Jong An Choi
Seoul National University
8 Papers
3 Citations
Jong An Choi is an academic researcher from Seoul National University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Preference & Medicine. The author has an hindex of 4, co-authored 6 publications.
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Papers
Individual Differences in Analytic Versus Holistic Thinking
TL;DR: Data analysis shows that those with high scores on the Analysis-Holism Scale displayed the holistic pattern of performances on each task more than did those with low scores.
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Parasite stress and pathogen avoidance relate to distinct dimensions of political ideology across 30 nations
Joshua M. Tybur,Yoel Inbar,Lene Aarøe,Pat Barclay,Fiona Kate Barlow,Mícheál de Barra,Mícheál de Barra,D. Vaughn Becker,Leah Borovoi,Incheol Choi,Jong An Choi,Nathan S. Consedine,Alan Conway,Jane Conway,Paul Conway,Paul Conway,Vera Cubela Adoric,Dilara Ekin Demirci,Ana María Fernández,Diogo Conque Seco Ferreira,Keiko Ishii,Ivana Jaksic,Tingting Ji,Florian van Leeuwen,David M. G. Lewis,Norman P. Li,Jason C. McIntyre,Sumitava Mukherjee,Justin H. Park,Bogusław Pawłowski,Michael Bang Petersen,David A. Pizarro,Gerasimos Prodromitis,Pavol Prokop,Markus J. Rantala,Lisa M. Reynolds,Bonifacio Sandín,Barış Sevi,Delphine De Smet,Narayanan Srinivasan,Shruti Tewari,Cameron Wilson,Jose C. Yong,Iris Žeželj +43 more
TL;DR: It is found that national parasite stress and individual disgust sensitivity relate more strongly to adherence to traditional norms than they relate to support for barriers between social groups, which suggests that the relationship between pathogens and politics reflects intragroup motivations more than intergroup motivations.
Need for cognitive closure and information search strategy
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated whether need for cognitive closure (NFCC) affected one's style of information search (attribute-based search vs. alternative based search) in consumer choice.
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Longitudinal examinations of changes in well-being during the early period of the COVID-19 pandemic: Testing the roles of extraversion and social distancing
TL;DR: In this article , the authors used longitudinal data collected in South Korea during the early period of the COVID-19 pandemic (1 January-7 April 2020) to examine the pandemic-related changes in the relationship between extraversion and well-being.
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