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%T "How much do you like your name?" An implicit measure of global self-esteem %A Gebauer, Jochen E. %A Riketta, Michael %A Broemer, Philip %A Maio, Gregory R. %J Journal of Experimental Social Psychology %N 5 %P 1346-1354 %V 44 %D 2008 %K Self-esteem; Self-evaluation; Implicit measure; Single-item measure %= 2011-08-10T09:47:00Z %~ http://www.peerproject.eu/ %> https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-262832 %X We introduce a single-item implicit measure of global self-esteem. The measure is based on the mere-ownership effect and asks participants to indicate how much they like their name. Six studies attested to the validity of this measure. In addition to showing high test–retest reliability (r = .85), the studies found that Name-Liking was (a) unrelated to impression management, (b) positively related to the Name-Letter-Task, the Self-Esteem IAT, explicit self-esteem measures, and self-reported subjective well-being, (c) more strongly related to explicit measures of global than domain-specific self-esteem, (d) more strongly related to self-esteem judgments made spontaneously as well as under cognitive load, and (e) predicted observer-reported anxiety during an anxiety-inducing interview whereas an explicit measure of self-esteem did not. %C NLD %G en %9 journal article %W GESIS - http://www.gesis.org %~ SSOAR - http://www.ssoar.info