Good Me Bad Me: Prioritization of the Good-Self During Perceptual Decision-Making
Author(s) -
Hu Chuan-Peng,
Yuxuan Lan,
C. Neil Macrae,
Jie Sui
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
collabra psychology
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.444
H-Index - 10
ISSN - 2474-7394
DOI - 10.1525/collabra.301
Subject(s) - prioritization , valence (chemistry) , categorization , perception , self , cognitive psychology , psychology , stimulus (psychology) , computer science , social psychology , artificial intelligence , engineering , physics , quantum mechanics , management science , neuroscience
People display systematic priorities to self-related stimuli. As the self is not a unified entity, however, it remains unclear which aspects of the self are crucial to producing this stimulus prioritization. To explore this issue, we manipulated the valence of the self-concept (good me vs. bad me) — a core identity-based facet of the self — using a standard shape-label association task in which participants initially learned the associations (e.g., circle/good-self, triangle/good-other, diamond/bad-self, square/bad-other), after which they completed shape-label matching and shape-categorization tasks, such that attention was directed to different aspects of the stimuli (i.e., self-relevance and valence). The results revealed that responses were more efficient to the good-self shape (vs. other shapes), regardless of the task that was undertaken. A hierarchical drift diffusion model (HDDM) analysis indicated that this good-self prioritization effect was underpinned by differences in the rate of information uptake. These findings demonstrate that activation of the good-self representation exclusively facilitates perceptual decision-making, thereby furthering understanding of the self-prioritization effect.
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