{"title":"编辑器的声明","authors":"J. M. Honeycutt, K. Markman, A. D’Angiulli","doi":"10.1177/02762366231169448","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Summer is always a welcome season for many people. Welcome to our summer issue for Volume 42, Issue 4. We have five innovative articles dealing with narrative identity and storytelling, daydreaming, divergent thinking, memory among friends and twins, and fantasies of revenge. The first pair of studies examines narrative identity in terms of understanding ourselves through storytelling. The first study authored by Alexander Wong and Shrija Dirghangi examines self-identity by examining self and other ratings. They discuss narrative identity in which individuals understand themselves through story telling. They discuss five studies reporting on the validity and reliability of a scale to determine how Big 5 personality traits are associated with narrative identity. They contrasted selfrating of identity with informant ratings. For example, it is interesting how cinematic self and informant reports are associated with extraversion while only cinematic self is negatively associated with neuroticism, but not for informants. The second study explores future projections across the lifespan. It is conducted by Alain Fritsch, Virginie Voltzenlogel, and Christine Cuervo-Lombard. They discuss how personal identity develops from adolescence through narratives. People often remember past events to ground themselves for self-development. People can be mental time travelers by projecting themselves into the future as well as reliving the past, which is linked to the episodic memory system. It is especially intriguing how future projections of young and middle-age adults were similar, yet quite different from older adults due to retirement. The third article is by Melina West, Eli Somer, and Inge-Marie Eigsti. They examine autism as it relates to maladaptive daydreaming and divergent thinking. Over 540 participants were surveyed among several social platforms (e.g., Redditt, Facebook, International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research). Additionally, another sample was recruited via Simons Foundation Powering Autism Research for Knowledge (SPARK), an online research collaborative of participants with professional ASD diagnoses. Using partial correlational analyses and hierarchical multiple linear regression models, they examined the effect of ASD traits (daydreaming community sample only), ADHD symptoms (ASD sample only), diagnostic age (ASD sample only), and divergent thinking originality and fluency while controlling for demographic variables (age, gender, level of education, and psychiatric Editorial","PeriodicalId":89150,"journal":{"name":"Imagination, cognition and personality","volume":"42 1","pages":"331 - 332"},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2023-06-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":"{\"title\":\"Editor's Statement\",\"authors\":\"J. M. Honeycutt, K. Markman, A. D’Angiulli\",\"doi\":\"10.1177/02762366231169448\",\"DOIUrl\":null,\"url\":null,\"abstract\":\"Summer is always a welcome season for many people. Welcome to our summer issue for Volume 42, Issue 4. We have five innovative articles dealing with narrative identity and storytelling, daydreaming, divergent thinking, memory among friends and twins, and fantasies of revenge. The first pair of studies examines narrative identity in terms of understanding ourselves through storytelling. The first study authored by Alexander Wong and Shrija Dirghangi examines self-identity by examining self and other ratings. They discuss narrative identity in which individuals understand themselves through story telling. They discuss five studies reporting on the validity and reliability of a scale to determine how Big 5 personality traits are associated with narrative identity. They contrasted selfrating of identity with informant ratings. For example, it is interesting how cinematic self and informant reports are associated with extraversion while only cinematic self is negatively associated with neuroticism, but not for informants. The second study explores future projections across the lifespan. 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引用次数: 0
摘要
夏天对许多人来说总是一个受欢迎的季节。欢迎收看我们的夏季版第42卷第4期。我们有五篇创新文章,涉及叙事身份和讲故事、白日梦、发散思维、朋友和双胞胎之间的记忆以及复仇的幻想。第一对研究从通过讲故事来理解我们自己的角度来考察叙事身份。Alexander Wong和Shrija Dirghangi撰写的第一项研究通过检查自我和其他评级来检查自我认同。他们讨论了个体通过讲故事来理解自己的叙事身份。他们讨论了五项关于量表有效性和可靠性的研究,以确定五大人格特征如何与叙事身份相关。他们将身份的自我评价与告密者的评价进行了对比。例如,有趣的是,电影自我和线人报告与外向性有关,而只有电影自我与神经质呈负相关,但线人则不然。第二项研究探讨了整个生命周期的未来预测。它由阿兰·弗里奇、维吉尼·沃尔岑洛格尔和克里斯汀·库尔沃·隆巴德指挥。他们讨论了个人身份是如何从青春期通过叙事发展起来的。人们经常回忆过去的事件,为自我发展奠定基础。人们可以通过将自己投射到未来以及重温过去来成为心理时间旅行者,这与情节记忆系统有关。特别有趣的是,年轻人和中年人的未来预测是相似的,但由于退休,与老年人的预测截然不同。第三篇文章由Melina West、Eli Somer和Inge Marie Eigsti撰写。他们研究了自闭症,因为它与不适应的白日梦和发散思维有关。在几个社交平台(如Redditt、Facebook、国际适应不良白日梦研究联合会)中,对540多名参与者进行了调查。此外,另一个样本是通过西蒙斯基金会资助自闭症知识研究(SPARK)招募的,这是一个由专业自闭症诊断参与者组成的在线研究合作组织。他们使用偏相关分析和分层多元线性回归模型,在控制人口统计学变量(年龄、性别、教育水平和精神病编辑)的同时,检验了自闭症谱系障碍特征(仅限白日梦社区样本)、多动症症状(仅限自闭症谱系疾病样本)、诊断年龄(仅限ASD样本)、发散思维独创性和流利性的影响
Summer is always a welcome season for many people. Welcome to our summer issue for Volume 42, Issue 4. We have five innovative articles dealing with narrative identity and storytelling, daydreaming, divergent thinking, memory among friends and twins, and fantasies of revenge. The first pair of studies examines narrative identity in terms of understanding ourselves through storytelling. The first study authored by Alexander Wong and Shrija Dirghangi examines self-identity by examining self and other ratings. They discuss narrative identity in which individuals understand themselves through story telling. They discuss five studies reporting on the validity and reliability of a scale to determine how Big 5 personality traits are associated with narrative identity. They contrasted selfrating of identity with informant ratings. For example, it is interesting how cinematic self and informant reports are associated with extraversion while only cinematic self is negatively associated with neuroticism, but not for informants. The second study explores future projections across the lifespan. It is conducted by Alain Fritsch, Virginie Voltzenlogel, and Christine Cuervo-Lombard. They discuss how personal identity develops from adolescence through narratives. People often remember past events to ground themselves for self-development. People can be mental time travelers by projecting themselves into the future as well as reliving the past, which is linked to the episodic memory system. It is especially intriguing how future projections of young and middle-age adults were similar, yet quite different from older adults due to retirement. The third article is by Melina West, Eli Somer, and Inge-Marie Eigsti. They examine autism as it relates to maladaptive daydreaming and divergent thinking. Over 540 participants were surveyed among several social platforms (e.g., Redditt, Facebook, International Consortium for Maladaptive Daydreaming Research). Additionally, another sample was recruited via Simons Foundation Powering Autism Research for Knowledge (SPARK), an online research collaborative of participants with professional ASD diagnoses. Using partial correlational analyses and hierarchical multiple linear regression models, they examined the effect of ASD traits (daydreaming community sample only), ADHD symptoms (ASD sample only), diagnostic age (ASD sample only), and divergent thinking originality and fluency while controlling for demographic variables (age, gender, level of education, and psychiatric Editorial