Scientific Reports (Jul 2024)

Grandiose narcissism, unfounded beliefs, and behavioral reactions during the COVID-19 pandemic

  • Magdalena Żemojtel-Piotrowska,
  • Artur Sawicki,
  • Jarosław Piotrowski,
  • Uri Lifshin,
  • Mabelle Kretchner,
  • John J. Skowronski,
  • Constantine Sedikides,
  • Peter K. Jonason,
  • Mladen Adamovic,
  • Oli Ahmed,
  • Kokou A. Atitsogbe,
  • Laith Al-Shawaf,
  • Seth Christopher Yaw Appiah,
  • Rahkman Ardi,
  • Uzma Azam,
  • Zana Hasan Babakr,
  • Einar Baldvin Baldursson,
  • Sergiu Bălțătescu,
  • Konstantin Bochaver,
  • Aidos Bolatov,
  • Mario Bonato,
  • Harshalini Y. Bundhoo,
  • Trawin Chaleeraktrakoon,
  • Phatthanakit Chobthamkit,
  • Richard G. Cowden,
  • Victor Counted,
  • Gisela de Clunie,
  • Sonya Dragova-Koleva,
  • Carla Sofia Esteves,
  • Valdiney V. Gouveia,
  • Katherine Gundolf,
  • Salima Hamouda,
  • Carmen Haretche,
  • Evelyn Hye Kyung Jeong,
  • Dzintra Iliško,
  • Najma Iqbal Malik,
  • John Jamir Benzon Aruta,
  • Fanli Jia,
  • Veljko Jovanović,
  • Tomislav Jukić,
  • Doroteja Pavan Jukić,
  • Shanmukh V. Kamble,
  • Narine Khachatryan,
  • Martina Klicperova-Baker,
  • Christoph Kogler,
  • Emil Knezović,
  • Metodi Koralov,
  • Monika Kovacs,
  • Walaa Labib M. Eldesoki,
  • Aitor Larzabal Fernandez,
  • Kadi Liik,
  • Sadia Malik,
  • John Maltby,
  • Karine Malysheva,
  • Agim Mamuti,
  • Jasmina Mangafic,
  • Chanki Moon,
  • Taciano L. Milfont,
  • Stephan Muehlbacher,
  • Reza Najafi,
  • Emrah Özsoy,
  • Joonha Park,
  • Pablo Pérez de León,
  • Iva Polackova Solcova,
  • Jano Ramos-Diaz,
  • Goran Ridic,
  • Ognjen Riđić,
  • Adil Samekin,
  • Andrea Spoto,
  • Andrej Starc,
  • Delia Stefenel,
  • Kiều Thị Thanh Trà,
  • Habib Tiliouine,
  • Robert Tomšik,
  • Jorge Torres-Marín,
  • Charles S. Umeh,
  • Eduardo Wills-Herrera,
  • Anna Wlodarczyk,
  • Zahir Vally,
  • Christin‐Melanie Vauclair,
  • Illia Yahiiaiev,
  • Somayeh Zand

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41598-024-67954-2
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 14, no. 1
pp. 1 – 9

Abstract

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Abstract A theoretical perspective on grandiose narcissism suggests four forms of it (sanctity, admiration, heroism, rivalry) and states that these forms conduce to different ways of thinking and acting. Guided by this perspective, we examined in a multinational and multicultural study (61 countries; N = 15,039) how narcissism forms are linked to cognitions and behaviors prompted by the COVID-19 pandemic. As expected, differences in cognitions and behaviors across narcissism forms emerged. For example, higher narcissistic rivalry predicted lower likelihood of enactment of COVID-19 prevention behaviors, but higher narcissistic sanctity predicted higher likelihood of enactment of COVID-19 prevention behaviors. Further, whereas the heroism, admiration, and rivalry narcissism forms acted in a typically antisocial manner, with high narcissism predicting greater endorsement of unfounded health beliefs, the sanctity form acted in a prosocial manner, with higher narcissism being linked to lower endorsement of unfounded COVID-19 health beliefs. Thus, the findings (a) support the idea of four narcissism forms acting differently, and (b) show that these differences reflect a double-edged sword, sometimes linking to an anti-social orientation, and sometimes linking to a pro-social orientation.