Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Eyes on the Prize: Narcissism and Visual Attention to Status and Affiliation
View through CrossRef
NOTE: Article in press in Personality Science. This is the accepted manuscript. It has not undergone typesetting or copy-editing. This eye tracking study tested the hypothesis that narcissists’ visual attention is motivated, focusing on two fundamental social motives: status and affiliation. We measured participants’ full narcissism spectrum (agency, antagonism, and neuroticism) via self-reports. We measured visual attention to status and affiliation images via eye-tracking in the lab. We hypothesized that narcissistic agency would relate to increased attention to status, and that narcissistic antagonism would relate to increased attention to status and decreased attention to affiliation. We formulated no hypotheses regarding narcissistic neuroticism. Results showed that only agentic narcissism was related to increased attention toward status. The three forms of narcissism were unrelated to attention to affiliation. These findings suggest that agentic narcissists’ attention is driven by an underlying status motive. More broadly, findings are consistent with the notion that visual attention expresses and maintains people’s personality traits via satisfying trait-congruent motives.
Title: Eyes on the Prize: Narcissism and Visual Attention to Status and Affiliation
Description:
NOTE: Article in press in Personality Science.
This is the accepted manuscript.
It has not undergone typesetting or copy-editing.
This eye tracking study tested the hypothesis that narcissists’ visual attention is motivated, focusing on two fundamental social motives: status and affiliation.
We measured participants’ full narcissism spectrum (agency, antagonism, and neuroticism) via self-reports.
We measured visual attention to status and affiliation images via eye-tracking in the lab.
We hypothesized that narcissistic agency would relate to increased attention to status, and that narcissistic antagonism would relate to increased attention to status and decreased attention to affiliation.
We formulated no hypotheses regarding narcissistic neuroticism.
Results showed that only agentic narcissism was related to increased attention toward status.
The three forms of narcissism were unrelated to attention to affiliation.
These findings suggest that agentic narcissists’ attention is driven by an underlying status motive.
More broadly, findings are consistent with the notion that visual attention expresses and maintains people’s personality traits via satisfying trait-congruent motives.
Related Results
A Pragmatic Study of Narcissism in the American Movie Big Eyes (2014)
A Pragmatic Study of Narcissism in the American Movie Big Eyes (2014)
Narcissism is a complicated phenomenon that can be reflected in the narcissist’s language. Investigating narcissism in terms of linguistics, and pragmatics in particular, does not ...
Abusive supervision: exploring the relationship with narcissism, self-promotion and unpredictability
Abusive supervision: exploring the relationship with narcissism, self-promotion and unpredictability
PurposeThis study investigates whether subordinates who rate their managers higher on narcissism are also more likely to view their managers as abusive. In particular, the study ex...
Did Narcissism Evolve?
Did Narcissism Evolve?
This chapter, like each chapter in the edited book, focuses on narcissism (arrogance, exploitativeness, self-admiration, etc.). My goal is to entertain and evaluate the possibility...
The OVERT NARCISSISM AND ITS IMPACT ON INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS OF YOUNG ADULTS
The OVERT NARCISSISM AND ITS IMPACT ON INTERPERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS OF YOUNG ADULTS
The current research examined the relationship between overt narcissism and interpersonal relationship among young adults. A correlational research design was employed to assess th...
Overt and Covert Narcissism in Poland and the Netherlands
Overt and Covert Narcissism in Poland and the Netherlands
This article reports a study of the relation between narcissism as a personality characteristic and the cultural dimension of individualism/collectivism. Participants from a more c...
The Relationship Between Narcissism and Prosocial Risk-Taking Behavior: The Multiple Mediating Roles of Status Motivation and Belongingness Motivation
The Relationship Between Narcissism and Prosocial Risk-Taking Behavior: The Multiple Mediating Roles of Status Motivation and Belongingness Motivation
Abstract
Prosocial risk behavior (PRB) refers to individuals' active engagement in potentially risky behaviors to promote the well-being of others or society. Although the ...
Self-portraiture: on photography’s reflexive surface
Self-portraiture: on photography’s reflexive surface
This exposition deals with narcissism, narrativity, self-portraiture, and photography. It illustrates a practice-based research project instigated in 2007 that aims to decode and r...
Female Narcissism: Assessment, Aetiology, and Behavioural Manifestations
Female Narcissism: Assessment, Aetiology, and Behavioural Manifestations
Despite putative gender differences in the expression of narcissism, prominent theories have virtually dismissed the role of females in the development and manifestation of narciss...

