Publication | Closed Access
Self-Threat Magnifies the Self-Serving Bias: A Meta-Analytic Integration
816
Citations
143
References
1999
Year
Self-efficacy TheorySocial IdentityPersonal FailureSelf-monitoringSocial PsychologyBiasMotivationManagementSelf-serving BiasSelf-defenseSelf-assessmentSocial SciencesSelf-esteemApplied Social PsychologyAchievement MotivationSelf-report StudyOrganizational BehaviorPsychology
Experiments testing the self-serving bias (SSB; taking credit for personal success but blaming external factors for personal failure) have used a multitude of moderators (i.e., role, task importance, outcome expectancies, self-esteem, achievement motivation, self-focused attention, task choice, perceived task difficulty, interpersonal orientation, status, affect, locus of control, gender, and task type). The present meta-analytic review established the viability and pervasiveness of the SSB and, more important, organized the 14 moderators just listed under the common theoretical umbrella of self-threat. According to the self-threat model, the high self-threat level of each moderator is associated with a larger display of the SSB than the low self-threat level. The model was supported: Self-threat magnifies the SSB.
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