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of 7
pro vyhledávání: '"Muping Gan"'
Publikováno v:
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 118:720-742
As actors in a social world, people constantly engage in behaviors that put their traits and abilities on stage. But do actors understand the implications of these social performances for how others view them? Seven studies support an overblown impli
Publikováno v:
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 44:1460-1472
Across five experiments (total N = 715), we propose that people can gain a subjective sense of power by being authentic—in other words, state authenticity breeds power. Supporting this, participants reported feeling more powerful when they visualiz
Supplemental material, PSPB_Supplementary_Materials_v2 for The Power in Being Yourself: Feeling Authentic Enhances the Sense of Power by Muping Gan, Daniel Heller and Serena Chen in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::17a0c26b4bceaf87118d987f921e24d4
Supplemental material, heller_online_appendix for The Power in Being Yourself: Feeling Authentic Enhances the Sense of Power by Muping Gan, Daniel Heller and Serena Chen in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Externí odkaz:
https://explore.openaire.eu/search/publication?articleId=doi_dedup___::00ebe80f64a6b9a90fdb1a48807f175c
Autor:
Serena Chen, Muping Gan
Publikováno v:
Personalitysocial psychology bulletin. 43(4)
Relational authenticity—which refers to subjective feelings of authenticity in a specific relationship—confers well-being; yet little is known about what gives rise to it. The present research tested competing hypotheses about the basis of relati
Publikováno v:
Environment and Behavior. 46:24-45
The present study examined how feedback regarding one’s personal impact on the environment, along with feedback regarding one’s group’s impact, influences environmental attitudes, intentions, and self-beliefs. Using a bogus carbon footprint cal
Publikováno v:
Psychological Studies. 56:159-166
This article examines self-relevant processes that sustain behaviors that have little or no direct implications for people’s well-being. When outcomes are low in direct personal relevance, far in the future, or only weakly linked to one’s present