Overclaiming as a measure of faking |
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Authors: | Mark N. Bing Don KluemperH. Kristl Davison Shannon TaylorMilorad Novicevic |
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Affiliation: | a Department of Management, University of Mississippi, United States b Department of Management, Northern Illinois University, United States |
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Abstract: | Researchers have recently asserted that popular measures of response distortion (i.e., socially desirable responding scales) lack construct validity (i.e., measure traits rather than test faking) and that applicant faking on personality tests remains a serious concern ( [Griffith and Peterson, 2008] and [Holden, 2008]). Thus, although researchers and human resource (HR) selection specialists have been attempting to find measures which readily capture individual differences in faking that increase personality test validity, to date such attempts have rarely, if ever succeeded. The current study, however, finds that the overclaiming technique captures individual differences in faking and subsequently increases personality test score validity via suppressing unwanted error variance in personality test scores. Implications of this research on the overclaiming technique for improving HR selection decisions are illustrated and discussed. |
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Keywords: | Socially desirable responding Response distortion Impression management Self-deception Test faking Test validity Personality measurement Suppression effect Overclaiming |
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