The Advances in Experimental Social Psychology series is the premier outlet for reviews of mature, high-impact research programs in social psychology. Contributions to the series provide defining pieces of established research programs, reviewing and integrating thematically related findings by individual scholars or research groups. Topics discussed in Volume 61 include Worldview Conflict and Prejudice, Money and Happiness, Attitude Representation, Emotion Regulation, and Social Perception.
- Provides one of the most cited series in the field of experimental social psychology
- Contains contributions of major empirical and theoretical interest
- Represents the best and brightest in new research, theory, and practice in social psychology
Contributors |
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vii | |
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1 Worldview conflict and prejudice |
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1 | (66) |
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1 Worldview conflict and prejudice |
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2 | (2) |
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2 Comparing the traditional and the worldview conflict perspectives |
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4 | (7) |
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11 | (26) |
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37 | (2) |
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39 | (12) |
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51 | (16) |
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52 | (1) |
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52 | (15) |
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2 Prosocial spending and buying time: Money as a tool for increasing subjective well-being |
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67 | (60) |
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1 The link between income and happiness |
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69 | (3) |
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72 | (1) |
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3 Assessing and improving evidentiary value |
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73 | (1) |
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73 | (12) |
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5 How big is the effect of prosocial spending anyway? And how long does it last? |
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85 | (1) |
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6 Does the warm glow of giving extend beyond self-report? |
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86 | (1) |
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7 How and when does prosocial spending promote happiness? |
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87 | (5) |
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8 Provocative questions and emerging answers |
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92 | (6) |
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98 | (2) |
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10 Buying time as a specific spending strategy |
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100 | (4) |
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11 Buying time as a broad orientation |
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104 | (2) |
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12 How and why does trading money for time promote happiness? |
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106 | (6) |
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13 Are the benefits of buying time universal? |
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112 | (3) |
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14 Provocative questions and emerging answers |
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115 | (2) |
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15 Conclusion and integration |
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117 | (10) |
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119 | (2) |
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121 | (6) |
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3 Attitudes beyond associations: On the role of propositional representations in stimulus evaluation |
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127 | (58) |
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128 | (10) |
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138 | (32) |
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3 Summary and conclusions |
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170 | (15) |
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175 | (1) |
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175 | (10) |
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4 Transcending the "good & bad" and "here & now" in emotion regulation: Costs and benefits of strategies across regulatory stages |
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185 | (52) |
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1 Emotion regulation is here, there and everywhere |
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186 | (1) |
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2 Challenges of emotion regulation |
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187 | (3) |
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3 Transcending the "good & bad" problem |
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190 | (3) |
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4 Transcending the "here & now" problem |
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193 | (32) |
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5 CODA: Emotion regulation is here to stay |
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225 | (12) |
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226 | (1) |
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226 | (11) |
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5 Dynamic interactive theory as a domain-general account of social perception |
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237 | |
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1 Dynamic interactive (Dl) theory |
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239 | (13) |
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2 Perceiving social categories |
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252 | (6) |
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258 | (9) |
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267 | (6) |
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5 Implications and conclusion |
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273 | |
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277 | (1) |
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277 | |
Dr. Bertram Gawronski, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his PhD in psychology from Humboldt-University Berlin (Germany) in 2001. In addition to editing five influential books on a broad range of social psychological topics, Dr. Gawronski has served as Associate Editor of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and Personality and Social Psychology Review.