202602.06
Self-evaluation in Social Contexts: How Social Acceptance and Rejection Shape the Self (IDAC Young Investigator Award)
Posted in EVENT
I am honored to receive a Research Award at the 165th IDAC Biennial Meeting.
In my award presentation, I introduced a series of studies examining how self-evaluation functions in social life, with a particular focus on social acceptance and rejection. By combining behavioral experiments, functional MRI, and survey data collected during the context of COVID-19, my research aims to demonstrate that self-evaluation is not merely an internal belief, but a socially adaptive process.
Across these studies, I showed that self-evaluation is selectively shaped across domains such as morality and competence, reflecting strategies for navigating social relationships. I also discussed how self-related processes are closely linked to social-cognitive processing, helping to explain both resilience and vulnerability in mental health. In addition, I presented work applying this framework to risk perception and coping behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the importance of considering self-related processes in real-world social contexts.
I would like to sincerely thank my collaborators, mentors, and all participants for their support and contributions to this work.
I am honored to receive a Research Award at the 165th IDAC Biennial Meeting.
In my award presentation, I introduced a series of studies examining how self-evaluation functions in social life, with a particular focus on social acceptance and rejection. By combining behavioral experiments, functional MRI, and survey data collected during the context of COVID-19, my research aims to demonstrate that self-evaluation is not merely an internal belief, but a socially adaptive process.
Across these studies, I showed that self-evaluation is selectively shaped across domains such as morality and competence, reflecting strategies for navigating social relationships. I also discussed how self-related processes are closely linked to social-cognitive processing, helping to explain both resilience and vulnerability in mental health. In addition, I presented work applying this framework to risk perception and coping behavior during the COVID-19 pandemic, highlighting the importance of considering self-related processes in real-world social contexts.
I would like to sincerely thank my collaborators, mentors, and all participants for their support and contributions to this work.