A social comparison theory meta-analysis 60+ years on.
Gordon College · Macquarie University · +1 more institution
Abstract
These meta-analyses of 60+ years of social comparison research focused on 2 issues: the choice of a comparison target (selection) and the effects of comparisons on self-evaluations, affect, and so forth (reaction). Selection studies offering 2 options (up or down) showed a strong preference (and no evidence of publication bias) for upward choices when there was no threat; there was no evidence for downward comparison as a dominant choice even when threatened. Selections became less differentiable when a lateral choice was also provided. For reaction studies, contrast was, by far, the dominant response to social comparison, with ability estimates most strongly affected. Moderator analyses, tests and adjustments…
Citation impact
- FWCI
- 20.06
- Percentile
- 100%
- References
- 86
Authors
3Topics & keywords
- Contrast (vision)
- Moderation
- Psychology
- Affect (linguistics)
- Social psychology
- Publication bias
- Social comparison theory
- Response bias
- Reduced inequalities