All Stories

  1. Unpacking the Gender Differences on Mental Health
  2. SU45. Humor Comprehension in Schizotypy
  3. To Be or Not To Be Humorous? Cross Cultural Perspectives on Humor
  4. Adult Playfulness, Humor Styles, and Subjective Happiness
  5. Applying Western models of volunteering in Hong Kong: The role of empathy, prosocial motivation and motive-experience fit for volunteering
  6. HUMOR STYLES, CREATIVE PERSONALITY TRAITS, AND CREATIVE THINKING IN A HONG KONG SAMPLE1,2
  7. A Cross-Cultural Study of Explicit and Implicit Motivation for Long-Term Volunteering
  8. How Belief in a Just World Benefits Mental Health: The Effects of Optimism and Gratitude
  9. Can you forgive? It depends on how happy you are
  10. Using the Brief Resilience Scale to Assess Chinese People’s Ability to Bounce Back From Stress
  11. HUMOR STYLES, SELF-ESTEEM, AND SUBJECTIVE HAPPINESS1
  12. Humour styles, gelotophobia and self-esteem among Chinese and Indian university students
  13. Addictive Internet Use and Parenting Patterns Among Secondary School Students in Guangzhou and Hong Kong
  14. HUMOR STYLES AND LONELINESS: A STUDY AMONG HONG KONG AND HANGZHOU UNDERGRADUATES1
  15. The activation of theory of mind network differentiates between point-to-self and point-to-other verbal jokes: An fMRI study
  16. Perception of humorists: a cross-cultural study of undergraduates in hong kong, hangzhou, and vancouver1
  17. Physical Health Outcomes of Conjugal Bereavement: A Psychoneuroendocrine Model of Resilience
  18. Up or Down? How Culture and Color Affect Judgments
  19. Dialectical thinking and health behaviors: The effects of theory of planned behavior
  20. Humor styles, optimism, and their relationships with distress among undergraduates in three Chinese cities
  21. Attitude to Health-Related Behaviors Measure
  22. Intentions for Health Behavior Measure
  23. Subjective Norms for Health Behavior Measure
  24. Prevalence Estimates and Etiologic Models of Internet Addiction
  25. Sojourn students’ humor styles as buffers to achieve resilience
  26. Sustaining Resilience Through Local Connectedness Among Sojourn Students
  27. Idol worship as compensation for parental absence
  28. Sojourn Student Adjustment Questionnaire
  29. DIFFERENT ATTITUDES TOWARD HUMOR BETWEEN CHINESE AND AMERICAN STUDENTS: EVIDENCE FROM THE IMPLICIT ASSOCIATION TEST1
  30. Who are the Best-Known National and Foreign Creators - a Comparative Study Among Undergraduates in China and Germany
  31. The Chinese ambivalence to humor: Views from undergraduates in Hong Kong and China
  32. Pentangular Dimensions of Chinese Adolescents' Idol Worship
  33. From glamour-oriented idolatry to achievement-oriented idolatry: A framing experiment among adolescents in Hong Kong and Shenzhen
  34. DEVELOPMENT AND VALIDATION OF THE ACCULTURATIVE HASSLES SCALE FOR CHINESE STUDENTS (AHSCS): AN EXAMPLE OF MAINLAND CHINESE UNIVERSITY STUDENTS IN HONG KONG
  35. Exploration of Chinese humor: Historical review, empirical findings, and critical reflections
  36. Which Chinese Creators are Famous and why: Views from Hong Kong and Mainland Chinese Students
  37. Luminary emergence and eminence across Chinese history
  38. WHOEVER IS INFLUENTIAL IS CREATIVE: HOW CHINESE UNDERGRADUATES CHOOSE CREATIVE PEOPLE IN CHINESE SOCIETIES1
  39. WHOEVER IS INFLUENTIAL IS CREATIVE: HOW CHINESE UNDERGRADUATES CHOOSE CREATIVE PEOPLE IN CHINESE SOCIETIES
  40. Self in learning among Chinese children
  41. Meritorious Evaluation Bias: How Chinese Undergraduates Perceive and Evaluate Chinese and Foreign Creators
  42. Creativity of university students: What is the impact of field and year of study?
  43. Identity Achievement and Idol Worship among Teenagers in Hong Kong
  44. Adolescent Modeling after Luminary and Star Idols and Development of Self-efficacy
  45. Compatibility of Chinese and Creative Personalities
  46. Perception of the most creative Chinese by undergraduates in Beijing, Guangzhou, Hong Kong, and Taipei
  47. Concepts of Creativity: Similarities and Differences among Mainland, Hong Kong and Taiwanese Chinese
  48. Measuring optimism in Hong Kong and mainland Chinese with the revised Life Orientation Test
  49. Selection of favourite idols and models among Chinese young people: A comparative study in Hong Kong and Nanjing
  50. Chinese Life Orientation Test--Revised
  51. Idol Worshipping for Vain Glory, Illusory Romance or Intellectual Learning: A Study in Nanjing and Hong Kong
  52. Filial Obligations and Expectations in China: Current Views from Young and Old People in Beijing
  53. Can you ever forgive me: It depends on how happy I feel about myself