Self Construals refer to the ways of thinking about yourself and what bring you happiness:
1) Independent self-construal when a person see oneself as unique, stable, and has the ability
to take care of oneself
2) Interdependent self-construal when a person see oneself as willing to sacrifice for others, avoid arguments, and maintain group solidarity
Related Articles | |
Act of Love at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Act of Love: In the psychology context, an "act of love" refers to a behavior or action taken by an individual . . . Read More | |
Fluid intelligence at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Fluid intelligence is defined as novel reasoning and the efficiency of solving new problems or responding . . . Read More | |
Intimacy at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Intimacy refers to the connection to another person characterized by mutual caring, openness, self-disclosure, . . . Read More | |
Agency at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Agency is a term in psychology used when viewing the self as the originator of action. In psychology, . . . Read More | |
Categorical self at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
Categorical self refers to a person’s classification of the self along socially significant dimensions . . . Read More | |
The Dis-Identification Technique at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■■ |
The Dis-Identification Technique (DIT) (or "Who Am I?"-Technique) leads to self-management and thus to . . . Read More | |
Central route to persuasion at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Central route to persuasion refers to one of two types of cognitive processes by which persuasion occurs. . . . Read More | |
Elaboration likelihood model at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Elaboration likelihood model: elaboration likelihood model the Theory that there are two ways in which . . . Read More | |
Executive functioning at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Executive functioning refers to cognitive abilities such as abstract thinking, planning, organizing, . . . Read More | |
Peace at psychology-glossary.com | ■■■ |
Peace in the psychology context refers to a state of mental and emotional calmness, where there is an . . . Read More |