نتایج جستجو برای: Self-conception

تعداد نتایج: 548762  

Journal: :مجله مطالعات جامعه شناختی جوانان 0
علی هاشمیان فر ali hashemianfar esfahanاصفهان اعظم ولایتی azam velayati dehaghanدهاقان امیررضا رضی amirreza razi dehaghanدهاقان

physical self-concept or perception of physical self is one of the main factors and properties of perception of one’s identity, especially of the youth which has recently been the center of attention of experts in different branches of humanities and social sciences. in fact, perception of body can be considered one of the most important factors that inevitably influence many of our social rela...

Journal: :Personality & social psychology bulletin 2006
Saskia A Schwinghammer Diederik A Stapel Hart Blanton

Three studies show that different forms of self-activation have differential influences on the processing of social comparison information. Activating neutral self-conceptions results in defensive processing of threatening social comparison information (Study 1). Participants maintain favorable self-evaluations in the face of upward comparison and rate the upward target of comparison negatively...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 2006
Pablo Briñol Richard E Petty S Christian Wheeler

Individuals with discrepancies among their explicit beliefs often engage in greater elaboration of discrepancy-related information in a presumed attempt to reduce the discrepancy. The authors predicted that individuals with discrepancies between explicit and implicit self-conceptions might similarly be motivated to engage in processing of discrepancy-related information, even though they might ...

2013
Shaun Gallagher

I argue for a pattern theory of self as a useful way to organize an interdisciplinary approach to discussions of what constitutes a self. According to the pattern theory, a self is constituted by a number of characteristic features or aspects that may include minimal embodied, minimal experiential, affective, intersubjective, psychological/cognitive, narrative, extended, and situated aspects. A...

Journal: :Journal of personality and social psychology 1989
B W Pelham W B Swann

Three factors were identified that uniquely contribute to people's global self-esteem: (a) people's tendencies to experience positive and negative affective states, (b) people's specific self-views (i.e., their conceptions of their strengths and weaknesses), and (c) the way people frame their self-views. Framing factors included the relative certainty and importance of people's positive versus ...

2001
Sean M. McCrea Edward R. Hirt

This research investigated whether self-handicapping preserves specific conceptions of ability in a particular domain despite poor performance. Reports of preparatory behaviors and stress among introductory psychology students were measured prior to an exam and subsequent performance, attributions for the performance, and measures of global self-esteem and specific selfconceptions were measured...

Journal: :Review of European Studies 2018

2012
Christopher J. Bryan Hal E. Hershfield

Americans are not saving enough for retirement. Previous research suggests that this is due, in part, to people’s tendency to think of the future self as more like another person than like the present self, making saving feel like giving money away rather than like investing in oneself. Using objective employer saving data, a field experiment capitalized on this phenomenon to increase saving. I...

Journal: :فلسفه و کلام اسلامی 0
سیده زهرا حسینی دانشگاه تهران، دانشجوی دکتری فلسفه و حکمت اسلامی احد فرامرز قراملکی دانشگاه تهران، استاد

according to mathnawi (the mystical mathnawi), self-alienation (or loss of one’s nerve) sets in as soon as one’s self-consciousness begins to wane as mathnawi defines a human being with respect to his/her consciousness. the basis of a man’s perception of the immediate world, values and behaviour lies in his self-conception (the way he imagines himself); consequently, if his self-conception is f...

Journal: :Journal of adolescence 2015
Jeffrey Jensen Arnett Laura M Padilla-Walker

Four hundred Danish emerging adults ages 17-29 were surveyed regarding their conceptions of adulthood and their self-assessments of their adult status. A majority of the 17-24-year-olds and nearly half the 25-29-year-olds viewed themselves as being adults in some ways but not others. Participants reported feeling most adult when with co-workers or romantic partners, and least adult with mothers...

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