Results 141 to 150 of about 3,024,748 (188)
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Self-Construal and the Fear of Death
Psychological Reports, 2015Orehek, Sasota, Kruglanski, Dechesne, and Ridgeway (2014) reported that priming students with self-construals (reading paragraphs focusing on the self vs others) increased their general fear of death. The Collett-Lester Fear of Death Scale measures the fear of death of the self separately from the fear of death of others, and so it was predicted that ...
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Is the Chinese self‐construal in transition?
Asian Journal of Communication, 2001The present article investigates the Chinese peoples’ interdependent and independent self‐construals, including how these self‐construals are influenced by socio‐demographic factors such as age, gender, and rural‐urban residence. A modified version of Singelis’ (1994) self construal scale was administered to 237 Chinese respondents’ in an urban and a ...
Nagesh Rao +3 more
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Self-construal and feature centrality
Marketing Letters, 2015The current research investigates the interactive influence of self-construal and product feature centrality on product judgment tasks. Feature centrality refers to the extent to which a feature is integral to the product concept and its network of correlated features, and contributes to the coherence of the product’s conceptual representation.
Mao, Huifang +3 more
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Culture, Self-Construal, and Embarrassability
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 1995This study investigates individual and cultural differences in embarrassability (i.e., susceptibility to embarrassment). Three hypotheses are formulated. First, the strength of the independent self-construal (the image of self as separate from others) is negatively correlated with embarrassability.
Theodore M. Singelis, William F. Sharkey
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Relational-interdependent self-construal
Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, 2012Relational-interdependent self-construal (RISC) refers to the tendency to think of oneself in terms of close relationships. We examined how self-construal predicted cognitions and affect within friendships. When listing friends, individuals named friends whom they perceived to be similar to the self in RISC (Study 1), but this was not because it was ...
Marian M. Morry +3 more
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Self-Construal in Chile and Norway
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 2009The study compares Chilean and Norwegian self-construal with regard to the concepts of independence and interdependence. Chile has been characterized as collectivistic and Norway as individualistic, and the hypothesis is that this characterization also distinguishes self-perception as independent and interdependent, respectively.
Arnulf Kolstad, Silje Horpestad
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Collectivistic Self‐Construal and Forgiveness
Counseling and Values, 2012This study tested a theoretical model of the relationship between collectivism and forgiveness. Participants (N= 298) completed measures of collectivistic self‐construal, forgiveness, and forgiveness‐related constructs. A collectivistic self‐construal was related to understanding forgiveness as an interpersonal process that involved reconciliation ...
Joshua N. Hook +4 more
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Language and Self-Construal Priming
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 2004Previous research has argued that language serves as a cognitive cue to reinforce culturally normative self-construals. We hypothesize that language-priming effects would be stronger for women than men and that they would primarily occur for self-construals that are not already latently salient in the respondents’ culture.
Markus Kemmelmeier +1 more
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2019
Self-concept is essential to the description of human beings. Authors from individualistic cultures have offered different definitions and measures of the self, sharing the idea that the self is a social entity that emerges from the constant dialectic relationships with others.
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Self-concept is essential to the description of human beings. Authors from individualistic cultures have offered different definitions and measures of the self, sharing the idea that the self is a social entity that emerges from the constant dialectic relationships with others.
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Culture and Individuation: The Role of Norms and Self-Construals
The Journal of Social Psychology, 2009Despite mounting evidence that members of Asian cultures are less likely to engage in behavior that makes them appear distinctive (i.e., individuating behavior) than members of prototypical Western culture, the direct mechanisms through which this effect occurs have not been explored. In the present research, we examined the role of judgments of social
Helen C, Boucher, Christina, Maslach
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