We found a match
Your institution may have access to this item. Find your institution then sign in to continue.
- Title
Effect of job applicant faking and cognitive ability on self‐other agreement and criterion validity of personality assessments.
- Authors
Wood, Joshua K.; Anglim, Jeromy; Horwood, Sharon
- Abstract
This study examined the effect of job applicant faking on the validity of personality assessments, including self‐other correlations, criterion validity, and cognitive ability correlates. By using a large sample, multiple other‐raters, a repeated‐measures design, and a realistic simulated job application, it sought to provide the most precise estimates to date of the effect of the applicant context on self‐other correlations, as well as the influence of cognitive ability on faking. Undergraduate psychology students (n = 584) completed a measure of Big Five personality (i.e., International Personality Item Pool NEO) in both a low‐stakes and a simulated job applicant context. Participants completed measures of intelligence (i.e., International Cognitive Ability Resource) and personality‐relevant objective criteria (e.g., university grades), and had an average of 3 other raters rate their personality (n = 1831). Responses to the Big Five scales were more socially desirable in the applicant context (average d = 0.58), with notable decreases in reported Neuroticism and increases in Conscientiousness, Agreeableness, and Extraversion. Average self‐other correlations declined by 24% from.59 in the low‐stakes to.45 in the applicant context. Cognitive ability was positively correlated with magnitude of faking. In the applicant context, criterion validities declined minimally. Results suggest response distortion by job applicants results in modest reductions in the accuracy and criterion validity of personality assessments. Practitioner points: Five hundred and eighty‐four participants completed a personality measure in both low‐stakes and applicant contextsParticipants also had three others rate them on the same personality measureResponses were more socially desirable in the applicant contextSelf‐other correlations decreased by 24% in the applicant contextCriterion validity decreased slightly in the applicant contextCognitive ability was correlated with magnitude of faking
- Subjects
PERSONALITY assessment; COGNITIVE ability; COGNITION; JOB applications; NEUROTICISM; PERSONALITY
- Publication
International Journal of Selection & Assessment, 2022, Vol 30, Issue 3, p378
- ISSN
0965-075X
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/ijsa.12382