Effects of ownership expressed by the first-person possessive pronoun |
| |
Authors: | Shi Zhan Zhou Aibao Han Wei Liu Peiru |
| |
Affiliation: | aLaboratory of Brain, Self and Society, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, PR China;bDepartment of Psychology, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, PR China;cDepartment of History, Northwest Normal University, Lanzhou 730070, PR China |
| |
Abstract: | The present study examined the behavioral effects of the first-person possessive pronoun. In each trial, a noun (e.g. cup or bread) was presented to participants after visual presentation of a possessive pronoun “wo de” (Chinese for “my”) or “ta de” (Chinese for “his”), which formed ownership. Half participants were assigned to contextual encoding (CE) condition in which they were required to judge whether they liked the item expressed by a noun from the first or third-person perspective. The rest were assigned to perceptual encoding (PE) condition in which they were asked to judge what color the noun was. A subsequent recall test was performed. The results showed that there were significant memory and response advantages for nouns in “my” ownership under both conditions. The results were discussed with reference to self-specificity and other effects in the current study. |
| |
Keywords: | First-person possessive pronoun Ownership Self-specificity Subjective perspective Response advantage Memory advantage |
本文献已被 ScienceDirect PubMed 等数据库收录! |
|