Seeking the next Editor ‐in‐Chief for AJSP
(Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 28, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Tags: Announcement Source Type: research

Erratum
(Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 28, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Tags: Erratum Source Type: research

Dialoguing Height Psychology into a life of interconnectedness: Response to commentaries by Hwang, Bhawuk, King & Hodgetts, Kashima, and Xie, Su, & Zhong
Liu (Asian Journal of Social Psychology, 000, 000) attempts to articulate an epistemology for the aspirational practice of Height Psychology as a human science informed by Kantian epistemology in dialogue with other philosophies, especially Confucianism and Taoism. Height Psychology is a framework or metatheory for the practice of teaching, research, and service rooted in Kantian epistemology, in dialogue with other philosophies. It provides a holistic philosophy for social scientists responding to wicked problems unfolding over long periods of time. In responding to commentaries, I suggest a corollary to Shweder's (Asian ...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 28, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: James H. Liu Tags: Commentary Source Type: research

Decoding dyadic interactive nonverbal behaviour in Chinese and Australian cohorts: A novel dyadic puzzle ‐solving task
The current study used a novel problem‐solving task in which the solution could only be reached via interactions between members of dyads. The study aimed to systematically examine how nonverbal interactive behaviour was related to the cultural background of the dyads, the participant's role in the dyad (viz., instructor, problem solver) and task repetition. Twenty‐one Australian dyads and 32 Chinese dyads performed the dyadic puzzle‐solving task while their interactions were video‐recorded. In each dyad, one instructor and one problem solver worked together to solve a seven‐piece puzzle. Six trials, each compris...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 28, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Jia Huang, Ya Wang, Bing ‐hui Liu, David L. Neumann, David H. K. Shum, Raymond C. K. Chan Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

Issue Information
(Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 28, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Tags: Issue Information Source Type: research

Moral foundations tell us why guilt induces unfair allocation in multi ‐party interactions
Asian Journal of Social Psychology,Volume 20, Issue 3-4, Page 191-200, July ‐October 2017. (Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research

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Asian Journal of Social Psychology,Volume 20, Issue 3-4, Page 191-200, July ‐October 2017. (Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Source Type: research

Forgiveness in Javanese collective culture: The relationship between rumination, harmonious value, decisional forgiveness and emotional forgiveness
Forgiveness in Javanese collective culture is examined by considering harmonious value (HV) a subjective value on maintaining social harmony and rumination. In Study 1, we conducted an exploratory sequential mixed‐method study to develop a scale measuring HV. In‐depth interviews with eight Javanese adolescents revealed three major domains of HV (Study 1a). In a second quantitative study (Study 1b), we developed items and assessed 347 Javanese adolescents in Yogyakarta, Indonesia. Principal component analysis and confirmatory factor analysis supported three factors: cooperation during conflict, forbearing and resolving ...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Ni Made Taganing Kurniati, Everett L. Worthington, Elizabeth Kristi Poerwandari, Adriana S. Ginanjar, Carissa Dwiwardani Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

Gathering a few thoughts on ‘Neo‐Confucian epistemology and Chinese philosophy’
In Neo‐Confucian Epistemology and Chinese Philosophy: Practical Postulates for Actioning Psychology as a Human Science, Professor Liu offers a critique of the Cartesian underpinnings of psychology as a natural science. Drawing on Chinese cultural postulates, Professor Liu offers a vision for a global psychology more orientated towards the morally centered person and which developed a culturally‐informed ethics. This commentary explores the implications of this rethinking of psychology for indigenous and applied social psychologies in Aotearoa/New Zealand. (Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology)
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Pita King, Darrin Hodgetts Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

Developing theories and models to serve: A manifesto for indigenous psychologists
This article reviews the theoretical foundations of Height Psychology, which proposes that researchers not only do research but act on their ideas to make the world a better place. It is posited that researchers should be passionate humanist whose thoughts propel actions and whose actions propel new thoughts, and they should be engaged change agents who work with communities in defining and solving problems rather than being disinterested scientists who are only interested in creating a body of objective knowledge. This approach is likely to fit the worldview of non‐western psychologists engaged in indigenous psychology,...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Dharm P. S. Bhawuk Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

Moral foundations tell us why guilt induces unfair allocation in multi ‐party interactions
Previous studies have demonstrated that a sense of guilt promotes and maintains social fairness in two‐party interactions (Psychological Bulletin, 115, 1994 and 243). However, the situation is much more complex in three‐party or multi‐party interactions. De Hooge et al. (Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100, 2011 and 462) found that guilt could not only induce pro‐social behaviour towards the victim, but also have a disadvantageous impact on a third party. In the present study, we attempt to explain how guilt promotes unfair allocations from a moral foundations perspective. We conducted two experiment...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 18, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Qiudi Feng, Yan Xu, Ruijie Xu, Enhan Zhang Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

What makes a meaningful life? Examining the effects of interpersonal harmony, dialectical coping, and nonattachment
Past cross‐cultural research on well‐being has tended to base Eastern construction of well‐being on the interdependent self‐construal, mainly as an offshoot of Confucius relationalism. However, other influential philosophical traditions in East Asian societies (i.e., Taoism and Buddhism) that portray a different picture of well‐being have received scant scholarly attention. We aim to foreground the distinctiveness of three well‐being constructs salient to Chinese culture, namely, interpersonal harmony, dialectical coping, and nonattachment, by providing experimental evidence on their differential effects on per...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 1, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Shu ‐Yi Wang, Y. Joel Wong, Kuang‐Hui Yeh, Lei Wang Tags: Short Note Source Type: research

Effects of Media Information on Collective Resilience in a Disaster —A Case Study of the Crisis of Stranded Commuters in Tokyo During the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake
This article examines the relations between media information and collective resilience—collective solidarity behaviours that emerge from a crowd—in a disaster. It uses the crisis of stranded commuters in Tokyo during the 2011 Great East Japan Earthquake as a case study with data collected from an original survey. Using a cluster analysis and a multinomial logistic regression, it is found that media information is positively related to the characteristics of collective resilience, such as shared identity and mutual help. Specifically, among those who felt threatened by the disaster, people who had received more informa...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 1, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: John W. Cheng, Hitoshi Mitomo Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research

Perceiving high social mindfulness during interpersonal interaction promotes cooperative behaviours
Social mindfulness refers to individual's respect and protection of others’ options in interpersonal interaction. The object‐choosing task is a traditional paradigm to assess social mindfulness. Individuals with high social mindfulness would choose the nonunique object so that others would have more options; on the contrary, individuals with low social mindfulness would choose the unique object, which limits others’ choices. No prior study has examined whether perceiving people with different levels of social mindfulness affects one's cooperation. Based on this background, two experiments were conducted to address th...
Source: Asian Journal Of Social Psychology - July 1, 2017 Category: Psychiatry Authors: Kai Dou, Yu ‐Jie Wang, Jian‐Bin Li, Jing‐Jing Li, Yan‐Gang Nie Tags: Regular Article Source Type: research