Mapping the Self: A Network Approach for Understanding Psychological and Neural Representations of Self-Concept Structure
How people self-reflect and maintain a coherent sense of self is an important question that spans from early philosophy to modern psychology and neuroscience. Research on the self-concept has not yet developed and tested a formal model of how beliefs about dependency relations amongst traits may inf...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Journal of personality and social psychology 2023-02, Vol.124 (2), p.237-263 |
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container_title | Journal of personality and social psychology |
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creator | Elder, Jacob Cheung, Bernice Davis, Tyler Hughes, Brent |
description | How people self-reflect and maintain a coherent sense of self is an important question that spans from early philosophy to modern psychology and neuroscience. Research on the self-concept has not yet developed and tested a formal model of how beliefs about dependency relations amongst traits may influence self-concept coherence. We first develop a network-based approach, which suggests that people's beliefs about trait relationships contribute to how the self-concept is structured (Study 1). This model describes how people maintain positivity and coherence in self-evaluations, and how trait interrelations relate to activation in brain regions involved in self-referential processing and concept representation (Study 2 and Study 3). Results reveal that a network-based property theorized to be important for coherence (i.e., outdegree centrality) is associated with more favorable and consistent self-evaluations and decreased ventral medial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activation. Further, participants higher in self-esteem and lower in depressive symptoms differentiate between higher and lower centrality positive traits more in self-evaluations, reflecting associations between mental health and how people process perceived trait dependencies during self-reflection. Together, our model and findings join individual differences, brain activation, and behavior to present a computational theory of how beliefs about trait relationships contribute to a coherent, interconnected self-concept. |
doi_str_mv | 10.1037/pspa0000315 |
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Research on the self-concept has not yet developed and tested a formal model of how beliefs about dependency relations amongst traits may influence self-concept coherence. We first develop a network-based approach, which suggests that people's beliefs about trait relationships contribute to how the self-concept is structured (Study 1). This model describes how people maintain positivity and coherence in self-evaluations, and how trait interrelations relate to activation in brain regions involved in self-referential processing and concept representation (Study 2 and Study 3). Results reveal that a network-based property theorized to be important for coherence (i.e., outdegree centrality) is associated with more favorable and consistent self-evaluations and decreased ventral medial prefrontal cortex (vmPFC) activation. Further, participants higher in self-esteem and lower in depressive symptoms differentiate between higher and lower centrality positive traits more in self-evaluations, reflecting associations between mental health and how people process perceived trait dependencies during self-reflection. 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subjects | Brain Brain - physiology Brain Mapping Coherence Cortex Dependency Female Human Humans Individual differences Magnetic Resonance Imaging Male Mapping Mental depression Mental health Personality Traits Positive emotions Prefrontal Cortex - physiology Psychology Self Concept Self esteem Self evaluation Self-Assessment Selfreflection Semantics |
title | Mapping the Self: A Network Approach for Understanding Psychological and Neural Representations of Self-Concept Structure |
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