학술논문

Boundaries of Self-Positivity: The Effect of Comparison Focus in Self—Friend Comparisons.
Document Type
Article
Source
Journal of Social Psychology. Aug2009, Vol. 149 Issue 4, p413-424. 12p. 1 Chart.
Subject
*SOCIAL comparison
*FRIENDSHIP
*COMPARISON (Psychology)
*SELF
*IDENTITY (Philosophical concept)
*SELF-evaluation
Language
ISSN
0022-4545
Abstract
The way in which a comparison is worded has systematic effects on its outcome. In self—other comparisons, the instruction "compare yourself with your peers" triggers greater self-positivity than does the reverse instruction, "compare your peers with yourself" (focus effect). But is the focus effect due to the inclusion of a generalized target? The authors extended the focus effect from comparisons with the average peer to comparisons with specific individuals (close friend or acquaintance). Participants displayed self-positivity when they compared themselves with a close friend but not when they compared a close friend with themselves. The present research is the first to demonstrate the focus effect in comparisons of self and specific individuals. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]