Social Desirability Bias in self-reported wellbeing Measures: Evidence from an online survey

被引:35
|
作者
Caputo, Andrea [1 ]
机构
[1] Univ Sapienza Rome, Rome, Italy
关键词
social desirability bias; psychological well-being; web-based survey; happiness; gratitude; GENDER-DIFFERENCES; RESPONSE BIAS; HAPPINESS; PERSONALITY; LONELINESS; SCALE; GRATITUDE; SATISFACTION; VALIDATION; DEPRESSION;
D O I
10.11144/Javeriana.upsy16-2.sdsw
中图分类号
B84 [心理学];
学科分类号
04 ; 0402 ;
摘要
Social desirability seems to enhance well-being measures because individuals tend to increase the degree of their satisfaction and happiness resulting in response artifacts and in a serious threat to the validity of self-reported data. This paper explores social desirability bias in self-reported subjective well-being, controlling for several socio-demographic variables such as gender, age, education, marital/relationship status, and employment status. This is in order to test whether social desirability has incremental validity in predicting some well-being measures. Three different facets of well-being are proposed which deal with subjective happiness, general life satisfaction, and gratitude and loneliness, respectively regarded as a positive and negative emotional response. Through a web-based survey a convenience sample of 170 participants completed an online questionnaire including measures of social desirability, subjective happiness, life satisfaction, gratitude, and loneliness. Correlation analyses and two-step hierarchical multiple regression analyses were conducted. All well-being measures show modest significant correlations with social desirability ranging from 0.235 to 0.309, except subjective happiness. Social desirability accounted for from about 3% to 6% of the variance of these measures, after controlling for socio-demographic variables. Social desirability seems thus to play little role in well-being self-report measures, as revealed by previous studies. Some limitations are discussed, as well as issues about social desirability bias in online investigation.
引用
收藏
页数:13
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [31] Justification bias in self-reported disability: New evidence from panel data
    Black, Nicole
    Johnston, David W.
    Suziedelyte, Agne
    [J]. JOURNAL OF HEALTH ECONOMICS, 2017, 54 : 124 - 134
  • [32] Social desirability and self-reported anxiety in children: An analysis of the RCMAS lie scale
    Dadds, MR
    Perrin, S
    Yule, W
    [J]. JOURNAL OF ABNORMAL CHILD PSYCHOLOGY, 1998, 26 (04) : 311 - 317
  • [33] Social desirability bias in measures of organizational values
    de Campos, Maria Isabel
    Marin Rueda, Fabian Javier
    [J]. UNIVERSITAS PSYCHOLOGICA, 2017, 16 (02)
  • [34] Social Desirability and Self-Reported Anxiety in Children: An Analysis of the RCMAS Lie Scale
    Mark R. Dadds
    Sean Perrin
    William Yule
    [J]. Journal of Abnormal Child Psychology, 1998, 26 : 311 - 317
  • [35] Understanding panel conditioning: an examination of social desirability bias in self-reported height and weight in panel surveys using experimental data
    Uhrig, S. C. Noah
    [J]. LONGITUDINAL AND LIFE COURSE STUDIES, 2012, 3 (01): : 120 - 136
  • [36] Survey Design Moderates Negativity Bias but not Positivity Bias in Self-Reported Job Stress
    Pauli, Roman
    Lang, Jessica
    [J]. EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF PSYCHOLOGICAL ASSESSMENT, 2024,
  • [37] Explaining Systematic Bias in Self-Reported Measures: Factors that Affect the Under- and Over-Reporting of Self-Reported Arrests
    Krohn, Marvin D.
    Lizotte, Alan J.
    Phillips, Matthew D.
    Thornberry, Terence P.
    Bell, Kristin A.
    [J]. JUSTICE QUARTERLY, 2013, 30 (03) : 501 - 528
  • [38] Does Social Desirability Confound the Assessment of Self-Reported Measures of Well-Being and Metacognitive Efficiency in Young and Older Adults?
    Fastame, Maria C.
    Penna, Maria P.
    [J]. CLINICAL GERONTOLOGIST, 2012, 35 (03) : 239 - 256
  • [39] The effect of social desirability trait on self-reported dietary measures among multi-ethnic female health center employees
    Hébert, JR
    Peterson, KE
    Hurley, TG
    Stoddard, AM
    Cohen, N
    Field, AE
    Sorensen, G
    [J]. ANNALS OF EPIDEMIOLOGY, 2001, 11 (06) : 417 - 427
  • [40] Social desirability trait influences on self-reported dietary measures among diverse participants in a multicenter multiple risk factor trial
    Hebert, James R.
    Hurley, Thomas G.
    Peterson, Karen E.
    Resnicow, Ken
    Thompson, Frances E.
    Yaroch, Amy L.
    Ehlers, Margaret
    Midthune, Doug
    Williams, Geoffrey C.
    Greene, Geoffrey W.
    Nebeling, Linda
    [J]. JOURNAL OF NUTRITION, 2008, 138 (01): : 226S - 234S