Psychological Perspectives on the Self, Volumes 1-4Jerry M. Suls Lawrence Erlbaum Associates, 1982 - 273 pages |
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Page 200
... individual ? To answer these questions , Snyder and Gangestad ( 1982 ) allowed individuals to choose to enter or not to enter a social situation that called for the expression of social extraversion . For some individuals , the extra ...
... individual ? To answer these questions , Snyder and Gangestad ( 1982 ) allowed individuals to choose to enter or not to enter a social situation that called for the expression of social extraversion . For some individuals , the extra ...
Page 201
... individuals may require them , more often than low - self- monitoring individuals , to practice the strategy of audience segregation . Thus , high - self - monitoring individuals who present a very different image of them- selves at ...
... individuals may require them , more often than low - self- monitoring individuals , to practice the strategy of audience segregation . Thus , high - self - monitoring individuals who present a very different image of them- selves at ...
Page 202
... individuals may be considerably more dependent on global and abid- ing personal preferences . Thus , for example , when deciding whether to wear a three - piece suit or a sports jacket , the high - self - monitoring individual may ask ...
... individuals may be considerably more dependent on global and abid- ing personal preferences . Thus , for example , when deciding whether to wear a three - piece suit or a sports jacket , the high - self - monitoring individual may ask ...
Contents
The Self In Social Information Processing | 63 |
Sex Differences | 71 |
Comparison | 97 |
Copyright | |
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