Construct validity of a personality assessment game in a simulated selection situation and the moderating roles of the ability to identify criteria and dispositional insight |
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Authors: | Ard J. Barends Reinout E. de Vries |
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Affiliation: | 1. Department of Criminology, Institute for Criminal Law and Criminology, Leiden, Leiden University, Leiden, The Netherlands;2. Department of Experimental and Applied Psychology, Institute for Brain and Behavior Amsterdam, Vrije Universiteit Amsterdam, Amsterdam, The Netherlands |
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Abstract: | There is scant research on the validity of personality assessment games in selection situations. Therefore, in two experimental simulated selection studies, the construct validity of an assessment game developed to assess honesty-humility was tested. Both studies found no differences between a control condition and a simulated selection condition on honesty-humility game scores. Moreover, convergent and discriminant validity with self-reported personality were not affected by the manipulation. We obtained mixed evidence that individual differences in dispositional insight and the ability to identify criteria influenced the validity of the game. As the validity of the personality assessment game was not significantly affected in the simulated selection context, our findings may imply that well-designed personality assessment games can be used for high-stakes selection assessments. |
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Keywords: | ability to identify criteria applied gaming assessment game dispositional insight faking game-based assessment honesty-humility personality serious game |
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