Etymology

Imposter Syndrome

Two psychologists named it in 1978. The women they studied had PhDs and still believed they had fooled everyone.

English · 1978
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In 1978, psychologists Pauline Rose Clance and Suzanne Imes published a paper in Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice titled "The Impostor Phenomenon in High Achieving Women." They described an internal experience of intellectual phoniness among people whose accomplishments should have made that feeling impossible.1

Clance and Imes studied over 150 women who held PhDs, were recognized professionals, or had earned high marks on standardized tests. Despite this objective evidence, the women persisted in believing they were not truly intelligent and had deceived anyone who thought otherwise.2 The researchers identified two family patterns: women whose sibling had been labeled "the smart one," and women whose families praised everything, leaving them unable to trust any evaluation.

150+
Women with PhDs and professional honors studied by Clance and Imes who believed they had fooled everyone.

Clance and Imes originally called it a phenomenon, not a syndrome, because it is not a clinical disorder. It does not appear in the DSM-5.3 A 2020 systematic review of 62 studies found prevalence rates ranging from 9 to 82 percent across populations, with no consistent gender difference.4

In 1985, Clance published a 20-item questionnaire that became the most widely used measure of the experience.5 A question the scale cannot answer is why a system that constantly evaluates, ranks, and sorts people would produce millions of professionals who do not believe their own credentials.

1978
Clance and Imes published the first paper on the impostor phenomenon in high-achieving women.
1985
Clance published the Impostor Phenomenon Scale, a 20-item diagnostic questionnaire.
2020
A systematic review of 62 studies found prevalence rates between 9 and 82 percent.
1 Pauline Rose Clance and Suzanne A. Imes, "The Impostor Phenomenon in High Achieving Women: Dynamics and Therapeutic Intervention," Psychotherapy: Theory, Research and Practice 15, no. 3 (1978): 241-247.
2 Clance and Imes, 241-247.
3 American Psychiatric Association, Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders, 5th ed. (Arlington: APA, 2013).
4 Dena M. Bravata et al., "Prevalence, Predictors, and Treatment of Impostor Syndrome: A Systematic Review," Journal of General Internal Medicine 35 (2020): 1252-1275.
5 Pauline Rose Clance, The Impostor Phenomenon: Overcoming the Fear That Haunts Your Success (Atlanta: Peachtree Publishers, 1985).
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