Authors
Roy F Baumeister
Publication date
1982/1
Source
Psychological bulletin
Volume
91
Issue
1
Pages
3
Publisher
American Psychological Association
Description
Self-presentation is the use of behavior to communicate some information about oneself to others. The 2 main self-presentational motives are to please the audience and to construct (create, maintain, and modify) one's public self congruent to one's ideal. It is proposed that a wide range of social behavior is determined or influenced by these self-presentational concerns. Research evidence is examined to show the relevance of the self-presentational motives to giving and receiving help, conformity, reactance, attitude expression and change, responses to evaluations, aggressive behavior, self-serving and counter-defensive attributional statements, task performance, ingratiation, and emotion.(149 ref)(PsycINFO Database Record (c) 2016 APA, all rights reserved)
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Scholar articles
RF Baumeister - Psychological bulletin, 1982