Your results

Pass experiment to show your results.

The previous tasks involved rating how much certain traits describe you and how much those same traits describe most other people. As initially discussed in chapter 5 of your text (page 160), we have a tendency to rank ourselves higher than most people on positive attributes. This is known as the better than average effect (Alicke, 1985). This effect can be seen as a result of our motivation to maintain and defend our self-esteem. Now let’s take a look at the results of this brief study to see if they align with what the research suggests.

Here are the results of the evaluations you just made. Do they align with what the research suggests in relation to the better than average effect?

Other results

Self
Most other people
4.25
3.1
0
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9

To give you some data to compare to, here are the results of a study conducted by Jonathon Brown in 2012. In this study, 29 undergraduates rated the same traits you did on how well they described the participants, and then how well they described most other people (using a 1 to 5 rating scale instead of the 0 to 9 rating scale you used). Results showed the ratings of the self to be significantly higher than the “most other people” ratings, suggesting a better than average effect.