A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious selfregulation, which people under threat use to enhance their self-esteem. This study demonstrated the name letter effect in Japanese participants using the English alphabet, and examined if preference for their name letter changes in response to threat. We manipulated the strength of self-threat by assigning the participants to a difficult or easy quiz. As a result, we successfully demonstrated the name letter effect. The strength of the first and family name letter preferences differed according to the participants' gender. Implicit egotism is partially observed among male participants, thus they boosted their name letter preference after being exposed to a ...
This study examined the impact of implicit egotism on social distance. Sixty-one participants with h...
Research has shown that people prefer the letters in their names to letters that are not in their na...
This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, ...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious self-regulation, wh...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Thirty years ago this year, Jozef Nuttin first reported that people prefer the letters occurring in ...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
We tested the usefulness of name-letter preference scores as indirect indicators of self-esteem by e...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Four studies test both the alternative explanation advanced by Hoorens and Todorova (1988) for Nutti...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
A common measure for implicit self-esteem is the name letter effect, traditionally calculated as the...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
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...
Research has shown that people prefer the letters in their names to letters that are not in their na...
This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, ...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious self-regulation, wh...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Thirty years ago this year, Jozef Nuttin first reported that people prefer the letters occurring in ...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
We tested the usefulness of name-letter preference scores as indirect indicators of self-esteem by e...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Four studies test both the alternative explanation advanced by Hoorens and Todorova (1988) for Nutti...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
A common measure for implicit self-esteem is the name letter effect, traditionally calculated as the...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
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...
Research has shown that people prefer the letters in their names to letters that are not in their na...
This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, ...