All Stories

  1. More than scientists: How message and messenger attributes influence viewers’ climate change intentions
  2. From detached to alarmed: How eco-emotion profiles predict concern and sacrifice for the planet
  3. Empowering communities through digital innovation: evaluating FeralScan adoption by Australian rural landholders
  4. Protecting and restoring freshwater biodiversity across urban areas in Aotearoa New Zealand: Citizens’ reporting of pollution in stormwater drains and waterways
  5. Purchasing sustainable palm oil products: narrowing the intention-behavior gap
  6. Australian Youth Mental Health and Climate Change Concern After the Black Summer Bushfires
  7. Wild dog management: understanding rural landholders’ willingness to participate in coordinated control programs
  8. What should we eat? Realistic solutions for reducing our food footprint
  9. Purchasing products with sustainable palm oil: designing and evaluating an online intervention for Australian consumers
  10. Palm oil: Understanding barriers to sustainable consumption
  11. How personal values shape job seeker preference: A policy capturing study
  12. Can Consumers Do It All? An Exploration of Factors that Influence the Purchase of Sustainable Palm Oil Products
  13. Human engagement in place-care
  14. Understanding why peri-urban residents do not report wild dog impacts: an audience segmentation approach
  15. Confronting the palm oil crisis: Identifying behaviours for targeted interventions
  16. Self-Compassion, Physical Health, and Health Behaviour: A Meta-Analysis
  17. Does Green-Person-Organization Fit Predict Intrinsic Need Satisfaction and Workplace Engagement?
  18. Can work climate foster pro-environmental behavior inside and outside of the workplace?
  19. Change the Humans First: Principles for Improving the Management of Free-Roaming Cats
  20. Using Audience Segmentation to Understand Nonparticipation in Invasive Mammal Management in Australia
  21. How projected electricity price and personal values influence support for a 50% renewable energy target in Australia
  22. Feelings About Fracking: Using the Affect Heuristic to Understand Opposition to Coal Seam Gas Production
  23. Increasing belief but issue fatigue: Changes in Australian Household Climate Change Segments between 2011 and 2016
  24. Using behavioural science to improve Australia’s environmental regulation
  25. Prioritizing community behaviors to improve wild dog management in peri-urban areas
  26. Refining Online Communication Strategies for Domestic Cat Management
  27. Assessing the impact of different persuasive messages on the intentions and behaviour of cat owners: A randomised control trial
  28. Self-compassion moderates the predictive effects of implicit cognitions on subjective well-being
  29. Upward counterfactual thinking and depression: A meta-analysis
  30. Can community-based governance strengthen citizenship in support of climate change adaptation? Testing insights from Self-Determination Theory
  31. Audience Segmentation and Climate Change Communication
  32. Fracked: Coal seam gas extraction and farmers’ mental health
  33. The new ecological paradigm and responses to climate change in China
  34. Pacific Islanders’ understanding of climate change: Where do they source information and to what extent do they trust it?
  35. Combining threat and efficacy messaging to increase public engagement with climate change in Beijing, China
  36. The Future is Now: Reducing Psychological Distance to Increase Public Engagement with Climate Change
  37. Spirituality and attitudes towards Nature in the Pacific Islands: insights for enabling climate-change adaptation
  38. The awareness of social inference test: development of a shortened version for use in adults with acquired brain injury
  39. Communicating climate change to different groups
  40. Thinking styles and decision making: A meta-analysis.
  41. Born to roam? Surveying cat owners in Tasmania, Australia, to identify the drivers and barriers to cat containment
  42. Cultural worldviews and climate change: A view from China
  43. Applying behavioral theories to invasive animal management: Towards an integrated framework
  44. Workplace incivility and work withdrawal
  45. Barriers and drivers of low emission agricultural practices
  46. Cultural worldviews and environmental risk perceptions
  47. En Route to Depression: Self-Esteem Discrepancies and Habitual Rumination
  48. Heritability of Preferred Thinking Styles and a Genetic Link to Working Memory Capacity
  49. Psychological Functioning of Partners of Australian Combat Veterans: Contribution of Veterans' PTSD Symptoms and Partners' Caregiving Distress
  50. Arousal, Working Memory Capacity, and Sexual Decision-Making in Men
  51. Audience segmentation and climate change communication: conceptual and methodological considerations
  52. The affect heuristic and public support for three types of wood smoke mitigation policies
  53. Identifying climate change interpretive communities in a large Australian sample
  54. Profiles of psychological well‐being in a sample of Australian university students
  55. The Multiple Sclerosis Work Difficulties Questionnaire (MSWDQ): development of a shortened scale
  56. “This is not a burning issue for me”: How citizens justify their use of wood heaters in a city with a severe air pollution problem
  57. Effectiveness of a Self-Guided Web-Based Cannabis Treatment Program: Randomized Controlled Trial
  58. Exploring the Factor Structure of Implicit and Explicit Cognitions Associated With Depression
  59. Latent profile analysis of working memory capacity and thinking styles in adults and adolescents
  60. Can Outcome Expectancies Help Explain Sex Differences in Direct and Indirect Aggression?
  61. The Multiple Sclerosis Work Difficulties Questionnaire
  62. Comparing the effectiveness of education and technology in reducing wood smoke pollution: A field experiment
  63. Development and validation of a revised measure of codependency
  64. A Latent Profile Analysis of Implicit and Explicit Cognitions Associated with Depression
  65. Working memory capacity and cognitive styles in decision-making
  66. A dual process account of adolescent and adult binge drinking
  67. THE GRASSY KNOLL . . . AND AN ELEPHANT
  68. The Effect of an Expressive-Writing Intervention for Employees on Emotional Self-Efficacy, Emotional Intelligence, Affect, and Workplace Incivility
  69. The ‘grass ceiling’: limitations in the literature hinder our understanding of cannabis use and its consequences
  70. The association of ability and trait emotional intelligence with alcohol problems
  71. Implicit cognition and depression: A meta-analysis
  72. Expectancies and Mental Models as Determinants of Adolescents' Smoking Decisions
  73. Experiential and rational processing styles, emotional intelligence and wellbeing
  74. Individual differences in trait urgency moderate the role of the affect heuristic in adolescent binge drinking
  75. A Cue Utilization Approach for Investigating Harvest Decisions in Commons Dilemmas
  76. Temporal pessimism and spatial optimism in environmental assessments: An 18-nation study
  77. Smoking cessation in adults: A dual process perspective
  78. Assessing individual differences in perceived vulnerability in older adults
  79. Chapter 9 The role of emotional self-efficacy, emotional intelligence, and affect in workplace incivility and workplace satisfaction
  80. Role of affect, expectancies and dual processes of cognition in predicting adult cigarette smoking
  81. Implicit cognition and substance use: A meta-analysis
  82. Development and preliminary validation of an emotional self-efficacy scale
  83. Thursday 24th July 2008
  84. Assessing individual differences in adolescents’ preference for rational and experiential cognition
  85. Development and validation of the Smoking Expectancy Scale for Adolescents.
  86. Keeping the home fires burning: The affect heuristic and wood smoke pollution
  87. Confirmatory factor analysis of the Wechsler Intelligence Scale for Children-Third Edition in an Australian clinical sample.
  88. The meaning of smoking as health and social risk in adolescence
  89. Assessment and Early Instruction of Preschool Children at Risk for Reading Disability.
  90. Development and validation of the Uncivil Workplace Behavior Questionnaire.
  91. Do dysfunctional cognitions mediate the relationship between risk factors and postnatal depression symptomatology?
  92. Mental Models of Poverty in Developing Nations
  93. Sex Differences in Workplace Aggression: An Investigation of Moderation and Mediation Effects
  94. Measuring adolescent smoking expectancies by incorporating judgments about the expected time of occurrence of smoking outcomes.
  95. Parental behaviour and alcohol misuse among adolescents: A path analysis of mediating influences
  96. A comparison of the mediational properties of four adolescent smoking expectancy measures.
  97. Alignment to Workplace Safety Principles
  98. Expectancies and Mental Models as Determinants of Adolescents' Smoking Decisions
  99. Attributions about self and others in commons dilemmas
  100. Fear Appeals, Individual Differences, and Environmental Concern