Search results for "Grandiosity"

showing 2 items of 2 documents

Narcissistic Traits and Explicit Self-Esteem: The Moderating Role of Implicit Self-View

2016

Objective: Whilst the relationship between narcissism and self-esteem has been studied for a long time, findings are still controversial. The majority of studies investigated narcissistic grandiosity, neglecting the existence of vulnerable manifestations of narcissism. Moreover, recent studies have shown that grandiosity traits are not always associated with inflated explicit self-esteem. The aim of the present study is to investigate the relationship between narcissistic traits and explicit self-esteem, distinguishing between grandiosity and vulnerability. Moreover, we consider the role of implicit self-esteem in qualifying these associations. Method: Narcissistic traits, explicit and impl…

050103 clinical psychologynarcissism narcissistic grandiosity narcissistic vulnerability explicit self-esteem implicit self-esteemmedia_common.quotation_subjectlcsh:BF1-990Vulnerability050109 social psychologyDevelopmental psychologyimplicit self-esteemNarcissismmedicinePsychology0501 psychology and cognitive sciencesAssociation (psychology)Implicit self-esteemGeneral Psychologymedia_commonOriginal ResearchGrandiosity05 social sciencesSelf-esteemlcsh:Psychologynarcissistic vulnerabilityexplicit self-esteemnarcissismmedicine.symptomM-PSI/08 - PSICOLOGIA CLINICAnarcissistic grandiosityPsychologySocial psychologyFrontiers in Psychology
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Narcissistic Tendencies Among Actors

2014

Building on a two-dimensional reconceptualization of grandiose narcissism, we investigated how narcissistic admiration (the tendency toward agentic self-promotion) and rivalry (the tendency toward other derogation) are related to acting. Study 1 ( N = 583) showed that acting students scored higher on narcissistic admiration than students with other majors, but at the same time, the acting students scored lower on rivalry. In Study 2 ( N = 283), we compared improvisational theater actors with a comparison group and found the same pattern: Admiration was higher, but rivalry was lower among the actors (across both self-reports and informant reports). Effects persisted when we controlled for s…

Clinical PsychologySocial PsychologyAdmirationGrandiosityNarcissismmedicineCravingmedicine.symptomPsychologyRivalrySocial psychologySocial Psychological and Personality Science
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