“…For example, both groups tend to overestimate their abilities, seek out positive evaluative feedback, and make self‐serving attributions (e. g., by taking personal credit for their successes, but blaming external forces for their failures) (Mezulis, Abramson, Hyde, & Hankin, ; Stipek & Mac Iver, ; Trzesniewski, Kinal, & Donnellan, ). Evidence that both children and adults frequently share news of positive events with others and that both groups generally benefit from active‐constructive responses to these positive event disclosures is also consistent with the perspective that self‐enhancement motives are strong, if not universal (Altermatt, ; Gable & Reis, ).…”