Study Finds People Cannot Tell When You Are Being Authentic

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Study Finds People Cannot Tell When You Are Being Authentic
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Do you know when other people are being genuine and when they’re just pretending? Not so fast, writes ArashEmamzadeh

Investigating perceptions of authenticitySurveys were given to two samples —Amazon’s Mechanical Turk workers and a class of MBA students. Perceptions of authenticity were measured using five items . The importance of authenticity was evaluated with four items A sample of 207 MBA students completed a number of surveys over a month and a half. These included self-evaluations and evaluations of group members.

Analysis of data showed, “other-rated authenticity did not significantly correlate with any self-rated measure of authenticity.” Furthermore, “perceived authenticity was biased. First, other-ratings of authenticity were more positive than self-ratings. Second, authentic raters rated other individuals as more authentic; that is, raters were biased by their own authenticity.”Another interesting finding was that familiarity was not predictive of the accuracy of perceptions of authenticity judgments.

Perhaps artificiality is easier to observe than authenticity, just as it is easier to tell when someone isOr maybe it is less difficult to fake authenticity than it is to be truly authentic.symptom of the disease. Therefore, even medical students will be able to diagnose the disease.of the symptoms. So he or she may not appear actually ill to the average person.

The results also indicate we should not expect others to know when we are being sincere and true to ourselves. For instance, we may be thinking that others now have greater respect and admiration for our

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