B
Brigida Carolina Rincon
Researcher at The Catholic University of America
Publications - 5
Citations - 186
Brigida Carolina Rincon is an academic researcher from The Catholic University of America. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cultural diversity & Personality. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 5 publications receiving 170 citations.
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Within-individual variability in self-concepts and personality states: Applying density distribution and situation-behavior approaches across cultures
A. Timothy Church,Marcia S. Katigbak,Charles M. Ching,Hengsheng Zhang,Jiliang Shen,Rina Mazuera Arias,Brigida Carolina Rincon,Hiroaki Morio,Junko Tanaka-Matsumi,Shino Takaoka,Khairul Anwar Mastor,Nurul A. Roslan,Joselina Ibáñez-Reyes,José de Jesús Vargas-Flores,Kenneth D. Locke,Jose Alberto S. Reyes,Sun Wenmei,Fernando A. Ortiz,Juan M. Alvarez +18 more
TL;DR: Within-individual variability in self-concepts and everyday personality states and affects was investigated in two experience sampling studies using density distribution and situation-behavior approaches as mentioned in this paper, and the results showed that within individual variability was substantial and selfconcept and personality state variability exhibited moderate convergence.
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The manifestation of traits in everyday behavior and affect: A five-culture study
Charles M. Ching,A. Timothy Church,Marcia S. Katigbak,Jose Alberto S. Reyes,Junko Tanaka-Matsumi,Shino Takaoka,Hengsheng Zhang,Jiliang Shen,Rina Mazuera Arias,Brigida Carolina Rincon,Fernando A. Ortiz +10 more
TL;DR: In this article, the Big Five traits predicted personality and affect states across 20 days in five cultures, and the relationships between trait extraversion, agreeableness, and openness to experience and positive affect states were generally fully mediated by the associated personality states.
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A four-culture study of self-enhancement and adjustment using the social relations model: do alternative conceptualizations and indices make a difference?
A. Timothy Church,Marcia S. Katigbak,Rina Mazuera Arias,Brigida Carolina Rincon,José de Jesús Vargas-Flores,Joselina Ibáñez-Reyes,Lei Wang,Juan M. Alvarez,Congcong Wang,Fernando A. Ortiz +9 more
TL;DR: In all cultures, self-enhancement indices were moderately consistent across friend and family contexts, suggesting traitlike tendencies, and in China, consistent with cultural psychology perspectives, Chinese showed a greater tendency to self-efface than self- enhance using social comparison and self-insight indices.
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Cross-Situational Self-Consistency in Nine Cultures: The Importance of Separating Influences of Social Norms and Distinctive Dispositions
Kenneth D. Locke,A. Timothy Church,Khairul Anwar Mastor,Guy J. Curtis,Pamela Sadler,Kelly McDonald,José de Jesús Vargas-Flores,Joselina Ibáñez-Reyes,Hiroaki Morio,Jose Alberto S. Reyes,Helena F. Cabrera,Rina Mazuera Arias,Brigida Carolina Rincon,Neida Coromoto Albornoz Arias,Arturo Muñoz,Fernando A. Ortiz +15 more
TL;DR: There remained robust distinctive noninjunctive self-consistency (reflecting individuating personality dispositions) in every country, including Japan, in accord with trait theory.
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Cross-observer agreement and self-concept consistency across cultures: Integrating trait and cultural psychology perspectives
Marcia S. Katigbak,A. Timothy Church,Juan M. Alvarez,Congcong Wang,José de Jesús Vargas-Flores,Joselina Ibáñez-Reyes,Rina Mazuera Arias,Brigida Carolina Rincon,Lei Wang,Fernando A. Ortiz +9 more
TL;DR: In this paper, the Social Relations Model was used to compare cross-observer agreement and self-concept consistency in trait judgments in the United States, Mexico, Venezuela, and China.