Faking by actual applicants on personality tests: A meta‐analysis of within‐subjects studies
Background Researchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a) characterize the typical finding from these studies and (b) examine variability across study results. Aims The current study was aimed at filling the...
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Published in | International journal of selection and assessment Vol. 29; no. 3-4; pp. 412 - 426 |
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Main Authors | , |
Format | Journal Article |
Language | English |
Published |
Oxford
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
01.12.2021
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Subjects | |
Online Access | Get full text |
ISSN | 0965-075X 1468-2389 |
DOI | 10.1111/ijsa.12338 |
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Abstract | Background
Researchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a) characterize the typical finding from these studies and (b) examine variability across study results.
Aims
The current study was aimed at filling these gaps by meta‐analyzing actual applicants’ responses to personality measurements in high‐stakes contexts versus low‐stakes contexts reported in within‐subjects studies.
Materials & Methods
This meta‐analysis examined 20 within‐subjects applicant–honest studies (where individuals completed an assessment once as applicants and again in a low‐stakes setting).
Results
We found that applicants had moderately higher (more socially desirable) means, slightly reduced variability, and stronger rank‐order consistency in high‐stakes settings. The assessment order moderated the findings; studies with a high‐to‐low order (where the high‐stakes setting was introduced first) showed a stronger faking effect—demonstrated by higher means and weaker rank‐order consistencies—than those in a low‐to‐high order.
Discussion and Conclusion
These findings are consistent with expectations that, relative to low‐stakes situations, individuals tend to exaggerate, in a positive direction, their personality descriptions as job applicants. In addition, assessment order matters when understanding the magnitudes of faking effects. |
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AbstractList | Background
Researchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a) characterize the typical finding from these studies and (b) examine variability across study results.
Aims
The current study was aimed at filling these gaps by meta‐analyzing actual applicants’ responses to personality measurements in high‐stakes contexts versus low‐stakes contexts reported in within‐subjects studies.
Materials & Methods
This meta‐analysis examined 20 within‐subjects applicant–honest studies (where individuals completed an assessment once as applicants and again in a low‐stakes setting).
Results
We found that applicants had moderately higher (more socially desirable) means, slightly reduced variability, and stronger rank‐order consistency in high‐stakes settings. The assessment order moderated the findings; studies with a high‐to‐low order (where the high‐stakes setting was introduced first) showed a stronger faking effect—demonstrated by higher means and weaker rank‐order consistencies—than those in a low‐to‐high order.
Discussion and Conclusion
These findings are consistent with expectations that, relative to low‐stakes situations, individuals tend to exaggerate, in a positive direction, their personality descriptions as job applicants. In addition, assessment order matters when understanding the magnitudes of faking effects. BackgroundResearchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a) characterize the typical finding from these studies and (b) examine variability across study results.AimsThe current study was aimed at filling these gaps by meta‐analyzing actual applicants’ responses to personality measurements in high‐stakes contexts versus low‐stakes contexts reported in within‐subjects studies.Materials & MethodsThis meta‐analysis examined 20 within‐subjects applicant–honest studies (where individuals completed an assessment once as applicants and again in a low‐stakes setting).ResultsWe found that applicants had moderately higher (more socially desirable) means, slightly reduced variability, and stronger rank‐order consistency in high‐stakes settings. The assessment order moderated the findings; studies with a high‐to‐low order (where the high‐stakes setting was introduced first) showed a stronger faking effect—demonstrated by higher means and weaker rank‐order consistencies—than those in a low‐to‐high order.Discussion and ConclusionThese findings are consistent with expectations that, relative to low‐stakes situations, individuals tend to exaggerate, in a positive direction, their personality descriptions as job applicants. In addition, assessment order matters when understanding the magnitudes of faking effects. |
Author | Hu, Jing Connelly, Brian S. |
Author_xml | – sequence: 1 givenname: Jing orcidid: 0000-0001-7937-1530 surname: Hu fullname: Hu, Jing email: jing.hu@unsw.edu.au organization: University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney – sequence: 2 givenname: Brian S. orcidid: 0000-0002-3543-7486 surname: Connelly fullname: Connelly, Brian S. organization: University of Toronto Scarborough |
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Researchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a)... BackgroundResearchers have used within‐subjects designs to assess personality faking in real‐world contexts. However, no research is available to (a)... |
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SubjectTerms | faking Meta-analysis Personality Personality tests response distortion Within-subjects design |
Title | Faking by actual applicants on personality tests: A meta‐analysis of within‐subjects studies |
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