This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, 1993). Across 4 studies, name letter evaluations were positively biased, confirming that implicit self-esteem is generally positive (A. G. Greenwald & M. R. Banaji, 1995). Study 1 found that this name letter bias was stable over a 4-week period. Study 2 found that positive bias for name letters and positive bias for birth date numbers were correlated and that both biases became inhibited when participants were induced to respond in a deliberative manner. Studies 3-4 found that implicit self-evaluations corresponded with self-reported self-evaluations, but only when participants were evaluating themselves very quickly (Study 3) or under cognit...
Recent interest in the implicit self-esteem construct has led to the creation and use of several new...
Three experiments investigated whether implicit self-esteem was influenced by various perceptual sti...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, ...
Implicit self-esteem is the automatic and unconscious component of self-esteem, which is generally ...
Greenwald and Banaji (1995) introduced the concept of implicit self-esteem a little over ten years a...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
Implicit self-esteem has recently been the focus of much research. Implicit self-esteem is distinct ...
A common measure for implicit self-esteem is the name letter effect, traditionally calculated as the...
Implicit and Explicit Measures of Self-Esteem, 2 The assumption that implicit measures assess associ...
This study examined the effect of positive feedback (in the context of high scores received on an in...
Gaining insight into the nature and consequences of people’s global self-evaluations (i.e., their se...
Thirty years ago this year, Jozef Nuttin first reported that people prefer the letters occurring in ...
We introduce a single-item implicit measure of global self-esteem. The measure is based on the mereo...
Four studies tested whether the perceived validity of intuition increases the correspondence between...
Recent interest in the implicit self-esteem construct has led to the creation and use of several new...
Three experiments investigated whether implicit self-esteem was influenced by various perceptual sti...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
This article explores the links between implicit self-esteem and the automatic self (D. L. Paulhus, ...
Implicit self-esteem is the automatic and unconscious component of self-esteem, which is generally ...
Greenwald and Banaji (1995) introduced the concept of implicit self-esteem a little over ten years a...
People show a preference for the letters occurring in their name (Name-Letter Effect, Nuttin, 1984),...
Implicit self-esteem has recently been the focus of much research. Implicit self-esteem is distinct ...
A common measure for implicit self-esteem is the name letter effect, traditionally calculated as the...
Implicit and Explicit Measures of Self-Esteem, 2 The assumption that implicit measures assess associ...
This study examined the effect of positive feedback (in the context of high scores received on an in...
Gaining insight into the nature and consequences of people’s global self-evaluations (i.e., their se...
Thirty years ago this year, Jozef Nuttin first reported that people prefer the letters occurring in ...
We introduce a single-item implicit measure of global self-esteem. The measure is based on the mereo...
Four studies tested whether the perceived validity of intuition increases the correspondence between...
Recent interest in the implicit self-esteem construct has led to the creation and use of several new...
Three experiments investigated whether implicit self-esteem was influenced by various perceptual sti...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...