2020
DOI: 10.1111/sjop.12643
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Mechanism underlying the self‐enhancement effect of voice attractiveness evaluation: self‐positivity bias and familiarity effect

Abstract: The aim of the present study was to determine whether the self‐enhancement effect of voice attractiveness evaluation is due to general self‐positivity bias and/or the familiarity effect. The participants were asked to rate the attractiveness of their own voice, a friend's voice and strangers' voices. In addition, a self‐reference valence (SR‐valence) task was adopted in the experiment. Significant self‐enhancement effects in voice attractiveness ratings were demonstrated, regardless of whether the participants… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(8 citation statements)
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“…According to the definition of the self-enhancement effect of vocal attractiveness evaluation (Hughes & Harrison, 2013;Peng et al, 2020;Peng et al, 2019), it could be indicated by two means. From the perspective of the rater, the self-enhancementeffect refers to the phenomenon that people tend to rate their own voices as more attractive than others rate their voices; thus, the self-enhancement effect (termed "SE_rater") could be calculated by subtracting the mean rating scores of the "Selfby-Other" condition from the mean ratings of the "Self-by-Self" condition (i.e., SE_rater = Self-by-Self -Self-by-Other).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
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“…According to the definition of the self-enhancement effect of vocal attractiveness evaluation (Hughes & Harrison, 2013;Peng et al, 2020;Peng et al, 2019), it could be indicated by two means. From the perspective of the rater, the self-enhancementeffect refers to the phenomenon that people tend to rate their own voices as more attractive than others rate their voices; thus, the self-enhancement effect (termed "SE_rater") could be calculated by subtracting the mean rating scores of the "Selfby-Other" condition from the mean ratings of the "Self-by-Self" condition (i.e., SE_rater = Self-by-Self -Self-by-Other).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…However, only three studies to date have explored the evaluation of self-voice attractiveness (Hughes & Harrison, 2013;Peng, Hu, Wang, & Liu, 2020;Peng, Wang, Meng, Liu, & Hu, 2019). They all found that there was a significant selfenhancement effect; that is, people evaluated their own voices as sounding more attractive than others rated their voices (this refers to the self-enhancement effect from the perspective of the rater), and people also rated their own voices as more attractive than the voices of others (this refers to the selfenhancement effect from the perspective of the voice) (Hughes & Harrison, 2013;Peng et al, 2020;Peng et al, 2019).…”
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confidence: 99%
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