The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time

Abstract concepts, such as time, can be understood in terms of metaphors. Therefore, temporal perspective can be mapped to spatial metaphors and be represented as either an ego-moving or time-moving perspective. The perspective adopted depends on a person’s motivation to vary the psychological dista...

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Main Author: Chern, Hui Ying
Other Authors: Albert Lee Kai Chung
Format: Final Year Project
Language:English
Published: Nanyang Technological University 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140672
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Institution: Nanyang Technological University
Language: English
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spelling sg-ntu-dr.10356-1406722020-06-01T05:44:40Z The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time Chern, Hui Ying Albert Lee Kai Chung School of Social Sciences AlbertLee@ntu.edu.sg Social sciences::Psychology Abstract concepts, such as time, can be understood in terms of metaphors. Therefore, temporal perspective can be mapped to spatial metaphors and be represented as either an ego-moving or time-moving perspective. The perspective adopted depends on a person’s motivation to vary the psychological distance between themselves and an event. Vicarious emotions can arise from the behaviors of others especially those of ingroups. Thurs, when recalling an immoral behavior displayed by the self (i.e., personal recall) or by an ingroup member (i.e., relational recall), how would self-construal play a part in the likelihood of the temporal perspective adopted? This paper investigates how self-construal (independent vs. interdependent) moderates the relationship between immoral past and the perspective of time adopted. Participants completed an online study involving a past immorality recall, a self-construal manipulation, and they answered an ambiguous temporal question that reflected temporal perspectives. While recalling a personal past immoral event led to stronger negative feelings compared to recalling a relational past immoral event, the self-construal manipulation did not significantly influence participants’ selfconstrual, and the predicted interactions between immoral past and self-construal were not supported by the data. Possible reasons for the insignificant interaction effects could be due to the weakness of the self-construal manipulation and anger being triggered instead of guilt or shame. Bachelor of Arts in Psychology 2020-06-01T05:44:40Z 2020-06-01T05:44:40Z 2020 Final Year Project (FYP) https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140672 en application/pdf Nanyang Technological University
institution Nanyang Technological University
building NTU Library
country Singapore
collection DR-NTU
language English
topic Social sciences::Psychology
spellingShingle Social sciences::Psychology
Chern, Hui Ying
The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
description Abstract concepts, such as time, can be understood in terms of metaphors. Therefore, temporal perspective can be mapped to spatial metaphors and be represented as either an ego-moving or time-moving perspective. The perspective adopted depends on a person’s motivation to vary the psychological distance between themselves and an event. Vicarious emotions can arise from the behaviors of others especially those of ingroups. Thurs, when recalling an immoral behavior displayed by the self (i.e., personal recall) or by an ingroup member (i.e., relational recall), how would self-construal play a part in the likelihood of the temporal perspective adopted? This paper investigates how self-construal (independent vs. interdependent) moderates the relationship between immoral past and the perspective of time adopted. Participants completed an online study involving a past immorality recall, a self-construal manipulation, and they answered an ambiguous temporal question that reflected temporal perspectives. While recalling a personal past immoral event led to stronger negative feelings compared to recalling a relational past immoral event, the self-construal manipulation did not significantly influence participants’ selfconstrual, and the predicted interactions between immoral past and self-construal were not supported by the data. Possible reasons for the insignificant interaction effects could be due to the weakness of the self-construal manipulation and anger being triggered instead of guilt or shame.
author2 Albert Lee Kai Chung
author_facet Albert Lee Kai Chung
Chern, Hui Ying
format Final Year Project
author Chern, Hui Ying
author_sort Chern, Hui Ying
title The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
title_short The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
title_full The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
title_fullStr The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
title_full_unstemmed The moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
title_sort moderating role of self-construal in the effects of past immorality on the perspective of time
publisher Nanyang Technological University
publishDate 2020
url https://hdl.handle.net/10356/140672
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