meta-analyses that included eight papers to investigate the question of whether people from Eastern cultures self-enhance more for traits that they view to be important compared to those that they view as unimportant. The results supported their hypothesis: Self-enhancement appears to be pancultural. However, this conclusion is severely compromised by six relevant papers that are not included in their meta-analyses. Importantly, all of these six studies contradicted their hypothesis. When complete meta-analyses are conducted which include all of the relevant papers, a very different pattern of results emerges. Eastern and Western cultures do not differ from each other in the pattern of their self-enhancement of independent and interdependen...
The culture movement challenged the universality of the self-enhancement motive by proposing that th...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as ‘the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement ...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as 'the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement'...
meta-analyses that included eight papers to investigate the question of whether people from Eastern ...
In a Journal of Personality and Social Psychology article, Sedikides, Gaertner and Vevea (2005) pres...
meta-analysis of published cross-cultural studies of self-enhancement reveals pervasive and pronounc...
What types of studies test the question of pancultural self-enhancement? Sedikides, Gaertner, and Ve...
self-enhancement. S. J. Heine (2005) challenged the authors ’ research on evidential and logical gro...
self-enhancement. S. J. Heine (2005) challenged the authors ’ research on evidential and logical gro...
C. Sedikides, L. Gaertner, and Y. Toguchi (2003) reported findings favoring the universality of self...
What types of studies test the question of pancultural self-enhancement? Sedikides, Gaertner, and Ve...
C. Sedikides, L. Gaertner, and Y. Toguchi (2003; see record 2002-08440-007) reported findings favori...
Heine, Kitayama and Hamamura (2007) attributed the Sedikides, Gaertner and Vevea (2005) findings to ...
defined by tendencies to view oneself in overly positive terms) is universal. The present article ch...
A recent meta-analysis on cross-cultural studies of self-enhancement finds that evidence for East As...
The culture movement challenged the universality of the self-enhancement motive by proposing that th...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as ‘the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement ...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as 'the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement'...
meta-analyses that included eight papers to investigate the question of whether people from Eastern ...
In a Journal of Personality and Social Psychology article, Sedikides, Gaertner and Vevea (2005) pres...
meta-analysis of published cross-cultural studies of self-enhancement reveals pervasive and pronounc...
What types of studies test the question of pancultural self-enhancement? Sedikides, Gaertner, and Ve...
self-enhancement. S. J. Heine (2005) challenged the authors ’ research on evidential and logical gro...
self-enhancement. S. J. Heine (2005) challenged the authors ’ research on evidential and logical gro...
C. Sedikides, L. Gaertner, and Y. Toguchi (2003) reported findings favoring the universality of self...
What types of studies test the question of pancultural self-enhancement? Sedikides, Gaertner, and Ve...
C. Sedikides, L. Gaertner, and Y. Toguchi (2003; see record 2002-08440-007) reported findings favori...
Heine, Kitayama and Hamamura (2007) attributed the Sedikides, Gaertner and Vevea (2005) findings to ...
defined by tendencies to view oneself in overly positive terms) is universal. The present article ch...
A recent meta-analysis on cross-cultural studies of self-enhancement finds that evidence for East As...
The culture movement challenged the universality of the self-enhancement motive by proposing that th...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as ‘the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement ...
We do not regard the better-than-average effect as 'the only acceptable measure of self-enhancement'...