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Chi-Yue Chiu
Researcher at The Chinese University of Hong Kong
Publications - 249
Citations - 18106
Chi-Yue Chiu is an academic researcher from The Chinese University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Cultural diversity & Social psychology (sociology). The author has an hindex of 63, co-authored 245 publications receiving 16299 citations. Previous affiliations of Chi-Yue Chiu include Chinese Academy of Social Sciences & Columbia University.
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Adherence to perceived norms across cultural boundaries: The role of need for cognitive closure and ingroup identification
TL;DR: This article proposed that cultural norms are closure providers when rendering social judgments, and individuals with higher need for closure would be more likely to conform to the dominant norms in a foreign country when deciding how to respond in that country.
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The Model Minority as a Shared Reality and Its Implication for Interracial Perceptions
TL;DR: The authors showed that the model minority image of being diligent, high achieving, and submissive is a characteristic representation of Asian Americans that is widely shared among Americans and found that media exposure to Asian-American successes can strengthen European Americans' belief in Asian Americans as a shared reality.
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Explaining self-esteem differences between Chinese and North Americans: Dialectical self (vs. self-consistency) or lack of positive self-regard
TL;DR: This article found that the difference in self-esteem between East Asians and North Americans was driven primarily by Chinese participants' greater tendency to agree with negatively worded selfesteem items and that because of the motivation to maintain consistent responses, North Americans' response pattern varied depending on whether the first item in the selfesteem measur...
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Mere exposure affects perceived descriptive norms: : Implications for personal preferences and trust
TL;DR: This article found that mere exposure to stimulus objects alters people's assumed familiarity to others, without conscious processing, and that this mere exposure effect affected personal preference only when there was a strong motivation for social connectedness.
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Toward a more complete understanding of the link between multicultural experience and creativity.
TL;DR: The response to the article, including Rich's reply, supports the view that the interest in multicultural experience and creativity is far from exhausted; future research will certainly uncover important new insights.