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Original Articles

Examining relations between shame and personality among university students in the United States and Japan: A developmental perspective

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Pages 113-123 | Published online: 18 Aug 2010
 

Abstract

American and Japanese university students' shame (haji)-related reactions across a number of diverse situations, and the personality correlates of these reactions, were studied. With age, shame ratings decreased significantly in situations describing defects in the ''private self'' among American students, and haji ratings decreased significantly in situations in which the ''public self'' was ridiculed or discomforted among Japanese students. Also with age, individual differences in personality, particularly internal self-introspection, played an increasingly important role in predicting shame reactions among American students, whereas among Japanese students, individual personality differences became increasingly unimportant in determining haji-related phenomena. Finally, American students showed an increasing, and Japanese students a decreasing, integration of internaland external-oriented elements of personality with development. Results are discussed in terms of theories of emotional development and cultural differences in self-concept.

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