C
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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To Know or Not to Know, Is That the Question? Exploring the Role and Assessment of Metacognition in Cross-Cultural Contexts
TL;DR: In this article, two studies were conducted that jointly explored the construct validity of a well-established self-reported measure of metacognition (i.e., the Metacognitive subscale of the Cultural Intelligence Scale; CQS), as well as its relative utility in predicting cross-cultural performance.
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Emotional costs of inaccurate self-assessments: both self-effacement and self-enhancement can lead to dejection.
Young Hoon Kim,Chi-Yue Chiu +1 more
TL;DR: It was found that self-enhancement, like self-effacement, was associated with greater vulnerability to depression and leading low (or high) performers to perceive their performance as high through providing bogus performance feedback produced analogous effects on the magnitude of experienced dejection.
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The critique of empirical social science: New policies at Management and Organization review
Arie Y. Lewin,Chi-Yue Chiu,Carl F. Fey,Sheen S. Levine,Gerald A. McDermott,Johan Peter Murmann,Eric W. K. Tsang +6 more
TL;DR: The history of modern empirical social science as the foundation of management, organization, and strategy research and the criticism of social science research has reached the point that some critics refer to current publication norms as encouraging and enabling the publication of junk science as discussed by the authors.
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Terror management among Chinese: Worldview defence and intergroup bias in resource allocation.
TL;DR: In this article, the authors tested the generality of terror management in Hong Kong Chinese samples and found robust and consistent mortality salience effects, which attest to the generalality of terrorism management.