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MODS Metadata of The measurement of social desirability : a cross-cultural perspective

roleTerm ( text )
advisor 
namePart
De Bruin, Gideon P., Prof.; Roodt, Gert, Prof. 
roleTerm ( text )
author 
namePart
Odendaal, Aletta 
dateAccessioned
2013-07-18T08:57:55Z 
dateAvailable
2013-07-18T08:57:55Z 
dateIssued
2013-07-18 
dateSubmitted
2013 
identifier ( uri )
http://hdl.handle.net/10210/8503 
note
D. Phil. (Industrial Psychology) 
abstract
This study focused on the measurement of social desirability from a cross-cultural perspective. In applied settings industrial psychologists use social desirability scales to eliminate sources of bias or systematic error that are not relevant to the measured attribute, to identify applicants who are deliberately presenting themselves in a positive manner, to adjust personality scale scores or to flag potentially invalid personality profiles. Socially desirable responding on personality measures continues to be an important concern for researchers and practitioners due to the potentially serious consequences of response distortion in personnel selection contexts. The effect of socially desirable responding on the validity and utility of personality testing in employment settings has been extensively debated and researched internationally. However, depending on the operational definition of social desirability used and the choice of research design, research results have been mixed and at times contradictory. In addition, there is growing recognition that the cross-cultural transferability of the social desirability construct needs to be empirically examined. Furthermore, the influence of potential race and ethnic group differences in social desirability scale scores, which can lead to disproportional selection ratios, has not been sufficiently researched in South Africa. This study therefore focused on the systematic analysis of theoretical and scientific evidence relating to socially desirable responding in occupational settings across different cultures and across different personality instruments currently in use in South Africa. 
languageTerm ( rfc3066 )
en 
accessCondition ( useAndReproduction )
University of Johannesburg 
topic
Social desirability 
topic
Personality tests 
topic
Psychological tests 
topic
Ability - Testing 
title
The measurement of social desirability : a cross-cultural perspective 
genre
Thesis 

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http://hdl.handle.net/10210/120748
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