It was proved independently by both Wolfson [An ideal theoretic
characterization of the ring of all linear transformations, Amer. J. Math. 75
(1953), 358-386] and Zelinsky [Every Linear Transformation is Sum of
Nonsingular Ones, Proc. Amer. Math. Soc. 5 (1954), 627-630] that every linear
transformation of a vector space V over a division ring D is the sum of two
invertible linear transformations except when V is one-dimensional over
Z2. This was extended by Khurana and Srivastava [Right
self-injective rings in which each element is sum of two units, J. Algebra and
its Appl., Vol. 6, No. 2 (2007), 281-286] who proved that every element of a
right self-injective ring R is the sum of two units if and only if R has no
factor ring isomorphic to Z2. In this paper we prove that if R is
a right self-injective ring, then for each element a∈R there exists a unit
u∈R such that both a+u and a−u are units if and only if R has no
factor ring isomorphic to Z2 or Z3.Comment: To appear in J. Algebra and App