The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self

Introduction. This paper discusses the role of self-relevant information in individuals’ representations of the self. Self-relevant information is defined here as a type of social information that contains such data about an individual as other people’s opinions, judgements, and attitudes about that...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Kirill V. Zlokazov, Nikolai I. Leonov, Roman Yu. Porozov
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: ООО "КРЕДО" 2019-01-01
Series:Российский психологический журнал
Subjects:
Online Access:https://rpj.ru.com/index.php/rpj/article/view/780
_version_ 1818671286332686336
author Kirill V. Zlokazov
Nikolai I. Leonov
Roman Yu. Porozov
author_facet Kirill V. Zlokazov
Nikolai I. Leonov
Roman Yu. Porozov
author_sort Kirill V. Zlokazov
collection DOAJ
description Introduction. This paper discusses the role of self-relevant information in individuals’ representations of the self. Self-relevant information is defined here as a type of social information that contains such data about an individual as other people’s opinions, judgements, and attitudes about that person. Critical assessment of the existing knowledge on the relationship between self-relevant information and individuals’ representations of the self shows its insufficiency, especially concerning Russian samples. This paper: (a) considers various concepts of individuals’ perception of self-relevant information, (b) focuses on the known properties of self-relevant information, and (c) describes the procedure and results of an empirical study of the relationship between self-relevant information and individuals’ representations of the self. Methods. The authors undertook a socio-psychological experiment that employed standardized self-reports and interviews as the means for data collection. Content analysis and repeated measures ANOVA were the data processing methods. The sample consisted of 129 individual participants with a mean age of 19.3 years, 49 % of whom were men. Results. The respondents perceived social information as self-relevant if it contained a) direct or indirect reference to them; b) information important for their actions and meeting their needs; and c) references to social objects associated with them. The study showed that self-relevant information affects individuals’ self-appraisal and the accuracy of their representations of the self. Negative self-relevant information encourages individuals to seek new social information and to verify it by social comparison. Discussion. This study, carried out on the Russian sample, enriches our knowledge of individuals’ perception of self-relevant information and our understanding of how self-relevant information may lead to distorting individuals’ representations of the self. The findings offer some criteria for distinguishing self-relevant information from the irrelevant one. The results can be used to further study social identity transformations among participants of Internet communities and to assess threats of online communications in different age groups.
first_indexed 2024-12-17T07:21:35Z
format Article
id doaj.art-ab7719c1ce844be3a92a05b703680f01
institution Directory Open Access Journal
issn 1812-1853
2411-5789
language English
last_indexed 2024-12-17T07:21:35Z
publishDate 2019-01-01
publisher ООО "КРЕДО"
record_format Article
series Российский психологический журнал
spelling doaj.art-ab7719c1ce844be3a92a05b703680f012022-12-21T21:58:44ZengООО "КРЕДО"Российский психологический журнал1812-18532411-57892019-01-01154709610.21702/rpj.2018.4.4780The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the SelfKirill V. Zlokazov0Nikolai I. Leonov1Roman Yu. Porozov2Санкт-Петербургский университет Министерства внутренних дел Российской ФедерацииУдмуртский государственный университетУральский государственный педагогический университетIntroduction. This paper discusses the role of self-relevant information in individuals’ representations of the self. Self-relevant information is defined here as a type of social information that contains such data about an individual as other people’s opinions, judgements, and attitudes about that person. Critical assessment of the existing knowledge on the relationship between self-relevant information and individuals’ representations of the self shows its insufficiency, especially concerning Russian samples. This paper: (a) considers various concepts of individuals’ perception of self-relevant information, (b) focuses on the known properties of self-relevant information, and (c) describes the procedure and results of an empirical study of the relationship between self-relevant information and individuals’ representations of the self. Methods. The authors undertook a socio-psychological experiment that employed standardized self-reports and interviews as the means for data collection. Content analysis and repeated measures ANOVA were the data processing methods. The sample consisted of 129 individual participants with a mean age of 19.3 years, 49 % of whom were men. Results. The respondents perceived social information as self-relevant if it contained a) direct or indirect reference to them; b) information important for their actions and meeting their needs; and c) references to social objects associated with them. The study showed that self-relevant information affects individuals’ self-appraisal and the accuracy of their representations of the self. Negative self-relevant information encourages individuals to seek new social information and to verify it by social comparison. Discussion. This study, carried out on the Russian sample, enriches our knowledge of individuals’ perception of self-relevant information and our understanding of how self-relevant information may lead to distorting individuals’ representations of the self. The findings offer some criteria for distinguishing self-relevant information from the irrelevant one. The results can be used to further study social identity transformations among participants of Internet communities and to assess threats of online communications in different age groups.https://rpj.ru.com/index.php/rpj/article/view/780представление о себеобраз Ясамооценкасоциальное взаимодействиеЯ-релевантная информациянегативное самопредставлениетрансформацияпредставлений о себесоциальная перцепциясамопознаниесоциальное поведение
spellingShingle Kirill V. Zlokazov
Nikolai I. Leonov
Roman Yu. Porozov
The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
Российский психологический журнал
представление о себе
образ Я
самооценка
социальное взаимодействие
Я-релевантная информация
негативное самопредставление
трансформация
представлений о себе
социальная перцепция
самопознание
социальное поведение
title The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
title_full The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
title_fullStr The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
title_full_unstemmed The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
title_short The Role of Self-Relevant Information in Individuals’ Representations of the Self
title_sort role of self relevant information in individuals representations of the self
topic представление о себе
образ Я
самооценка
социальное взаимодействие
Я-релевантная информация
негативное самопредставление
трансформация
представлений о себе
социальная перцепция
самопознание
социальное поведение
url https://rpj.ru.com/index.php/rpj/article/view/780
work_keys_str_mv AT kirillvzlokazov theroleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself
AT nikolaiileonov theroleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself
AT romanyuporozov theroleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself
AT kirillvzlokazov roleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself
AT nikolaiileonov roleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself
AT romanyuporozov roleofselfrelevantinformationinindividualsrepresentationsoftheself