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Handwriting and Self-Presentation
The Journal of Social Psychology, 1975Summary Relations were examined between students' self-conceptions and handwriting-based inferences about academically relevant traits made by members of the academic population to whom the writers were unknown. There was good interjudge agreement for some traits. Agreement between handwriting judgments and writer self-ratings was significantly reduced
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2001
Focuses on 2 types of aversive self-presentations: those that are intended to be aversive and those that have aversive consequences without the actor's intention. The author presents a taxonomy of self-presentational behavior that includes positive as well as negative behaviors, and describes the motives for self-presentation in general.
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Focuses on 2 types of aversive self-presentations: those that are intended to be aversive and those that have aversive consequences without the actor's intention. The author presents a taxonomy of self-presentational behavior that includes positive as well as negative behaviors, and describes the motives for self-presentation in general.
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1989
I first encountered phenomenology as an undergradute at Northwestern in the Sixties. Only, I was a student of engineering, majoring in mathematics. In the midst of my junior year I looked at the text my roommate was reading for a course on perception (I still have this text).
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I first encountered phenomenology as an undergradute at Northwestern in the Sixties. Only, I was a student of engineering, majoring in mathematics. In the midst of my junior year I looked at the text my roommate was reading for a course on perception (I still have this text).
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2006
Abstract In the civic registry of Verona for 1603 we find one Giacomo Bonvesino, originally from Sant ‘Ambrogio in the Valpolicella, resident in the San Tomio quarter with his wife, Isabetta, her mother, and their four daughters. Bonvesino listed himself as zaratano, charlatan in the Veneto dialect.
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Abstract In the civic registry of Verona for 1603 we find one Giacomo Bonvesino, originally from Sant ‘Ambrogio in the Valpolicella, resident in the San Tomio quarter with his wife, Isabetta, her mother, and their four daughters. Bonvesino listed himself as zaratano, charlatan in the Veneto dialect.
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How online self-presentation affects well-being and body image: A systematic review
Telematics and Informatics, 2020Nadia A J D Bij de Vaate +2 more
exaly

