Narcissistic Personality Features and Perceptions of Social Worth at Work: Implications for Job-Related Attitudes

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.2220232776

Keywords:

narcissism, job commitment, job satisfaction, investment, social worth

Abstract

We examined the role that perceptions of social worth played in the connections that narcissistic personality features had with job-related attitudes in a sample of Israeli community members (N = 814). Our results showed that the positive associations that the extraverted aspect of narcissism had with each of the job-related attitudes were mediated by status-based social worth. In contrast, the neurotic aspect of narcissism was negatively associated with job-related attitudes – with the exception of the perceived quality of alternative jobs – and these associations were mediated by status-based social worth. Antagonistic narcissism was negatively associated with job-related attitudes, but perceptions of social worth seemed to play little role in these associations. The discussion is focused on the role that perceptions of social worth may play in the connections between narcissism and job-related attitudes.

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Published

2023-06-20

How to Cite

Zeigler-Hill, V., Barlow, C., & Besser, A. (2023). Narcissistic Personality Features and Perceptions of Social Worth at Work: Implications for Job-Related Attitudes. Journal of Social Psychology Research, 2(2), 56–66. https://doi.org/10.37256/jspr.2220232776