): Koriat, Asher ; Undorf, Monika ; Newman, Eryn J ; Schwarz, Norbert
Art des Eintrags: Bibliographie
Titel: Subjective confidence in the response to personality questions: Some insight into the construction of people's responses to test items
Sprache: Englisch
Publikationsjahr: 2020
Titel der Zeitschrift, Zeitung oder Schriftenreihe: Frontiers in Psychology
Jahrgang/Volume einer Zeitschrift: 11
DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01250
URL / URN: https://www.frontiersin.org/article/10.3389/fpsyg.2020.01250...
Kurzbeschreibung (Abstract):

Drawing on research on subjective confidence, we examined how the confidence and speed in responding to personality items track the consistency and variability in the response to the same items over repeated administrations. Participants (N = 57) responded to 132 personality items with a true/false response format. The items were presented five times over the course of two sessions. Consistent with the Self-Consistency Model, the confidence and speed with which an item was endorsed at its first presentation predicted the likelihood of repeating that response across the subsequent presentations of the item, thus tracking test-retest reliability. Confidence and speed also predicted the likelihood that others will make the same response, thus tracking inter-person consensus. However, confidence and speed varied more strongly with within-person consistency than with inter-person consensus, suggesting some reliance on idiosyncratic cues in response formation. These results mirror, in part, findings obtained in other domains such as general knowledge, social attitudes, and personal preferences, suggesting some similarity in the decision processes underlying the response to binary items: responses to personality items are not retrieved ready-made from memory but constructed at the time of testing, based on the sampling of a small number of cues from a larger population of cues associated with the item's content. Because confidence is based on the consistency with which the cues support a response, it is prognostic of within-person consistency and cross-person consensus. Theoretical and methodological implications are discussed.

Freie Schlagworte: State-Trait debate, consistency and variability, response latency, self-report measures of personality, subjective confidence
Fachbereich(e)/-gebiet(e): 03 Fachbereich Humanwissenschaften
03 Fachbereich Humanwissenschaften > Institut für Psychologie
03 Fachbereich Humanwissenschaften > Institut für Psychologie > Angewandte Kognitionspsychologie
Hinterlegungsdatum: 17 Mai 2024 07:03
Letzte Änderung: 17 Mai 2024 07:03
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