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Siqing Peng

Researcher at Peking University

Publications -  8
Citations -  410

Siqing Peng is an academic researcher from Peking University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corporate social responsibility & Cultural identity. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 7 publications receiving 373 citations.

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Perceived cultural importance and actual self-importance of values in cultural identification.

TL;DR: A perceived cultural importance approach to identifying core values is proposed, in which core values are values that members of the culture as a group generally believe to be important in the culture.
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Measuring Cultures through Intersubjective Cultural Norms Implications for Predicting Relative Identification With Two or More Cultures

TL;DR: The authors proposed an intersubjective consensus approach to identify core cultural values based on the latter definition and found that endorsement of these values was related to the relative strength of identification with these cultural groups.
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Explaining East-West Differences in the Likelihood of Making Favorable Self-Evaluations: The Role of Evaluation Apprehension and Directness of Expression

TL;DR: This article found that Asian Americans and Chinese are more comfortable making favorable self-evaluations when they can do it indirectly by denying possession of negative traits than when they have to do it directly by claiming possession of positive traits.
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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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Advancing Our Understanding of Culture Mixing

TL;DR: In this article, culture mixing refers to the coexistence of representative symbols of different cultures in the same space at the same time, and is defined as the "coexistence of two cultures in a shared space".