So they can cluster and flatter each other, leading to toxic social systems.
You remind me of someone awesome: Narcissistic tolerance is driven by perceived similarity
Author: K. Alex Burton,John Milton Adams,William Hart,Brett Grant,Kyle Richardson,Greg Tortoriello
Publication: Personality and Individual Differences
Publisher:Elsevier
Date:January 2017
Highlights
•Narcissists (vs. non-narcissists) are more tolerant of other narcissists.
•There is support for narcissistic-tolerance theory when using a more ecologically valid manipulation.
•Perceived similarity and selective interpretation mediate the link between narcissism and liking.
Abstract
Previous research suggests that narcissists (vs. non-narcissists) may be more tolerant of other narcissists. However, previous research on this topic has involved methodologies that rely on trait-relevant priming rather than observations of actual behavior, thus limiting the generalizability of the findings. The current study examined whether narcissists tolerate narcissists by assessing participants' reactions to actors behaving in a narcissistic or non-narcissistic fashion. Narcissism was positively associated with liking in the narcissistic-actor condition and negatively associated with liking in the non-narcissistic-actor condition. Path modeling suggested that this interaction was mediated by perceived similarity and tendencies to selectively interpret the actor's behavior. These findings have implications for how narcissists view other narcissists and interpret social information.
You remind me of someone awesome: Narcissistic tolerance is driven by perceived similarity
Author: K. Alex Burton,John Milton Adams,William Hart,Brett Grant,Kyle Richardson,Greg Tortoriello
Publication: Personality and Individual Differences
Publisher:Elsevier
Date:January 2017
Highlights
•Narcissists (vs. non-narcissists) are more tolerant of other narcissists.
•There is support for narcissistic-tolerance theory when using a more ecologically valid manipulation.
•Perceived similarity and selective interpretation mediate the link between narcissism and liking.
Abstract
Previous research suggests that narcissists (vs. non-narcissists) may be more tolerant of other narcissists. However, previous research on this topic has involved methodologies that rely on trait-relevant priming rather than observations of actual behavior, thus limiting the generalizability of the findings. The current study examined whether narcissists tolerate narcissists by assessing participants' reactions to actors behaving in a narcissistic or non-narcissistic fashion. Narcissism was positively associated with liking in the narcissistic-actor condition and negatively associated with liking in the non-narcissistic-actor condition. Path modeling suggested that this interaction was mediated by perceived similarity and tendencies to selectively interpret the actor's behavior. These findings have implications for how narcissists view other narcissists and interpret social information.
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