Publications by authors named "Elvia Vargas Trujillo"

Article Synopsis
  • - Markus and Kitayama's theory (1991) on self-construals emphasizes cultural influences in psychological processes but has faced criticism for overly focusing on North American versus East Asian comparisons.
  • - Recent research revisits this theory by employing a new 7-dimensional model of self-reported independence and interdependence, using data from 2 large-scale multinational surveys with thousands of participants across various countries.
  • - Findings reveal that cultural groups exhibit unique ways of expressing independence and interdependence, highlighting that a simple dichotomy of these constructs fails to capture the complexity of selfhood across different cultures.
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Several theories propose that self-esteem, or positive self-regard, results from fulfilling the value priorities of one's surrounding culture. Yet, surprisingly little evidence exists for this assertion, and theories differ about whether individuals must personally endorse the value priorities involved. We compared the influence of four bases for self-evaluation (controlling one's life, doing one's duty, benefitting others, achieving social status) among 4,852 adolescents across 20 cultural samples, using an implicit, within-person measurement technique to avoid cultural response biases.

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The motive to attain a distinctive identity is sometimes thought to be stronger in, or even specific to, those socialized into individualistic cultures. Using data from 4,751 participants in 21 cultural groups (18 nations and 3 regions), we tested this prediction against our alternative view that culture would moderate the ways in which people achieve feelings of distinctiveness, rather than influence the strength of their motivation to do so. We measured the distinctiveness motive using an indirect technique to avoid cultural response biases.

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