Publication | Closed Access
The need to evaluate.
423
Citations
68
References
1996
Year
Social PsychologyIndividual DifferencesEducationPsychometricsSocial SciencesPsychologyProgram EvaluationPsychological EvaluationEvaluation MethodologyAssessmentBehavioral SciencesUnfamiliar PaintingsCommunity EngagementNeeds AssessmentStable Individual DifferencesUser ExperienceApplied Social PsychologyExperimental PsychologySocial CognitionChronic TendencyPersonality PsychologyEvaluation MeasureEducational AssessmentEvaluation TechniqueSelf-assessment
Five studies tested the hypothesis that stable individual differences exist in the chronic tendency to engage in evaluative responding. In 2 studies, the 16-item Need to Evaluate Scale (NES) was developed and demonstrated to possess high internal consistency, a single factor structure, high testretest reliability, and convergent and discriminant validity. Three additional studies supported the predictive validity of the NES. In one, high-NES participants were more likely to report having attitudes toward a variety of important social and political issues than low-NES participants. In another study, high-NES participants wrote more evaluative thoughts in a free thought listing about unfamiliar paintings than low-NES participants. In a final study, high-NES participants wrote more evaluative thoughts in a free thought listing about a typical day in their lives than low-NES participants. Implications for research in social and personality psychology are discussed.
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