Implicit egotism is the notion that major life decisions are influenced by name-similarity. This paper revisits the evidence for the most systematic test of this hypothesis. Anseel & Duyck (2008) analyzed data from 1/3 of all Belgian employees and found that a disproportionate fraction of them shared their initial with their employer. Using a data set with American employees I replicate the finding, but new analyses strongly suggest they are due to reverse causality, whereby the documented effect seems to be driven by people naming companies they start after themselves rather than by employees seeking out companies they have a shared initial with. Walt Disney, for example, worked for a company starting with D (Disney World) not because of a...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
Although the name-letter-effect has been demonstrated reliably in choice contexts, recent research h...
Implicit egotism is the notion that major life decisions are influenced by name-similarity. This pap...
Three articles published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology have shown that a dispr...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
According to a new hypothesis based on implicit egotism, people gravitate toward cities, states, and...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Consumers subconsciously prefer brand names that resemble their own names - an effect called name le...
Research has shown that people prefer the letters in their names to letters that are not in their na...
According to a new hypothesis based on implicit egotism, people gravitate toward cities, states, and...
This study examined the impact of implicit egotism on social distance. Sixty-one participants with h...
This study examined the impact of implicit egotism on social distance. Sixty-one participants with h...
In five studies, we found that people like their names enough to unconsciously pursue consciously av...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
Although the name-letter-effect has been demonstrated reliably in choice contexts, recent research h...
Implicit egotism is the notion that major life decisions are influenced by name-similarity. This pap...
Three articles published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology have shown that a dispr...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
According to a new hypothesis based on implicit egotism, people gravitate toward cities, states, and...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Consumers subconsciously prefer brand names that resemble their own names - an effect called name le...
Research has shown that people prefer the letters in their names to letters that are not in their na...
According to a new hypothesis based on implicit egotism, people gravitate toward cities, states, and...
This study examined the impact of implicit egotism on social distance. Sixty-one participants with h...
This study examined the impact of implicit egotism on social distance. Sixty-one participants with h...
In five studies, we found that people like their names enough to unconsciously pursue consciously av...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
Although the name-letter-effect has been demonstrated reliably in choice contexts, recent research h...