Title of article
IMPLICIT-EXPLICIT DIFFERENCES IN SELF-ENHANCEMENT FOR AMERICANS AND JAPANESE
Author/Authors
CHIHIRO KOBAYASHI، نويسنده , , Anthony G. Greenwald، نويسنده ,
Issue Information
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2003
Pages
20
From page
522
To page
541
Abstract
Past research on cross-cultural psychology has shown that North Americans have self-enhancing attitudes,
evaluating themselves more favorably than others, including friends. The present research identifies a discrepancy
— this self-enhancement in relation to friends did not appear when measured implicitly. Using
American and Japanese university students as subjects, the present studies investigated responses to explicit
(self-report) and implicit measures (the Implicit Association Test) toward three targets: self, best friends,
and fellow university students. Results revealed that North Americans showed more positive implicit attitudes
toward best friends than toward self, a very different pattern from the explicit results. For the Japanese,
best friends were evaluated slightly more positively than the self on implicit measures, which contrasted
with previous findings with explicit measures that showed best friends being evaluated more positively.
Keywords
Implicit association test , selfpresentation , self-esteem , Implicit self-esteem , Self-enhancement
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Serial Year
2003
Journal title
Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
Record number
708142
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