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Pancultural self-enhancement.
842
Citations
193
References
2003
Year
Social IdentityCultureSocial PsychologyCross-cultural PerspectiveMotivationEducationSocial SciencesCultural FactorApplied Social PsychologyCultural SensitivitySelf-enhancement MotiveUnited StatesCulture MovementPsychologyCultural Psychology
The culture movement challenged the universality of the self-enhancement motive by proposing that the motive is pervasive in individualistic cultures (the West) but absent in collectivistic cultures (the East). The present research posited that Westerners and Easterners use different tactics to achieve the same goal: positive self-regard. Study 1 tested participants from differing cultural backgrounds (the United States vs. Japan), and Study 2 tested participants of differing self-construals (independent vs. interdependent). Americans and independents self-enhanced on individualistic attributes, whereas Japanese and interdependents self-enhanced on collectivistic attributes. Independents regarded individualistic attributes, whereas interdependents regarded collectivistic attributes, as personally important. Attribute importance mediated self-enhancement. Regardless of cultural background or self-construal, people self-enhance on personally important dimensions. Self-enhancement is a universal human motive.
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