“…In testing this theory, Pryor, Gibbons, Wicklund, Fazio, and Hood (1977) thus found that the correspondence between self-ratings of sociability and actual social behavior was increased when subjects' degree of concurrent self-focus was enhanced by the presence of a mirror. From an individual-differences perspective, Scheier, Buss, and Buss (1978) and Turner, Scheier, Carver, and Ickes (1978) reported higher correlations between self-reports and behavior among subjects who were high rather than low in their dispositional levels of self-consciousness. Indeed, Carver and Scheier (1981) argued that as a general rule, focusing attention on the self produces more valid reports about mental states.…”