Dataset for: Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluations
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Kim, Jun-Yeob
                                                        Other kind(s) of contributor
Newman, Daniel A.
                                                                                                                                                                Harms, P. D.
                                                                                                                                                                Wood, Dustin
                                                        Abstract / Description
Research in personality and organizational psychology has begun to investigate a novel evaluative trait known as perceived normality, defined as an overall perception that one is normal (vs. strange or weird). The current work evaluates a brief measure of this trait (i.e., a “weirdness scale”), extending past work by assessing both self-reports and peer reports of these normality evaluations. Results confirm the measurement equivalence of self- and peer-reports of perceived weirdness, and discriminant validity of self- and peer-reports of perceived weirdness from Big Five traits. A multitrait-multisource analysis further reveals that trait loadings are larger than self-report and peer-report method loadings for the measure of perceived weirdness. Implications for measurement of self-perceptions and social perceptions of weirdness/normality are discussed.
                                                                                                                                                                Dataset for: Kim, J.-Y., Newman, D. A., Harms, P. D., & Wood, D. (2023). Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluations. Personality Science, 4, 1-23. https://doi.org/10.5964/ps.7399
                                                        Keyword(s)
perceived weirdness normality evaluations multitrait-multimethod measurement equivalence Big FivePersistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2021-09-06
                                                        Publisher
PsychArchives
                                                        Is referenced by
Citation
Kim, J.-Y. (2021). Dataset for: Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluations [Data set]. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/PSYCHARCHIVES.5085
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                            Dataset.csvCSV - 184.29KBMD5 : f724e5dc8cec4abbbc19816b921d89f2
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                            Codebook.csvCSV - 1.5KBMD5 : c8c9d733de0e04e1fe71928731a7457b
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            There are no other versions of this object.
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                        Author(s) / Creator(s)Kim, Jun-Yeob
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                        Other kind(s) of contributorNewman, Daniel A.
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                        Other kind(s) of contributorHarms, P. D.
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                        Other kind(s) of contributorWood, Dustin
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                        PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2021-09-06T14:08:13Z
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                        Made available on2021-09-06T14:08:13Z
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                        Date of first publication2021-09-06
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                        Abstract / DescriptionResearch in personality and organizational psychology has begun to investigate a novel evaluative trait known as perceived normality, defined as an overall perception that one is normal (vs. strange or weird). The current work evaluates a brief measure of this trait (i.e., a “weirdness scale”), extending past work by assessing both self-reports and peer reports of these normality evaluations. Results confirm the measurement equivalence of self- and peer-reports of perceived weirdness, and discriminant validity of self- and peer-reports of perceived weirdness from Big Five traits. A multitrait-multisource analysis further reveals that trait loadings are larger than self-report and peer-report method loadings for the measure of perceived weirdness. Implications for measurement of self-perceptions and social perceptions of weirdness/normality are discussed.en
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                        Abstract / DescriptionDataset for: Kim, J.-Y., Newman, D. A., Harms, P. D., & Wood, D. (2023). Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluations. Personality Science, 4, 1-23. https://doi.org/10.5964/ps.7399en
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                        Review statusunknownen
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                        CitationKim, J.-Y. (2021). Dataset for: Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluations [Data set]. PsychArchives. https://doi.org/10.23668/PSYCHARCHIVES.5085en
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                        Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/4509
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                        Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.5085
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                        Language of contenteng
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                        PublisherPsychArchives
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                        Is referenced byhttps://doi.org/10.5964/ps.7399
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                        Is related tohttps://www.psycharchives.org/handle/20.500.12034/4510
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                        Is related tohttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/9160
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                        Keyword(s)perceived weirdnessen
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                        Keyword(s)normality evaluationsen
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                        Keyword(s)multitrait-multimethoden
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                        Keyword(s)measurement equivalenceen
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                        Keyword(s)Big Fiveen
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                        Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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                        TitleDataset for: Perceived Weirdness: A Multitrait-Multisource Study of Self and Other Normality Evaluationsen
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                        DRO typeresearchDataen