R. Weidmann, W. J. Chopik, R. A. Ackerman, M. Allroggen, E. C. Bianchi, C. Brecheen, W. K. Campbell, T. M. Gerlach, K. Geukes, E. Grijalva, I. Grossmann, C. J. Hopwood, R. Hutteman, S. Konrath, A. C. Küfner, M. Leckelt, J. D. Miller, L. Penke, A. L. Pincus, K. H. Renner, D. Richter, B. W. Roberts, C. G. Sibley, L. J. Simms, E. Wetzel, A. G. Wright and M. D. Back
Age differences in narcissism: A comprehensive study across eight measures and over 250,000 participants
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Age and gender differences in narcissism have been studied often. However, considering the rich history of narcissism research accompanied by its diverging conceptualizations, little is known about age and gender differences across various narcissism measures. The present study investigated age and gender differences and their interactions across eight widely used narcissism instruments (i.e., Narcissistic Personality Inventory, Hypersensitive Narcissism Scale, Dirty Dozen, Psychological Entitlement Scale, DSM-IV NPD, Narcissistic Admiration and Rivalry Questionnaire-Short Form, Single Item Narcissism Scale, and brief version of the Pathological Narcissism Inventory). The findings of Study 1 (N = 5,736) revealed heterogeneity in how strongly the measures correlated. Some instruments loaded clearly on one of three factors proposed by previous research (i.e., neuroticism, extraversion, antagonism), while others cross- loaded across factors and in distinct ways. Cross-sectional analyses using each measure and meta-analytic results across all measures (Study 2) with a total sample of 270,029 participants suggest consistent linear age effects (random effects meta-analytic effect of r = -.104), with narcissism being highest in young adulthood. Consistent gender differences also emerged (random effects meta-analytic effect was -.079), such that men scored higher in narcissism than women. Quadratic age effects and age x gender effects were generally very small and inconsistent. We conclude that despite the various conceptualizations of narcissism, age and gender differences are generalizable across the eight measures used in the present study. However, their size varied based on the instrument used. We discuss the sources of this heterogeneity and the potential mechanisms for age and gender differences.