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    Please use this identifier to cite or link to this item: https://nccur.lib.nccu.edu.tw/handle/140.119/154958


    Title: Wipe away the impact of negative interpersonal feedback? The effect of psychological separation
    Authors: 孫蒨如
    Sun, Chien-Ru
    Contributors: 心理系
    Date: 2024-07
    Issue Date: 2024-12-26 13:51:10 (UTC+8)
    Abstract: We all hope to have a “positive self-evaluation,” but life is always full of tests and even setbacks, which may impact our self-evaluation. Psychologists have proposed many ways to enhance our self-evaluation. Although the current research results on embodied cognition are still controversial, some studies do show that an individual's physical feelings can also affect their cognition and even behaviour. In the present research, we explore how embodied cognition may affect an individual's self-evaluation and the confluence of self-functions. The embodied cognition employed is “physical cleansing.” Dong & Lee (2017) suggest that cleansing can be viewed as an embodied procedure of psychological separation. This study explored whether the psychological separation produced by physical cleansing also affects the negative feedback received during interpersonal interactions. Participants were randomly assigned to a 3 (interpersonal feedback: positive vs. negative vs. no feedback) x 2(how to evaluate antiseptic wipes: using it vs. examining it) design. The dependent measure was the evaluation of the interacting partner. Results showed that by using antiseptic wipes, participants in negative interpersonal feedback conditions would not devalue their partner. However, participants who were told to examine the antiseptic wipes didn't show the same effect. It indicated that cleansing did induce psychological separation and further affect subsequent evaluation. However, in the positive evaluation group and the control group, this effect did not occur. Further implications were also discussed.
    Relation: International Congress of Psychology (ICP), ICP
    Data Type: conference
    Appears in Collections:[Department of Psychology] Proceedings

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