In this article we analyze beliefs about the social desirability of ten racial attitude items from the German General Social Survey (ALLBUS). These beliefs indicate that the items, as well as respondents with regard to different sex, age and education, are differently prone to social desirability bias. Demographic response differences may thus only reflect differences in social desirability bias. We matched the desirability differences between the items and demographic groups with the racial attitude responses from the independent, nationwide sample of the ALLBUS survey in 1996. The desirability beliefs obtained from our urban, West German sample predicted the attitude answers, and this predictability was stronger for ALLBUS respondents wit...
Given the sensitive nature of ethics research, the presence of social desirability bias (SDB) threat...
This article describes some of the more significant denotations of social desirability and discusses...
Purpose: This paper aims to address the issue of survey distortion caused by one of the most common ...
In this article we analyze beliefs about the social desirability of ten racial attitude items from t...
Empirical evidence suggests that the respondents' approval motive, their desirability beliefs and th...
Social desirability (SD)-bias is a serious threat for survey-data quality, and the respondents’ desi...
Social desirability (SD) bias is a serious threat for the quality of survey data, and SD beliefs pre...
Social desirability describes the tendency of respondents to present themselves in a more positive l...
For decades, researchers have expressed concern that self-report racial attitude measures are vulner...
This paper examines the associations among social desirability response bias, cultural constructs an...
In the last 60 years, the proportion of white Americans expressing anti-black prejudice in face-to-f...
The study investigates the social desirability of four characteristics often asked as self-descripti...
186 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Subsequently, I introduce an ...
Social desirability refers to the need for social approval or acceptance (Toh, Lee, & Hu, 2006). Thi...
Given the sensitive nature of ethics research, the presence of social desirability bias (SDB) threat...
This article describes some of the more significant denotations of social desirability and discusses...
Purpose: This paper aims to address the issue of survey distortion caused by one of the most common ...
In this article we analyze beliefs about the social desirability of ten racial attitude items from t...
Empirical evidence suggests that the respondents' approval motive, their desirability beliefs and th...
Social desirability (SD)-bias is a serious threat for survey-data quality, and the respondents’ desi...
Social desirability (SD) bias is a serious threat for the quality of survey data, and SD beliefs pre...
Social desirability describes the tendency of respondents to present themselves in a more positive l...
For decades, researchers have expressed concern that self-report racial attitude measures are vulner...
This paper examines the associations among social desirability response bias, cultural constructs an...
In the last 60 years, the proportion of white Americans expressing anti-black prejudice in face-to-f...
The study investigates the social desirability of four characteristics often asked as self-descripti...
186 p.Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, 2001.Subsequently, I introduce an ...
Social desirability refers to the need for social approval or acceptance (Toh, Lee, & Hu, 2006). Thi...
Given the sensitive nature of ethics research, the presence of social desirability bias (SDB) threat...
This article describes some of the more significant denotations of social desirability and discusses...
Purpose: This paper aims to address the issue of survey distortion caused by one of the most common ...