remind us of ourselves
:
Brett W. Pelham, Matthew C. Mirenberg, and John T. Jones, “Why Susie Sells Seashells by the Seashore:
Implicit Egotism and Major Life Decisions,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
82 (2002): 469–487; John T. Jones,
Brett W. Pelham, Matthew C. Mirenberg, and John J. Hetts, “Name Letter Preferences Are Not Merely Mere Exposure:
Implicit Egotism as Self-Regulation,”
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology
38 (2002): 170–177
;
Brett W. Pelham,
Mauricio Carvallo, and John T. Jones, “Implicit Egotism,”
Current Directions in Psychological Science
14 (2006): 106–110;
and Ernest L. Abel, “Influence of Names on Career Choices in Medicine,”
Names
58 (2010): 65–74.
attracted to potential dates
:
John T. Jones, Brett W. Pelham, Mauricio Carvallo, and Matthew C. Mirenberg, “How Do I Love Thee?
Let Me Count the Js: Implicit Egotism and Interpersonal Attraction,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
87 (2004):
665–683.
Kiva
:
Jeff Galak, Deborah Small, and Andrew T. Stephen, “Microfinance Decision Making: A Field Study of Prosocial Lending,”
Journal of Marketing Research
XLVIII (2011): S130–S137.
alternative explanations
:
Uri Simonsohn, “Spurious? Name Similarity Effects (Implicit Egotism) in Marriage, Job, and Moving
Decisions,”
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
101 (2011): 1–24; Leif D. Nelson and Joseph P. Simmons,
“Moniker Maladies: When Names Sabotage Success,”
Psychological Science
18 (2007): 1106–1112; Ernest L. Abel and
Michael L. Kruger, “Symbolic Signifi cance of Initials on Longevity,”
Perceptual and Motor Skills
104 (2007): 179–182; and
“Athletes, Doctors, and Lawyers with First Names Beginning with ‘D’ Die Sooner,”
Death Studies
34 (2010): 71–81; and
Nicholas Christenfeld, David P. Phillips, and Laura M. Glynn, “What’s in a Name: Mortality and the Power of Symbols,”
Journal
of Psychosomatic Research
47 (1999): 241–254.
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