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Cultural Dispositions and Types of Self-Consciousness

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology / Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, (P)1229-0653;
2001, v.15 no.2, pp.111-139
Geung-Ho Cho (Sogang University)
Jung-Wan Myung (Sogang University)
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Abstract

To inverstigate the relationship between respondents' cultural dispositions and their focus of attention in some self-related areas, Korean high school students (n=624: Study 1) and college students (n=239: Study 2) participated and were divided into 2 groups: idiocentrics who have individualistic cultural disposition and allocentrics who have collectivist cultural disposition according to their scores on the Individualism-Collectivism Scale. We compared their responses on the 4 scales/questionaires: Self-Consciousness Scale, Depressive Experience Questionaire, False Uniqueness Perception Questionaire and False Consensus Perception Questionaire. As anticipated, the followings were found: Idiocintrics have strong private self-consciousness, are vulnerable to efficacy depression, and exaggerate their uniqueness in various abilities and individualistic traits; In contrast with idiocentrics, allocentrics have strong public self-consciousness, are vulnerable to dependency depression, and exaggerate their similarities with others in various tastes/hobbies and opinions/attitudes/values. On the bases of these results, it was discussed that idiocentric's attention is focused mostly to his/her own inner personal chatacteristics, while allocentric attends mostly to significant others and ingroup norms.

keywords
Cultural Disposition, Self-consciousness, Vulnerability to Depression, False Uniqueness, False Consensus, Asymmetry in Similarity Judgment
Submission Date
2001-07-02
Revised Date
Accepted Date
2001-07-13

Korean Journal of Social and Personality Psychology