Publication | Closed Access
When modesty prevails: Differential favorability of self-presentation to friends and strangers.
434
Citations
54
References
1995
Year
Modest MannerSocial PsychologySocial InfluenceCommunicationSelf-monitoringSocial SciencesPsychologyInterpersonal AttractionSelf-report StudySocial IdentityBehavioral SciencesApplied Social PsychologyDifferential FavorabilityOverlearned PatternsCollective SelfSocial CognitionInterpersonal CommunicationProsocial BehaviorSocial BehaviorInteraction PartnerInterpersonal RelationshipsHuman InteractionArtsPersuasionNonverbal Communication
Although most interpersonal interactions take place between people who know each other, most self-presentation research has focused on self-presentation to strangers. Five studies showed that self-presentational favorability differed as a function of whether the interaction partner was a friend or a stranger. Studies I and 2 found that self-presentations to friends were consistently more modest than self-presentations to strangers. In Studies 3 and 4, self-presentations were manipulated by instructing participants to present themselves in either a self-enhancing or modest manner. Modesty with strangers and self-enhancement with friends both resulted in impaired recall for the interaction, consistent with the view that those strategies contradict familiar, overlearned patterns. Study 5 distinguished self-deprecation from modesty. Taken together, the results indicate that people habitually use different self-presentation strategies with different audiences, relying on favorable self-enhancement with strangers but shifting toward modesty when among friends.
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