People typically attribute lower health risks to themselves than to others, a phenomenon referred to as unrealistic optimism. The present study tested the person positivity bias as a previously unexamined explanation of the phenomenon and analyzed the relationship between unrealistic optimism and expectations of control. High-school students estimated their own and one of three other persons' (the average student's, a randomly chosen student's, or their best same-sex friend's) chances of getting health problems. They also filled out questionnaires measuring locus of control and health-protective behavior. In contrast with the person positivity explanation, unrealistic optimism was not restricted to the 'average other'' condition. However, u...
We examined whether comparative optimism characterizes the events people generate when they describe...
Optimistic bias is a phenomenon in which people believe they are less likely to experience negative ...
In this study, we assessed students’ perceptions of the H1N1 virus based on research done on unreali...
People typically attribute lower health risks to themselves than to others, a phenomenon referred to...
Research has shown that unrealistically-optimistic people believe that they will experience fewer ne...
In various health areas, the importance of personal perceptions of susceptibility to harm has been e...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
Most people believe that they are less at risk for controllable health and safety hazards than avera...
Two studies investigated the tendency of people to be unrealistically optimistic about future life e...
Two studies investigated the tendency of people to be unrealistically optimistic about future life e...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
Presents results of an investigation into the occurrence of optimistic bias in relation to both posi...
Although optimistic bias has been well documented for adults, little is known about how children vie...
N. D. Weinstein (1980) established that optimistic bias, the tendency to see others as more vulnerab...
The effect of event valence on unrealistic optimism was studied. 94 Deakin University students rated...
We examined whether comparative optimism characterizes the events people generate when they describe...
Optimistic bias is a phenomenon in which people believe they are less likely to experience negative ...
In this study, we assessed students’ perceptions of the H1N1 virus based on research done on unreali...
People typically attribute lower health risks to themselves than to others, a phenomenon referred to...
Research has shown that unrealistically-optimistic people believe that they will experience fewer ne...
In various health areas, the importance of personal perceptions of susceptibility to harm has been e...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
Most people believe that they are less at risk for controllable health and safety hazards than avera...
Two studies investigated the tendency of people to be unrealistically optimistic about future life e...
Two studies investigated the tendency of people to be unrealistically optimistic about future life e...
In the present paper, the relationship between illusory superiority (the belief to be better than ot...
Presents results of an investigation into the occurrence of optimistic bias in relation to both posi...
Although optimistic bias has been well documented for adults, little is known about how children vie...
N. D. Weinstein (1980) established that optimistic bias, the tendency to see others as more vulnerab...
The effect of event valence on unrealistic optimism was studied. 94 Deakin University students rated...
We examined whether comparative optimism characterizes the events people generate when they describe...
Optimistic bias is a phenomenon in which people believe they are less likely to experience negative ...
In this study, we assessed students’ perceptions of the H1N1 virus based on research done on unreali...