Cargando…

Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task

BACKGROUND: The initial preference task (IPT) is an implicit measure that has featured prominently in the literature and enjoys high popularity because it offers to provide an unobtrusive and objective assessment of self-esteem that is easy to administer. However, its use for self-esteem assessment...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Pietschnig, Jakob, Gittler, Georg, Stieger, Stefan, Forster, Michael, Gadek, Natalia, Gartus, Andreas, Kocsis-Bogar, Krisztina, Kubicek, Bettina, Lüftenegger, Marko, Olsen, Jerome, Prem, Roman, Ruiz, Nina, Serfas, Benjamin G., Voracek, Martin
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: Public Library of Science 2018
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6126831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30188907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202873
_version_ 1783353376719765504
author Pietschnig, Jakob
Gittler, Georg
Stieger, Stefan
Forster, Michael
Gadek, Natalia
Gartus, Andreas
Kocsis-Bogar, Krisztina
Kubicek, Bettina
Lüftenegger, Marko
Olsen, Jerome
Prem, Roman
Ruiz, Nina
Serfas, Benjamin G.
Voracek, Martin
author_facet Pietschnig, Jakob
Gittler, Georg
Stieger, Stefan
Forster, Michael
Gadek, Natalia
Gartus, Andreas
Kocsis-Bogar, Krisztina
Kubicek, Bettina
Lüftenegger, Marko
Olsen, Jerome
Prem, Roman
Ruiz, Nina
Serfas, Benjamin G.
Voracek, Martin
author_sort Pietschnig, Jakob
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: The initial preference task (IPT) is an implicit measure that has featured prominently in the literature and enjoys high popularity because it offers to provide an unobtrusive and objective assessment of self-esteem that is easy to administer. However, its use for self-esteem assessment may be limited because of weak associations with direct personality measures. Moreover, moderator effects of sample- and study-related variables need investigation to determine the value of IPT-based assessments of self-esteem. METHODS: Conventional and grey-literature database searches, as well as screening of reference lists of obtained articles, yielded a total of 105 independent healthy adult samples (N = 17,777) originating from 60 studies. Summary effect estimates and subgroup analyses for potential effect moderators (e.g., administration order, algorithm, rating type) were calculated by means of meta-analytic random- and mixed-effects models. Moreover, we accounted for potential influences of publication year, publication status (published vs. not), and participant sex in a weighted stepwise hierarchical multiple meta-regression. We tested for dissemination bias through six methods. RESULTS: There was no noteworthy correlation between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem (r = .102), indicating conceptual independence of these two constructs. Effects were stronger when the B-algorithm was used for calculation of IPT-scores and the IPT was administered only once, whilst all other moderators did not show significant influences. Regression analyses revealed a somewhat stronger (albeit non-significant) effect for men. Moreover, there was no evidence for dissemination bias or a decline effect, although effects from published studies were numerically somewhat stronger than unpublished effects. DISCUSSION: We show that there is no noteworthy association between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem, which is broadly consistent with dual-process models of implicit and explicit evaluations on the one hand, but also casts doubt on the suitability of the IPT for the assessment of implicit self-esteem on the other hand.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-6126831
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Public Library of Science
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-61268312018-09-15 Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task Pietschnig, Jakob Gittler, Georg Stieger, Stefan Forster, Michael Gadek, Natalia Gartus, Andreas Kocsis-Bogar, Krisztina Kubicek, Bettina Lüftenegger, Marko Olsen, Jerome Prem, Roman Ruiz, Nina Serfas, Benjamin G. Voracek, Martin PLoS One Research Article BACKGROUND: The initial preference task (IPT) is an implicit measure that has featured prominently in the literature and enjoys high popularity because it offers to provide an unobtrusive and objective assessment of self-esteem that is easy to administer. However, its use for self-esteem assessment may be limited because of weak associations with direct personality measures. Moreover, moderator effects of sample- and study-related variables need investigation to determine the value of IPT-based assessments of self-esteem. METHODS: Conventional and grey-literature database searches, as well as screening of reference lists of obtained articles, yielded a total of 105 independent healthy adult samples (N = 17,777) originating from 60 studies. Summary effect estimates and subgroup analyses for potential effect moderators (e.g., administration order, algorithm, rating type) were calculated by means of meta-analytic random- and mixed-effects models. Moreover, we accounted for potential influences of publication year, publication status (published vs. not), and participant sex in a weighted stepwise hierarchical multiple meta-regression. We tested for dissemination bias through six methods. RESULTS: There was no noteworthy correlation between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem (r = .102), indicating conceptual independence of these two constructs. Effects were stronger when the B-algorithm was used for calculation of IPT-scores and the IPT was administered only once, whilst all other moderators did not show significant influences. Regression analyses revealed a somewhat stronger (albeit non-significant) effect for men. Moreover, there was no evidence for dissemination bias or a decline effect, although effects from published studies were numerically somewhat stronger than unpublished effects. DISCUSSION: We show that there is no noteworthy association between IPT-based implicit and explicit self-esteem, which is broadly consistent with dual-process models of implicit and explicit evaluations on the one hand, but also casts doubt on the suitability of the IPT for the assessment of implicit self-esteem on the other hand. Public Library of Science 2018-09-06 /pmc/articles/PMC6126831/ /pubmed/30188907 http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202873 Text en © 2018 Pietschnig et al http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an open access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/) , which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original author and source are credited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Pietschnig, Jakob
Gittler, Georg
Stieger, Stefan
Forster, Michael
Gadek, Natalia
Gartus, Andreas
Kocsis-Bogar, Krisztina
Kubicek, Bettina
Lüftenegger, Marko
Olsen, Jerome
Prem, Roman
Ruiz, Nina
Serfas, Benjamin G.
Voracek, Martin
Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title_full Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title_fullStr Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title_full_unstemmed Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title_short Indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: A meta-analysis of the initial preference task
title_sort indirect (implicit) and direct (explicit) self-esteem measures are virtually unrelated: a meta-analysis of the initial preference task
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC6126831/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/30188907
http://dx.doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0202873
work_keys_str_mv AT pietschnigjakob indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT gittlergeorg indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT stiegerstefan indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT forstermichael indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT gadeknatalia indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT gartusandreas indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT kocsisbogarkrisztina indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT kubicekbettina indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT lufteneggermarko indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT olsenjerome indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT premroman indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT ruiznina indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT serfasbenjaming indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask
AT voracekmartin indirectimplicitanddirectexplicitselfesteemmeasuresarevirtuallyunrelatedametaanalysisoftheinitialpreferencetask