Distortions in reports of health behaviors: The time span effect and illusory supefuority
- 1 May 1998
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Psychology & Health
- Vol. 13 (3) , 451-466
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08870449808407303
Abstract
The occurreace of a time span effect and illusory superiority in self reports of health behaviors was tested. It was found that people report proportionally lower frequencies of both healthy and unhealthy behaviors if they give frequency estimations over a longer as compared to a shorter time span (time span effect). In addition, they report lower frequencies of unhealthy behaviors, and higher frequencies of healthy behaviors for themselves than for the average other (illusory superiority). For healthy but not for unhealthy behaviors a stronger illusory superiority effect was obtained in frequency reports for behavioral expectations as compared to past behaviors. Potential explanations and implications for subjective measurements of health behavior are discussed.Keywords
This publication has 27 references indexed in Scilit:
- Self-Favoring Biases for Positive and Negative Characteristics: Independent Phenomena?Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1996
- The interpretation of verbal reports in health psychology; editors' introductionPsychology & Health, 1996
- Self‐Favoring Biases, Self‐Presentation, and the Self‐Other Asymmetry in Social ComparisonJournal of Personality, 1995
- Modification of Fishbein and Ajzen's theory of reasoned action to predict chip consumptionFood Quality and Preference, 1992
- Planned health education and the role of self-efficacy: Dutch researchHealth Education Research, 1991
- Characteristics of interval‐based estimates of autobiographical frequenciesApplied Cognitive Psychology, 1991
- A Tale of Two Questions: Benefits of Asking More Than One QuestionPublic Opinion Quarterly, 1990
- The precaution adoption process.Health Psychology, 1988
- Evaluations of Self and Others: Self-Enhancement Biases in Social JudgmentsSocial Cognition, 1986
- When Four Months Equal a Year: Inconsistencies in Student Reports of Drug UsePublic Opinion Quarterly, 1981