Shinobu Kitayama | |
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北山 忍 | |
Born | Shizuoka, Shizuoka Prefecture, Japan | March 9, 1957
Nationality | Japanese |
Education | Kyoto University University of Michigan |
Known for | Cross-cultural psychology Cultural neuroscience |
Awards | Career Contribution Award from the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (2017) |
Scientific career | |
Fields | Social psychology |
Institutions | University of Michigan |
Thesis | Attention as a mediator between affect and cognition: emotional tone and expectancy jointly determine accuracy in word perception (1987) |
Shinobu Kitayama (Japanese: 北山 忍; born March 9, 1957)[1] is a Japanese social psychologist and the Robert B. Zajonc Collegiate Professor of Psychology at the University of Michigan. He is also the Social Psychology Area Chair and Director of the Culture & Cognition Program at the University of Michigan. He is the editor-in-chief of the Attitudes and Social Cognition section of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.[2] He received his bachelor's degree and master's degree from Kyoto University and his doctorate from the University of Michigan.[3] Together with Mayumi Karasawa, he discovered the birthday-number effect, the subconscious tendency of people to prefer the numbers in the date of their birthday over other numbers. Prof. Kitayama is best known for his work on the social psychology of culture as it relates to the self. He and Hazel Rose Markus have argued that Western selves are constructed as independent from others, and people from many East Asian cultures construct interdependent selves, based on the fundamental relatedness of individuals to each other. These differently constructed selves deeply affect how people see the world, how they experience emotions, how they organize their experience, and what they value.