4.4 Article

Others Sometimes Know Us Better Than We Know Ourselves

Journal

CURRENT DIRECTIONS IN PSYCHOLOGICAL SCIENCE
Volume 20, Issue 2, Pages 104-108

Publisher

SAGE PUBLICATIONS INC
DOI: 10.1177/0963721411402478

Keywords

self-knowledge; accuracy; peer reports; personality; meta-perception; self-insight

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Most people believe that they know themselves better than anyone else knows them. However, a complete picture of what a person is like requires both the person's own perspective and the perspective of others who know him or her well. People's perceptions of their own personalities, while largely accurate, contain important omissions. Some of these blind spots are likely due to a simple lack of information, whereas others are due to motivated distortions in our self-perceptions. Perhaps for these reasons, others can perceive some aspects of personality better than the self can. This is especially true for traits that are very desirable or undesirable, when motivational factors are most likely to distort self-perceptions. Therefore, much can be learned about a person's personality from how he or she is seen by others. Future research should examine how people can tap into others' knowledge to improve self-knowledge.

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