111 results on '"Sasaki, Joni Y."'
Search Results
2. The ego dampening influence of religion: evidence from behavioral genetics and psychology
3. Nature, Nurture, and Their Interplay
4. Toward an explanation of cultural differences in subjective well-being: the role of positive emotion norms and positive illusions.
5. Cultural Neuroscience: Biology of the Mind in Cultural Contexts
6. Lay Misperceptions of Culture as "Biological" and Suggestions for Reducing Them.
7. Lay Misperceptions of Culture as “Biological” and Suggestions for Reducing Them
8. Gene-Culture Interactions: Toward an Explanatory Framework
9. Will you remember me? Cultural differences in own-group face recognition biases
10. Specialized mechanisms for theory of mind: Are mental representations special because they are mental or because they are representations?
11. The reemergence of Yellow Peril: Beliefs in the Asian health hazard stereotype predict lower psychological well-being.
12. How do culture and religion interact worldwide? A cultural match approach to understanding religiosity and well-being in the Many Analysts Religion Project
13. A many-analysts approach to the relation between religiosity and well-being
14. How the Study of Religion and Culture Informs Genetics and Vice Versa
15. List of Contributors
16. Intercultural similarities and differences in personality development
17. How do culture and religion interact worldwide? A cultural match approach to understanding religiosity and well-being in the Many Analysts Religion Project
18. A many-analysts approach to the relation between religiosity and well-being
19. Gene–culture interaction: influence of culture and oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) polymorphism on loneliness
20. Promise and Challenges Surrounding Culture-Gene Coevolution and Gene-Culture Interactions
21. Asian Health Hazard Stereotype Scale
22. Culture, distress, and oxytocin receptor polymorphism (OXTR) interact to influence emotional support seeking
23. Culture modulates sensitivity to the disappearance of facial expressions associated with serotonin transporter polymorphism (5-HTTLPR)
24. The Gene–Culture Interaction Framework and Implications for Health
25. Zahra or Zoe, Arjun or Andrew? Bicultural baby names reflect identity and pragmatic concerns.
26. Culture and self-worth
27. Does self-construal shape automatic social attention?
28. Supplemental Material, West,_Muise,_and_Sasaki_Consequences_of_Frame_Switching_R2_Online_Supplement - The Cost of Being 'True to Yourself' for Mixed Selves: Frame Switching Leads to Perceived Inauthenticity and Downstream Social Consequences for Biculturals
29. Too Asian? The model minority stereotype in a Canadian context.
30. Religion priming differentially increases prosocial behavior among variants of the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene
31. At the Intersection of Culture and Religion: A Cultural Analysis of Religionʼs Implications for Secondary Control and Social Affiliation
32. The Cost of Being “True to Yourself” for Mixed Selves: Frame Switching Leads to Perceived Inauthenticity and Downstream Social Consequences for Biculturals
33. How robust is the own-group face recognition bias? Evidence from first- and second-generation East Asian Canadians
34. Culture, serotonin receptor polymorphism and locus of attention
35. Gene–Culture Interactions
36. The Potential Cost of Cultural Fit: Frame Switching Undermines Perceptions of Authenticity in Western Contexts
37. 26 - Intercultural similarities and differences in personality development
38. The Cost of Being “True to Yourself” for Mixed Selves: Frame Switching Leads to Perceived Inauthenticity and Downstream Social Consequences for Biculturals
39. Explaining agency detection within a domain-specific, culturally attuned model
40. Nature, Nurture, and Their Interplay: A Review of Cultural Neuroscience
41. More Than the Sum of Its Parts: A Transformative Theory of Biculturalism
42. Nature, Nurture, and Their Interplay
43. Automatic Mechanisms for Social Attention Are Culturally Penetrable
44. Culture moderates the relationship between interdependence and face recognition
45. Religion priming and an oxytocin receptor gene (OXTR) polymorphism interact to affect self-control in a social context
46. Automatic Mechanisms for Social Attention Are Culturally Penetrable.
47. Emotion Regulation: The Interplay of Culture and Genes
48. Religion priming differentially increases prosocial behavior among variants of the dopamine D4 receptor (DRD4) gene
49. Religion and Well-being
50. Gene–Culture Interaction
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