Abstract

Researchers have suggested that certain individuals may show a self-positivity bias, rating themselves as possessing more positive personality traits than others. Previous evidence has shown that people evaluate self-related information in such a way as to maintain or enhance self-esteem. However, whether self-esteem would modulate the time course of self-positivity bias in explicit self-evaluation has never been explored. In the present study, 21 participants completed the Rosenberg self-esteem scale and then completed a task where they were instructed to indicate to what extent positive/negative traits described themselves. Behavioral data showed that participants endorsed positive traits as higher in self-relevance compared to the negative traits. Further, participants’ self-esteem levels were positively correlated with their self-positivity bias. Electrophysiological data revealed smaller N1 amplitude and larger late positive component (LPC) amplitude to stimuli consistent with the self-positivity bias (positive-high self-relevant stimuli) when compared to stimuli that were inconsistent with the self-positivity bias (positive-low self-relevant stimuli). Moreover, only in individuals with low self-esteem, the latency of P2 was more pronounced in processing stimuli that were consistent with the self-positivity bias (negative-low self-relevant stimuli) than to stimuli that were inconsistent with the self-positivity bias (positive-low self-relevant stimuli). Overall, the present study provides additional support for the view that low self-esteem as a personality variable would affect the early attentional processing.

Highlights

  • An overall desire to feel happy, the desire to maintain or enhance self-esteem, defined as ‘‘confidence and satisfaction about oneself’’, and a reduction in anxiety about the uncertainty associated with future life outcomes, all result in self-positivity bias [1]

  • We would hypothesize that the latency of anterior P2 would be more pronounced in processing stimuli that were consistent with the selfpositivity bias compared to stimuli that were inconsistent with the self-positivity bias in individuals with low self-esteem

  • In the electrophysiological data analysis, data from four participants were excluded from analysis because their Beck depression inventory (BDI) scores were higher than 14

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Summary

Introduction

An overall desire to feel happy, the desire to maintain or enhance self-esteem, defined as ‘‘confidence and satisfaction about oneself’’, and a reduction in anxiety about the uncertainty associated with future life outcomes, all result in self-positivity bias [1]. People judge the self as more positive (or less negative) than they do others on a range of dimensions, such as social skills, achievement, or health [2]. This self-positivity-bias has been termed as ‘‘better-than-average’’ effect when traits are concerned [3]. This effect is quite robust and has been obtained across a diverse representation of samples varying in age, gender, psychopathology, and culture [4,5]. The tendency for individuals to evaluate the self in more favorable terms than they evaluated people in general was pronounced among those with high self-esteem [10]

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