All Stories

  1. Misinformed by images: How images influence perceptions of truth and what can be done about it
  2. Commentaries on “Beyond statistical significance: Five principles for the new era of data analysis and reporting”
  3. How Prominent Cases of Sexual Harassment Influence Public Opinion Across Countries: The Cases of Cosby, Trump, and Weinstein
  4. The paucity of morality in everyday talk
  5. Close to the same: Similarity influences remembered distance between stimuli
  6. Semantic Prosody: How Neutral Words With Collocational Positivity/Negativity Color Evaluative Judgments
  7. What makes narratives feel right? The role of metacognitive experiences
  8. Humility in inquiry
  9. Implicit Bias Reflects the Company That Words Keep
  10. Conceptual metaphors, processing fluency, and aesthetic preference
  11. Sound and credibility in the virtual court: Low audio quality leads to less favorable evaluations of witnesses and lower weighting of evidence.
  12. Novelty as Opportunity and Risk: A Situated Cognition Analysis of Psychological Control and Novelty Seeking
  13. What’s on Your Mind?
  14. When photos backfire: Truthiness and falsiness effects in comparative judgments
  15. Grounded procedures in mind and society
  16. Theory and Effects in Consumer Psychology
  17. Metacognitive experiences as information: Processing fluency in consumer judgment and decision making
  18. Situated Embodiment: When Physical Weight Does and Does Not Inform Judgments of Importance
  19. “That’s bitter!”: Culture-specific effects of gustatory experience on judgments of fairness and advancement.
  20. Identity‐Based Motivation and the Logic of Conversations Obfuscate Loss of Online Privacy and What Policy‐Makers Can Do About It
  21. The Effects of Group Conformity on the Prototypical Majority Effect for Confidence and Response Latency
  22. Truth from familiar turns of phrase: Word and number collocations in the corpus of language influence acceptance of novel claims
  23. Metacognitive approach to narrative persuasion: the desirable and undesirable consequences of narrative disfluency
  24. Subjective Confidence in the Response to Personality Questions: Some Insight Into the Construction of People’s Responses to Test Items
  25. Risk Overgeneralization in Times of a Contagious Disease Threat
  26. Shifting views on “global warming” and “climate change” in the United States
  27. Grounded procedures: A proximate mechanism for the psychology of cleansing and other physical actions
  28. Uniformity: The effects of organizational attire on judgments and attributions
  29. Too close to call: Spatial distance between options influences choice difficulty
  30. Global reports of well-being overestimate aggregated daily states of well-being
  31. Truthiness, the illusory truth effect, and the role of need for cognition
  32. The War on Prevention II: Battle Metaphors Undermine Cancer Treatment and Prevention and Do Not Increase Vigilance
  33. Surveys, Experiments, and the Psychology of Self-Report
  34. Nostalgia and well-being in daily life: An ecological validity perspective.
  35. Score blending: How scale response grouping biases perceived standing
  36. Cross-cultural Comparability of Response Patterns of Subjective Probability Questions
  37. Methodological deviation from the original experiment
  38. Conservatives Report Greater Meaning in Life Than Liberals
  39. Of fluency, beauty, and truth
  40. Good Sound, Good Research: How Audio Quality Influences Perceptions of the Research and Researcher
  41. (Mis)imagining the good life and the bad life: Envy and pity as a function of the focusing illusion
  42. How seemingly innocuous words can bias judgment: Semantic prosody and impression formation
  43. The Prototypical Majority Effect Under Social Influence
  44. A grounded cognition perspective on folk-economic beliefs
  45. Make It Short and Easy: Username Complexity Determines Trustworthiness Above and Beyond Objective Reputation
  46. How One Thing Leads to Another: Spillover Effects of Behavioral Mind-Sets
  47. Embodied Cognition, Sensory Marketing, and the Conceptualization of Consumers’ Judgment and Decision Processes: Introduction to the Issue
  48. Conservatism as a situated identity: Implications for consumer behavior
  49. Energy dissipation within the wave run-up at stepped revetments
  50. Mixed feelings: the case of ambivalence
  51. Malleability of taste perception: biasing effects of rating scale format on taste recognition, product evaluation, and willingness to pay
  52. Does art expertise facilitate distancing?
  53. Beyond ‘what’ comes to mind: experiential and conversational determinants of information use
  54. Editorial overview: Social priming: Information accessibility and its consequences
  55. Evaluating Psychological Research Requires More Than Attention to the N
  56. Medical Metaphors Matter: Experiments Can Determine the Impact of Metaphors on Bioethical Issues
  57. Let’s not be indifferent about neutrality: Neutral ratings in the International Affective Picture System (IAPS) mask mixed affective responses.
  58. How aging affects self-reports
  59. Metacognitive inferences from other people’s memory performance.
  60. Semantic prosody and judgment.
  61. Questionable Research Practices Revisited
  62. Positioning Rationality and Emotion: Rationality Is Up and Emotion Is Down
  63. Norbert Schwarz: A Pioneer in Social Indicators and Quality of Life Research
  64. Finding a Fit or Developing It
  65. The path of ambivalence: tracing the pull of opposing evaluations using mouse trajectories
  66. Something smells fishy: Olfactory suspicion cues improve performance on the Moses illusion and Wason rule discovery task
  67. It’s a Trap! Instructional Manipulation Checks Prompt Systematic Thinking on “Tricky” Tasks
  68. Which Mission? Thoughts About the Past and Future of BDT
  69. Views That Are Shared With Others Are Expressed With Greater Confidence and Greater Fluency Independent of Any Social Influence
  70. Elaborative Thinking Increases the Impact of Physical Weight on Importance Judgments
  71. Attentive Turkers: MTurk participants perform better on online attention checks than do subject pool participants
  72. Hunger promotes acquisition of nonfood objects
  73. Questionnaire Design Effects in Climate Change Surveys
  74. Weighty data: importance information influences estimated weight of digital information storage devices
  75. Attitude Measurement
  76. Questionnaires: Cognitive Approaches
  77. Metacognition.
  78. Endorsement of Fit and Develop Theories Measure
  79. Fit Theory and Develop Theory Dichotomous Measure
  80. Fit Theory and Develop Theory Questionnaire
  81. Self-Limiting and Self-Bolstering Behavior Coding Scheme
  82. The War on Prevention
  83. The role of social comparison for maximizers and satisficers: Wanting the best or wanting to be the best?
  84. Happy Marriage, Happy Life? Marital Quality and Subjective Well-being in Later Life
  85. Framing love: When it hurts to think we were made for each other
  86. Erratum to special issue 24/2, April 2014 titled, “Sensory perception, embodiment, and grounded cognition: Implications for consumer behavior” [Journal of Consumer Psychology 24 (2014)]
  87. Culture-Sensitive Question Order Effects of Self-Rated Health Between Older Hispanic and Non-Hispanic Adults in the United States
  88. Commentaries and Rejoinder on Klein et al. (2014)
  89. Cognition and Communication
  90. MLK Day and Racial Attitudes: Liking the Group More but Its Members Less
  91. Reduced Renal α-Klotho Expression in CKD Patients and Its Effect on Renal Phosphate Handling and Vitamin D Metabolism
  92. What makes an art expert? Emotion and evaluation in art appreciation
  93. Lee and Schwarz Respond
  94. Nachruf auf Martin Irle
  95. Something smells fishy: Sensory distrust primes improve critical thinking
  96. The war on prevention: Bellicose cancer metaphors hurt (some) prevention intentions
  97. When quitters don't quite quit: Putting lay theories into context
  98. It's a trap!: Instrumental manipulation checks encourage reflective responding
  99. Metaphor in judgment and decision making.
  100. Too much experience: A desensitization bias in emotional perspective taking.
  101. Question Context and Priming Meaning of Health: Effect on Differences in Self-Rated Health Between Hispanics and Non-Hispanic Whites
  102. "Did you know?" - Unintended effects of metacognitive prompts on unfamiliar information
  103. Distrust and the positive test heuristic: Dispositional and situated social distrust improves performance on the Wason Rule Discovery Task.
  104. When quitters don't quite quit: Putting lay theories into context
  105. Sensory marketing, embodiment, and grounded cognition: A review and introduction
  106. Pragmatic Processes in Survey Interviewing
  107. Lost in the crowd: Entitative group membership reduces mind attribution
  108. The power of precise numbers: A conversational logic analysis
  109. Does Time Fly When You are Having Fun? A Day Reconstruction Method Analysis
  110. How Successful You Have Been in Life Depends on the Response Scale Used: The Role of Cultural Mindsets in Pragmatic Inferences Drawn from Question Format
  111. Retraction notice to “Similarities and differences between the impact of traits and expectancies: What matters is whether the target stimulus is ambiguous or mixed” [Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 34 (1998) 227–245]
  112. Measuring Time Use of Older Couples
  113. Would Others Be Gaga for Lady Gaga? Making Decisions For Others After Repeated Exposure
  114. A Desensitization Bias in Social Judgment: Predicting Others' Emotive Reactions and Making Recommendations after Repeated Exposure
  115. I Like Your Product When I Like My Photo: Misattribution Using Interactive Virtual Mirrors
  116. When promoting a charity can hurt charitable giving: A metacognitive analysis
  117. The Presenter's Paradox: Figure 1.
  118. Misinformation and Its Correction
  119. The Right Angle: Visual Portrayal of Products Affects Observers’ Impressions of Owners
  120. How and Why 1 Year Differs from 365 Days: A Conversational Logic Analysis of Inferences from the Granularity of Quantitative Expressions
  121. Embodiment in Social Psychology
  122. Today's misery and yesterday's happiness: Differential effects of current life-events on perceptions of past wellbeing
  123. To judge a book by its weight you need to know its content: Knowledge moderates the use of embodied cues
  124. Announcement of a Special Issue in Journal of Consumer Psychology on: “Sensory perception, embodiment, and grounded cognition: Implications for consumer behavior”
  125. Fluency and Social Influence
  126. Disability, participation, and subjective wellbeing among older couples
  127. The “Fair Trade” Effect
  128. Feelings-as-Information Theory
  129. The impact of imagery-evoking category labels on perceived variety
  130. The influence of affective states on the process of lie detection.
  131. Bidirectionality, mediation, and moderation of metaphorical effects: The embodiment of social suspicion and fishy smells.
  132. Washing away your (good or bad) luck: Physical cleansing affects risk-taking behavior.
  133. Assessing Time-Diary Quality for Older Couples: An Analysis of the PSID Disability and Use-of-Time Supplement
  134. Response Alternatives: The Impact of Their Choice and Presentation Order
  135. Wiping the Slate Clean
  136. Why don't we learn from poor choices? The consistency of expectation, choice, and memory clouds the lessons of experience
  137. "Global warming" or "climate change"?: Whether the planet is warming depends on question wording
  138. To compete or to cooperate? Values' impact on perception and action in social dilemma games
  139. Uniform(ity)
  140. Something smells fishy here: Suspicion enhances identification of a fishy smell, a fishy smell increases suspicion
  141. Shifting text can shift thinking: The effect of subtle changes in text presentation on processing style
  142. The effects of visual cues on the perception of weight
  143. The unit effect
  144. Uniform(ity)
  145. Disgust as a hedonic experience: The case of humor
  146. Together forever and never to part: Attachment style and replacement intentions for anthropomorphized objects
  147. Does "fair trade" chocolate have fewer calories? Ethics claims bias health judgments
  148. Something smells fishy here: Fishy smells increase suspicion and suspicion enhances identification of fishy smells
  149. On the one hand, on the other hand: How hand movements tune the mind
  150. Past on the left, future on the right: How thinking about time affects choice
  151. Positive Affect and College Success
  152. Dirty Hands and Dirty Mouths
  153. I like those glasses on you, but not in the mirror: Fluency, preference, and virtual mirrors
  154. Polyaxial vs. Monoaxial Angular Stability in Osteosynthesis with Internal Fixators for Complex Periarticular Fractures
  155. The Aging Consumer
  156. Washing Away Postdecisional Dissonance
  157. Cultural Emphasis on Honor, Modesty, or Self-Enhancement: Implications for the Survey-Response Process
  158. Cognition, Communication, and Culture: Implications for the Survey Response Process
  159. Will This Trip Really Be Exciting? The Role of Incidental Emotions in Product Evaluation
  160. Use does not wear ragged the fabric of friendship: Thinking of objects as alive makes people less willing to replace them
  161. Sneezing in Times of a Flu Pandemic
  162. Aesthetic Appeal Scale
  163. Experiences of Fluency with Memories of Charities
  164. Inferring Extremity from Memory: The Effects of Temporal Distance and Metacognitive Inference on Word-Of-Mouth
  165. How the Numbers on Your Rating Scale Influence Taste Perception and Willingness to Pay
  166. Educating Older Adults about Health: A Paradoxical Effect on Memory and Behavioral Intentions
  167. Measurement as Cooperative Communication: What Research Participants Learn from Questionnaires
  168. Motivated biases in the perception of temporal distance generalize across unrelated events
  169. Mental Construal and the Emergence of Assimilation and Contrast Effects
  170. I Buy for Quality, You Buy for Status: Marketplace Metacognition in Consumer-to-Consumer Inferences
  171. Introduction to Research Dialogue
  172. Online and On My Mind: Temporary and Chronic Accessibility Moderate the Influence of Media Figures
  173. Introduction to research dialogue
  174. If It's Difficult to Pronounce, It Must Be Risky
  175. Do We Really Need a Reason to Indulge?
  176. The Cognitive Consequences of Thinking of Computers as Alive
  177. Introduction to research dialogue
  178. Global and Episodic Reports of Hedonic Experience
  179. How extending your middle finger affects your perception of others: Learned movements influence concept accessibility
  180. Time Use and Subjective Well-Being in France and the U.S.
  181. Attitude Measurement
  182. Fluency and the Detection of Misleading Questions: Low Processing Fluency Attenuates the Moses Illusion
  183. Introduction to research dialogue
  184. If It's Hard to Read, It's Hard to Do
  185. Of great art and untalented artists: Effort information and the flexible construction of judgmental heuristics
  186. Context Effects in Survey Ratings of Health, Symptoms, and Satisfaction
  187. Introduction to Research Dialogue
  188. Of Frog Wines and Frowning Watches: Semantic Priming, Perceptual Fluency, and Brand Evaluation
  189. Introduction to research dialogue
  190. Effective Cost Based Choice
  191. The Psychology of Survey Response
  192. Including Computer Game Characters as a Part of the Self
  193. Introduction to research dialogue
  194. Attitude Construction: Evaluation in Context
  195. Introduction to Research Dialogues
  196. Do Male Politicians Have Big Heads? Face-ism in Online Self-Representations of Politicians
  197. Preference Fluency in Choice
  198. Introduction to Research Dialogues
  199. Introduction to Research Dialogues
  200. Cognitive aspects of survey methodology
  201. Metacognitive Experiences and Hindsight Bias: It's Not Just the Thought (Content) That Counts!
  202. Financial aspirations, financial success, and overall life satisfaction: who? and how?
  203. Face-ism in politicians' online presentations
  204. Introduction to Research Dialogues
  205. Under the thumb of our fingers: Symbolic body movements influence trait attributions and evaluations
  206. If it's easy to read, it's easy to do: Processing fluency affects the prediction of behavioral fluency
  207. Metacognitive Experiences and the Intricacies of Setting People Straight: Implications for Debiasing and Public Information Campaigns
  208. Inferring the popularity of an opinion from its familiarity: A repetitive voice can sound like a chorus.
  209. Evaluating Surveys and Questionnaires
  210. Metacognitive Experiences and Human Judgment
  211. When “the Logic of Capital Is the Real Which Lurks in the Background”
  212. When conveying a message may hurt the relationship: Cultural differences in the difficulty of using an answering machine
  213. Would You Be Happier If You Were Richer? A Focusing Illusion
  214. Attitude Research: Between Ockham's Razor and the Fundamental Attribution Error
  215. Daniel Kahneman, Ed Diener, and Norbert Schwarz (eds.), Well-Being: The Foundations of Hedonic Psychology (New York: The Russell Sage Foundation, 1999), pp. xii + 593
  216. Reversing the affective congruency effect: The role of target word frequency of occurrence
  217. Why are You Calling Me? How Study Introductions Change Response Patterns
  218. on judgments of truth & beauty
  219. Feelings, Fit, and Funny Effects: A Situated Cognition Perspective
  220. Do We Really Need a Reason to Indulge?
  221. Gender biases in facial prominence of photographs in American Psychologist
  222. Individualism and Collectivism
  223. Online I am We: Contrast and assimilation effects in online environments
  224. The Effect of Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR) Activities on Companies With Bad Reputations
  225. Research Dialogue
  226. The Wason Selection task - Is it all a matter of trust? Distrust priming reduces confirmation bias
  227. A population approach to the study of emotion: Diurnal rhythms of a working day examined with the day reconstruction method.
  228. Statistical Analysis of Choice Experiments and Surveys
  229. Should para-phenylenediamine (PPD) 1% pet. be part of commercially available standard series?
  230. How Warnings about False Claims Become Recommendations
  231. Sex, guise, and videogames: Constructing gender in virtual space
  232. Misimagining the unimaginable: The disability paradox and health care decision making.
  233. When Thinking Feels Difficult: Meta-Cognitive Experiences in Judgment and Decision Making
  234. What is an implicit attitude?
  235. A Survey Method for Characterizing Daily Life Experience: The Day Reconstruction Method
  236. Processing Fluency and Aesthetic Pleasure: Is Beauty in the Perceiver's Processing Experience?
  237. Integrating Temporal Biases
  238. Errors of judgment and the logic of conversation
  239. X-ray diffraction study and Monte Carlo simulation of the relaxation behavior of epitaxially grown wire structures
  240. Toward National Well-Being Accounts
  241. Fluency experiences in decision making
  242. Metacognitive Experiences: Response to Commentaries
  243. Metacognitive Experiences in Consumer Judgment and Decision Making
  244. Facial expressions, perceived effort, and the hindsight bias: "Backfire" and "it-could-never-have-happened" effects
  245. Language, social comparison, and college football: is your school less similar to the rival school than the rival school is to your school?
  246. Zeroing in on the Dark Side of the American Dream
  247. Mood as Information: 20 Years Later
  248. Approaching and Avoiding Linda: Motor Signals Influence the Conjunction Fallacy
  249. Feeling and Thinking: Implications for Problem Solving
  250. Debiasing the hindsight bias: The role of accessibility experiences and (mis)attributions
  251. Self-Reports in Consumer Research: The Challenge of Comparing Cohorts and Cultures
  252. Nobelpreis für Daniel Kahneman und die Psychologie
  253. The effect of subjective experiences during decision-making on choice
  254. Gender Typed Advertisements and Impression Formation: The Role of Chronic and Temporary Accessibility
  255. Experienced uncertainty in morally difficult decisions
  256. Mood as Information: 20 Years Later
  257. Explicit memory, implicit memory and the challenges of aging
  258. Remember me, remember me not: The effects of being remembered by others
  259. Accessibility experiences and the hindsight bias: I knew it all along versus it could never have happened
  260. The Activation of Aging Stereotypes in Younger and Older Adults
  261. Feelings as Information: Moods Influence Judgments and Processing Strategies
  262. The Availability Heuristic Revisited: Ease of Recall and Content of Recall as Distinct Sources of Information
  263. Making sense of standardized survey questions: The influence of reference periods and their repetition
  264. Is the Interdependent Self More Sensitive to Question Context Than the Independent Self? Self-Construal and the Observation of Conversational Norms
  265. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  266. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  267. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  268. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  269. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  270. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  271. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  272. Selbstberichte im Alter
  273. Approaching and avoiding Linda: Motor signals influence the conjunction effect
  274. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  275. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  276. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  277. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  278. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  279. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  280. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  281. 5. Affect and processing dynamics
  282. When debiasing backfires: Accessible content and accessibility experiences in debiasing hindsight.
  283. The hot fringes of consciousness
  284. Epitaxy and magnetotransport properties of the diluted magnetic semiconductor p-Be(1−x)MnxTe
  285. Implementation Intentions and Facilitation of Prospective Memory
  286. "How Many Partners Is Too Many?" Shaping Perceptions of Personal Vulnerability1
  287. Personalized versus Generalized Benefits of Stereotype Disconfirmation: Trade-offs in the Evaluation of Atypical Exemplars and Their Social Groups
  288. Service Experiences and Satisfaction Judgments: The Use of Affect and Beliefs in Judgment Formation
  289. Asking Questions About Behavior: Cognition, Communication, and Questionnaire Construction
  290. How Pleasant Was Your Childhood? Beliefs About Memory Shape Inferences From Experienced Difficulty of Recall
  291. The Psychology of Survey Response, Roger Tourangeau, Lance J. Rips, and Kenneth Rasinski. New York: Cambridge University Press, 2000. 401pp, ISBN 0-521-57246-0 (cloth) and 0-521-57629-6 (paper).
  292. Blackwell Handbook of Social Psychology: Intraindividual Processes
  293. Attitudes, Persuasion, and Behavior
  294. The Construction of Attitudes
  295. Study of the Influence of Fictional Information on Beliefs Across Ages
  296. Service Experiences and Satisfaction Judgments: The Use of Affect and Beliefs in Judgment Formation
  297. Asking questions about behavior: cognition, communication, and questionnaire construction
  298. Reducing Context Effects by Adding Context Information: The Direction and Size of Context Effects in Political Judgment
  299. Cognition and Survey Research
  300. Cognition and Survey Research
  301. Emotion, cognition, and decision making
  302. Culture, Autobiographical Memory, and Behavioral Frequency Reports: Measurement Issues in Cross-Cultural Studies
  303. Agenda 2000 ? Social judgment and attitudes: warmer, more social, and less conscious
  304. Seymour Sudman, 1928–2000
  305. Negative affect and the status quo bias
  306. Attitudes: Attitude measurement.
  307. Unobservable and Observable Behaviors Measure
  308. Decomposition can harm the accuracy of behavioural frequency reports
  309. Telling what they want to know: participants tailor causal attributions to researchers' interests
  310. Effects of Perceptual Fluency on Judgments of Truth
  311. Cognitition, Aging and Self-Reports
  312. Forming Judgments of Attitude Certainty, Intensity, and Importance: The Role of Subjective Experiences
  313. Beliefs Influence Information Processing Strategies: Declarative and Experiential Information in Risk Assessment
  314. Improving accuracy of major depression age-of-onset reports in the US National Comorbidity Survey
  315. A Paradoxical Effect of the Illusion of Truth
  316. Measuring Constructed Preferences: Towards a Building Code
  317. Self-reports: How the questions shape the answers.
  318. The Influence of Aging and Question Content on Frequency Scale Effects with Self-Reported Behaviors
  319. Self-reports: How the questions shape the answers.
  320. Constructing Perceptions of Vulnerability: Personal Relevance and the Use of Experiential Information in Health Judgments
  321. Cognition, Aging and Self-Reports
  322. Warmer and More Social: Recent Developments in Cognitive Social Psychology
  323. The Smell of Bias: What Instigates Correction Processes in Social Judgments?
  324. The Republican Who Did Not Want to Become President: Colin Powell's Impact on Evaluations of the Republican Party and Bob Dole
  325. Recalling more childhood events leads to judgments of poorer memory: Implications for the recovered/false memory debate
  326. FORMAL FEATURES OF RATING SCALES AND THE INTERPRETATION OF QUESTION MEANING
  327. Accessible Content and Accessibility Experiences: The Interplay of Declarative and Experiential Information in Judgment
  328. RETRACTED: Similarities and Differences between the Impact of Traits and Expectancies: What Matters Is Whether the Target Stimulus Is Ambiguous or Mixed
  329. Context effects in political judgement: assimilation and contrast as a function of categorization processes
  330. The Role of Ease of Retrieval and Attribution in Memory Judgments: Judging Your Memory as Worse Despite Recalling More Events
  331. Methodological studies of the Composite International Diagnostic Interview (CIDI) in the US national comorbidity survey (NCS)
  332. Context Effects in Product Line Extensions: Context Is Not Destiny
  333. Looking back at anger: Reference periods change the interpretation of emotion frequency questions.
  334. Looking back at anger: Reference periods change the interpretation of emotion frequency questions.
  335. Effects of Perceptual Fluency on Affective Judgments
  336. Neue Wege zu Pentalen-Vorstufen
  337. Subliminal Affective Priming Resists Attributional Interventions
  338. POLITICAL KNOWLEDGE, ATTRIBUTION, AND INFERRED INTEREST IN POLITICS: THE OPERATION OF BUFFER ITEMS
  339. Survey Measurement and Process Quality
  340. Questionnaire Design: The Rocky Road from Concepts to Answers
  341. Reducing Question Order Effects: The Operation of Buffer Items
  342. Moods and Attitude Judgments: A Comment on Fishbein and Middlestadt
  343. Cognition, Communication, and Survey Measurement: Some Implications for Contingent Valuation Surveys
  344. How Much Will I Spend? Factors Affecting Consumers’ Estimates of Future Expense
  345. Mood and the impact of category membership and individuating information
  346. Answering Questions: Methodology for Determining Cognitive and Communicative Processes in Survey Research
  347. Survey Research: Collecting Data by Asking Questions
  348. Doctor-Assisted Suicide Attitude Strength Measure
  349. Mood and Stereotyping: Affective States and the Use of General Knowledge Structures
  350. Mood and the use of scripts: Does a happy mood really lead to mindlessness?
  351. Insult, aggression, and the southern culture of honor: An "experimental ethnography."
  352. Are (some) reports of attitude strength context dependent?
  353. Insult, aggression, and the southern culture of honor: An "experimental ethnography."
  354. Mood and the use of scripts: Does a happy mood really lead to mindlessness?
  355. Behavioral Frequency Judgments: An Accessibility-Diagnosticity Framework
  356. What Respondents Learn from Questionnaires: The Survey Interview and the Logic of Conversation
  357. The availability heuristic revisited: Experienced ease of retrieval in mundane frequency estimates
  358. Autobiographical Memory and the Validity of Retrospective Reports
  359. Asking Comparative Questions: The Impact of the Direction of Comparison
  360. Subsequent Questions May Influence Answers to Preceding Questions in Mail Surveys
  361. THE NUMERIC VALUES OF RATING SCALES: A COMPARISON OF THEIR IMPACT IN MAIL SURVEYS AND TELEPHONE INTERVIEWS
  362. Effects of Atypical Exemplars on Racial Beliefs: Enlightened Racism or Generalized Appraisals
  363. The Disassembly and Safe Disposal of Alkali-Metal Systems
  364. Cognitive and Communicative Aspects of Survey Measurement
  365. Autobiographical Memory and the Validity of Retrospective Reports
  366. Introduction and Overview
  367. Retrospective Reports: The Impact of Response Formats
  368. Need for Cognition Scale--German Version
  369. German Need for Cognition Scale--Short Form
  370. Subjective Assessments and Evaluations of Change: Some Lessons from Social Cognition Research
  371. Are you what you feel? The affective and cognitive determinants of self-judgments
  372. THE USE OF ANCHORING STRATEGIES IN THE CONSTRUCTION OF PROXY-REPORTS OF ATTITUDES
  373. Judgment in a Social Context: Biases, Shortcomings, and the Logic of Conversation
  374. Salience of rape affects self-esteem: The moderating role of gender and rape myth acceptance
  375. Mood States Influence the Production of Persuasive Arguments
  376. What's in a Question?
  377. The informative functions of research procedures: Bias and the logic of conversation
  378. BOOK REVIEW
  379. Awareness of the influence as a determinant of assimilation versus contrast
  380. Affect and persuasion: Mood effects on the processing of message content and context cues and on subsequent behaviour
  381. Scandals and the Public's Trust in Politicians: Assimilation and Contrast Effects
  382. Asking Difficult Questions: Task Complexity Increases the Impact of Response Alternatives
  383. Bases of political judgments: The role of stereotypic and nonstereotypic information
  384. Book reviews
  385. Context Effects in Social and Psychological Research
  386. A Cognitive Model of Response-Order Effects in Survey Measurement
  387. Introduction
  388. CONFIDENTIALITY ASSURANCES IN SURVEYS: REASSURANCE OR THREAT?
  389. Mood effects on attitude judgments: Independent effects of mood before and after message elaboration.
  390. Mood effects on attitude judgments: Independent effects of mood before and after message elaboration.
  391. Ease of retrieval as information: Another look at the availability heuristic.
  392. Differential effects of priming at the encoding and judgment stage
  393. The impact of administration mode on response effects in survey measurement
  394. Semantic and Pragmatic Aspects of Context Effects in Social and Psychological Research
  395. Base Rates, Representativeness, and the Logic of Conversation: The Contextual Relevance of “Irrelevant” Information
  396. The Cognitive and Affective Bases of Political Tolerance Judgments
  397. Assimilation and Contrast Effects in Part-Whole Question Sequences: A Conversational Logic Analysis
  398. Context Effects in Attitude Surveys: Applying Cognitive Theory to Social Research
  399. Rating Scales: Numeric Values May Change the Meaning of Scale Labels
  400. Mood and Persuasion: Affective States Influence the Processing of Persuasive Communications
  401. Response scales as frames of reference: The impact of frequency range on diagnostic judgements
  402. Salience of comparison standards and the activation of social norms: Consequences for judgements of happiness and their communication
  403. What determines a ‘perspective’? Contrast effects as a function of the dimension tapped by preceding questions
  404. Mood and Persuasion
  405. Infrared excitation of the subbands of A δ-layer in GaAs and Si
  406. What mediates the impact of response alternatives on frequency reports of mundane behaviors?
  407. WHAT RESPONDENTS LEARN FROM SCALES: THE INFORMATIVE FUNCTIONS OF RESPONSE ALTERNATIVES
  408. Infrared resonance excitation of δ-layers-a silicon-based infrared quantum-well detector
  409. Vibration spectroscopy for surface layers on Si
  410. What's in a picture? The impact of face-ism on trait attribution
  411. Resonant excitation of a layer of Si donors in GaAs
  412. ‘NO OPINION’-FILTERS: A COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE
  413. Cognitive and affective bases of opinion survey responses.
  414. Cognitive and affective bases of opinion survey responses.
  415. Judgments of relationship satisfaction: Inter- and intraindividual comparisons as a function of questionnaire structure
  416. Priming and communication: Social determinants of information use in judgments of life satisfaction
  417. What triggers causal attributions? The impact of valence and subjective probability
  418. The Range of Response Alternatives May Determine the Meaning of the Question: Further Evidence on Informative Functions of Response Alternatives
  419. Cognitive accessibility of sex role concepts and attitudes toward political participation: The impact of sexist advertisements
  420. Stimmung als Information
  421. Stimmung und Berichtete Lebenszufriedenheit: Forschungsstand und Erste Evidenz
  422. Subjektives Wohlbefinden Als Urteil: Integration Der Ergebnisse
  423. Social Information Processing and Survey Methodology
  424. Stimmungseinflüsse auf die Beurteilung der Allgemeinen Lebenszufriedenheit und spezifischer bereichszufriedenheiten
  425. Emotionale Einflüsse auf die Informationsverarbeitung und Urteilsbildung: Ein Überblick
  426. Stimmung Oder Inhaltliche information als Urteilsgrundlage: Eine Frage der relativen salienz?
  427. Informative und Direktive Funktionen Emotionaler Zustände: Zusammenfassung und Implikationen
  428. Lebenssituation, Urteilssituation und Berichtete Lebenszufriedenheit: Plädoyer Für Eine Urteilsperspektive
  429. Die Vermittlung von Stimmungseinflüssen auf die Bewertung Des Eigenen Lebens: Missattributionsexperimente
  430. Response Effects in Surveys
  431. Editors’ Introduction
  432. What Response Scales may Tell your Respondents: Informative Functions of Response Alternatives
  433. Ausblick
  434. Einleitung
  435. Soccer, rooms, and the quality of your life: Mood effects on judgments of satisfaction with life in general and with specific domains
  436. Not Forbidding Isn't Allowing: The Cognitive Basis of the Forbid-Allow Asymmetry
  437. Modellversuche zur Verbesserung der Stabilität bei einseitiger Fixateur externe Osteosynthese (Klammerfixateur) - Improved Stability in Experimental One-Sided External Fixation Osteosynthesis
  438. Attribution of Arousal as a Mediator of the Effectiveness of Fear-Arousing Communications1
  439. Effects of rank ordering stimuli on magnitude ratings of these and other stimuli
  440. Happiness and reminiscing: The role of time perspective, affect, and mode of thinking.
  441. Response Scales: Effects of Category Range on Reported Behavior and Comparative Judgments
  442. When reactance effects persist despite restoration of freedom: Investigations of time delay and vicarious control
  443. Mood, misattribution, and judgments of well-being: Informative and directive functions of affective states.
  444. Effects of salience of rape on sex role attitudes, trust, and self-esteem in non-raped women
  445. Manipulating Salience
  446. Interactive effects of writing and reading a persuasive essay on attitude change and selective exposure
  447. Self-Reports of Behaviors and Opinions
  448. Cognition, Aging, and Self-Reports; Editors’ Introduction
  449. Self-Reports in Consumer Research
  450. The Psychology of Asking Questions
  451. It's Hard to Imagine: Mental Simulation, Metacognitive Experiences, and the Success of Debiasing
  452. National Time Accounting
  453. Rejoinder