All Stories

  1. Having a meaningful life protects the mental health of combat veterans
  2. The role of target‐specific shared reality in interpersonal interactions and protective health behaviours
  3. Dispositional mindfulness moderates the links between potentially morally injurious event exposure and symptoms of anxiety and depression but not suicidal ideation
  4. Morals for the sake of movement: Locomotion and sensitivity to norms in moral dilemmas
  5. Motivation and well-being across the lifespan: A cross-sectional examination
  6. Regulatory focus and (un)ethical behavior within an organization.
  7. Locomoting Larks and Assessing Owls: Morality from Mode and Time of Day
  8. Beyond Value in Moral Phenomenology: The Role of Epistemic and Control Experiences
  9. Sense of Personal Control Intensifies Moral Judgments of Others’ Actions
  10. When Group Influence Is More or Less Likely: The Case of Moral Judgments
  11. Beyond outcomes: How regulatory focus motivates consumer goal pursuit processes
  12. Should We Approach Approach and Avoid Avoidance? An Inquiry from Different Levels
  13. Approach and Avoidance Dynamics: How Expanding the Scope Informs Motivation Science
  14. The Proper Mix: Balancing Motivational Orientations in Goal Pursuit
  15. The Tripartite Motivational Human Essence
  16. Effective education and communication strategies to promote environmental engagement
  17. Shared reality makes life meaningful: Are we really going in the right direction?
  18. How the “Truth” Self Relates to Altruism: When Your Problem is Mine
  19. Securing foundations and advancing frontiers: Prevention and promotion effects on judgment & decision making
  20. Eager feelings and vigilant reasons: Regulatory focus differences in judging moral wrongs.
  21. Approach and avoidance in moral psychology: Evidence for three distinct motivational levels
  22. The “Ought” Premise of Moral Psychology and the Importance of the Ethical “Ideal”
  23. Microinterventions targeting regulatory focus and regulatory fit selectively reduce dysphoric and anxious mood
  24. Judging Political Hearts and Minds
  25. Distress from Motivational Dis-integration: When Fundamental Motives Are Too Weak or Too Strong
  26. Truth, control, and value motivations: the “what,” “how,” and “why” of approach and avoidance
  27. Public policy for thee, but not for me: Varying the grammatical person of public policy justifications influences their support
  28. Locomotion concerns with moral usefulness: When liberals endorse conservative binding moral foundations
  29. “Happiness” and “The Good Life” as Motives Working Together Effectively
  30. Repeating the Past
  31. Morality and Its Relation to Political Ideology
  32. "Doing What You’ve Done: Prevention Focus Motivates Repeating Decisions, Even When Unethical"