All Stories

  1. Is there anything good about conspiracy beliefs? Belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories is associated with benefits to well-being
  2. A gateway conspiracy? Belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories prospectively predicts greater conspiracist ideation
  3. Sensitive Liberals and Unfeeling Conservatives? Interoceptive Sensitivity Predicts Political Liberalism
  4. A gateway conspiracy? Belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories prospectively predicts greater conspiracist ideation
  5. Contracting COVID-19: a longitudinal investigation of the impact of beliefs and knowledge
  6. In harm’s way, but not stressed about it: On the antecedents and consequences of belief in COVID-19 conspiracy theories
  7. Concern about salient pathogen threats increases sensitivity to disgust
  8. Investigating the Conservatism-Disgust Paradox in Reactions to the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Critical Reexamination of the Interrelations between Political Ideology, Disgust Sensitivity, and Pandemic Response
  9. Who is (not) complying with the U. S. social distancing directive and why? Testing a general framework of compliance with virtual measures of social distancing
  10. Social distancing decreases an individual’s likelihood of contracting COVID-19
  11. Examining the Left-Right Divide through the Lens of a Global Crisis: Ideological Differences and Their Implications for Responses to the COVID-19 Pandemic
  12. Avoiding versus contracting COVID-19: On the effectiveness of social distancing at the level of the individual
  13. Who is (Not) Complying with the Social Distancing Directive and Why? Testing a General Framework of Compliance with Multiple Measures of Social Distancing
  14. Of unbiased beans and slanted stocks: Neutral stimuli reveal the fundamental relation between political ideology and exploratory behaviour
  15. The Enhancing Versus Backfiring Effects of Positive Emotion in Consumer Reviews
  16. From trust in caregivers’ support to exploration: The role of openness to negative affect and self‐regulation
  17. Does the future look bright? Processing style determines the impact of valence weighting biases and self-beliefs on expectations.
  18. Attitude Accessibility as a Function of Emotionality
  19. The weighting of positive vs. negative valence and its impact on the formation of social relationships
  20. Who Starts the Wave? Let's Not Forget the Role of the Individual
  21. The role of valence weighting in impulse control
  22. Are Some Attitudes More Self-Defining Than Others? Assessing Self-Related Attitude Functions and Their Consequences
  23. Recalibrating valence weighting biases to promote changes in rejection sensitivity and risk-taking
  24. Recalibrating valence-weighting tendencies as a means of reducing anticipated discomfort with an interracial interaction
  25. Generalization of evaluative conditioning toward foods: Increasing sensitivity to health in eating intentions.
  26. On the generalization of attitude accessibility after repeated attitude expression
  27. On the Dominance of Attitude Emotionality
  28. Predicting Changes in Depressive Symptoms From Valence Weighting During Attitude Generalization
  29. Directed abstraction: Encouraging broad, personal generalizations following a success experience.
  30. (In)Competence Is Everywhere: Self-Doubt and the Accessibility of Competence
  31. Positive Versus Negative Valence
  32. The Evaluative Lexicon: Adjective use as a means of assessing and distinguishing attitude valence, extremity, and emotionality
  33. What Changes in Cognitive Therapy for Depression? An Examination of Cognitive Therapy Skills and Maladaptive Beliefs
  34. The MODE Model and Its Implications for Studying the Media
  35. Individual differences in valence weighting: When, how, and why they matter
  36. Political Attitudes Bias the Mental Representation of a Presidential Candidate’s Face
  37. Recalibrating positive and negative weighting tendencies in attitude generalization
  38. Approach behavior can mitigate predominately univalent negative attitudes: Evidence regarding insects and spiders.
  39. Socialization of Dissonance Processes
  40. Attitude accessibility as a determinant of object construal and evaluation
  41. Weighting Positive Versus Negative: The Fundamental Nature of Valence Asymmetry
  42. Predicting return of fear following exposure therapy with an implicit measure of attitudes
  43. Valence Weighting as a Predictor of Emotional Reactivity to a Stressful Situation
  44. It was as big as my head, I swear!
  45. Attentional Control Buffers the Effect of Public-Speaking Anxiety on Performance
  46. Social network integration
  47. Person Categorization and Automatic Racial Stereotyping Effects on Weapon Identification
  48. Malleability of attitudes or malleability of the IAT?
  49. Evaluative Conditioning
  50. Political ideology, exploration of novel stimuli, and attitude formation
  51. Implicit misattribution as a mechanism underlying evaluative conditioning.
  52. Prejudiced learning: A connectionist account
  53. Attitude formation in depression: Evidence for deficits in forming positive attitudes
  54. Getting Acquainted in Interracial Interactions: Avoiding Intimacy but Approaching Race
  55. Implicit learning of evaluative vs. non-evaluative covariations: The role of dimension accessibility
  56. Attitudes
  57. Roommate Relationships: A Comparison of Interracial and Same-Race Living Situations
  58. Expectancy confirmation in attitude learning: A connectionist account
  59. Interracial Roommate Relationships
  60. Accessibility as input: The use of construct accessibility as information to guide behavior
  61. How subtyping shapes perception: Predictable exceptions to the rule reduce attention to stereotype-associated dimensions
  62. Attitudes as Object–Evaluation Associations of Varying Strength
  63. Attitude generalization: Similarity, valence, and extremity
  64. Discordant Evaluations of Blacks Affect Nonverbal Behavior
  65. Negativity bias in attitude learning: A possible indicator of vulnerability to emotional disorders?
  66. The deautomatization of accessible attitudes
  67. Reporting Tendencies Underlie Discrepancies Between Implicit and Explicit Measures of Self-Esteem
  68. Attitude learning through exploration: advice and strategy appraisals
  69. Automatically activated racial attitudes as predictors of the success of interracial roommate relationships
  70. The influence of experimentally created extrapersonal associations on the Implicit Association Test
  71. Reducing Automatically Activated Racial Prejudice Through Implicit Evaluative Conditioning
  72. Research Dialogue
  73. Perceived Reactions to Interracial Romantic Relationships: When Race is Used as a Cue to Status
  74. Attitude formation through exploration: Valence asymmetries.
  75. Reducing the Influence of Extrapersonal Associations on the Implicit Association Test: Personalizing the IAT.
  76. Trait Inferences as a Function of Automatically Activated Racial Attitudes and Motivation to Control Prejudiced Reactions
  77. Relations Between Implicit Measures of Prejudice
  78. Connectionist Simulation of Attitude Learning: Asymmetries in the Acquisition of Positive and Negative Evaluations
  79. Choosing Social Situations: The Relation Between Automatically Activated Racial Attitudes and Anticipated Comfort Interacting With African Americans
  80. Implicit Measures in Social Cognition Research: Their Meaning and Use
  81. Implicit Acquisition And Manifestation Of Classically Conditioned Attitudes
  82. Implicit Attitude Formation Through Classical Conditioning
  83. Emotional Reactions to a Seemingly Prejudiced Response: The Role of Automatically Activated Racial Attitudes and Motivation to Control Prejudiced Reactions
  84. On the automatic activation of associated evaluations: An overview
  85. On the Origins of Racial Attitudes: Correlates of Childhood Experiences
  86. Measuring Associative Strength: Category‐Item Associations and Their Activation from Memory
  87. On the costs of accessible attitudes: Detecting that the attitude object has changed.
  88. On the Value of Knowing One's Likes and Dislikes: Attitude Accessibility, Stress, and Health in College
  89. Categorization by Race: The Impact of Automatic and Controlled Components of Racial Prejudice
  90. Influencing Probability Judgments by Manipulating the Accessibility of Sample Spaces
  91. Motivation, Attention, and Judgment: A Natural Sample Spaces Account
  92. An Individual Difference Measure of Motivation to Control Prejudiced Reactions
  93. The role of belief accessibility in attitude formation
  94. Considering the best choice: Effects of the salience and accessibility of alternatives on attitude–decision consistency.
  95. Women as Men and People: Effects of Gender-Marked Language
  96. Impact of Dominance and Relatedness on Brand Extensions
  97. Accessible attitudes influence categorization of multiply categorizable objects.
  98. Variability in automatic activation as an unobtrusive measure of racial attitudes: A bona fide pipeline?
  99. Attitude accessibility as a moderator of autonomic reactivity during decision making.
  100. Variability in the likelihood of automatic attitude activation: Data reanalysis and commentary on Bargh, Chaiken, Govender, and Pratto (1992).
  101. On the Development and Strength of Category–Brand Associations in Memory: The Case of Mystery Ads
  102. On the orienting value of attitudes: Attitude accessibility as a determinant of an object's attraction of visual attention.
  103. Multiple Processes by which Attitudes Guide Behavior: The Mode Model as an Integrative Framework
  104. The role of attitudes in memory-based decision making.
  105. On the automatic activation of attitudes.
  106. Attitude accessibility as a moderator of the attitude–perception and attitude–behavior relations: An investigation of the 1984 presidential election.
  107. Detecting and identifying change: Additions versus deletions.
  108. A New Look at Dissonance Theory
  109. Attitude accessibility following a self-perception process.
  110. Parallals between attitudes and traits as predictors of behavior
  111. On the consequences of priming: Assimilation and contrast effects
  112. Toward a process model of the attitude–behavior relation: Accessing one's attitude upon mere observation of the attitude object.
  113. Computer lessons for a social psychology research methods course
  114. Attitude accessibility, attitude-behavior consistency, and the strength of the object-evaluation association
  115. The feature-positive effect in the self-perception process: Does not doing matter as much as doing?
  116. Relating Attitudes to Residential Energy Use
  117. On the self-perception explanation of the overjustification effect: The role of the salience of initial attitude
  118. Direct Experience And Attitude-Behavior Consistency
  119. Self-perceptions following social interaction.
  120. Expectancy confirmation processes arising in the social interaction sequence.
  121. Attitude–behavior consistency: An individual difference perspective.
  122. Effects of salience of extrinsic rewards on liking and loving.
  123. Motives for social comparison: The construction–validation distinction.
  124. Predicting Summer Energy Consumption from Homeowners' Attitudes1
  125. On the relationship of data to theory: A reply to Ronis and Greenwald
  126. Attitudinal qualities relating to the strength of the attitude-behavior relationship
  127. On the predictive validity of attitudes: The roles of direct experience and confidence1
  128. Dissonance and humor: Evidence for the undifferentiated nature of dissonance arousal.
  129. Self-focused attention and self-report validity1
  130. Dissonance and self-perception: An integrative view of each theory's proper domain of application
  131. On the consistency between attitudes and behavior: Look to the method of attitude formation
  132. Liking and the attribution process