Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 19
pro vyhledávání: '"Colleen M. Carpinella"'
Autor:
David James Lick, Colleen M. Carpinella, Mariana A. Preciado, Robert Philip Spunt, Kerri L. Johnson
Publikováno v:
Frontiers in Psychology, Vol 4 (2013)
Sex categorization is a critical process in social perception. While psychologists have long theorized that perceivers have distinct mental representations of men and women that help them to achieve efficient sex categorizations, researchers have onl
Externí odkaz:
https://doaj.org/article/43ecf1a040e34247a365b544c8d4f17c
Publikováno v:
Neuropsychiatric Disease and Treatment
Carmela Benson,1 David Singer,2 Colleen M Carpinella,3 May Shawi,4 Larry Alphs4 1Real-World Value & Evidence, Janssen Scientific Affairs, LLC, Titusville, NJ, USA; 2Jefferson College of Population Health, Thomas Jefferson University, Philadelphia, PA
Publikováno v:
Politics, Groups, and Identities. 9:369-386
Extant scholarship offers conflicting conclusions about whether female candidates emphasize feminine or masculine stereotypes in campaigns. We suggest that female candidates use both stereotypes, a...
Publikováno v:
Political Research Quarterly. 71:395-407
Existing research debates the extent to which feminine and masculine stereotypes affect voters’ impressions of female candidates. Current approaches identify how descriptions of female candidates as having feminine or masculine qualities lead voter
Publikováno v:
Social Psychological and Personality Science. 9:944-952
Despite multidisciplinary theorizing on the consequences of the changing racial demographics in the United States, few studies have systematically examined how exposure to racial diversity may impact White individuals’ lay beliefs about race. In a
Publikováno v:
Social and Personality Psychology Compass. 10:281-297
Autor:
Michael A. Perez, Jonathan Benitez, Steven J. Stroessner, Kerri L. Johnson, Alisa B. Wyman, Colleen M. Carpinella
Publikováno v:
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 87:103915
Five experiments tested the possibility that basic shapes – squares, circles, and equilateral triangles – are gendered. Based on morphological, evolutionary, and socialization considerations, we hypothesized that square shapes would be associated
Publikováno v:
Political Communication. 33:21-38
Facial cues are consequential for voters’ behavior at the polls. Yet the facial cues that are associated with vote choice remain under-examined. We predicted that vote choice judgments rely, in part, on the sex typicality of facial cues (i.e., the
Publikováno v:
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin. 41:405-419
Race and gender categories, although long presumed to be perceived independently, are inextricably tethered in social perception due in part to natural confounding of phenotypic cues. We predicted that target gender would affect race categorizations.
Publikováno v:
Social and Personality Psychology Compass. 9:15-30
Social categorization research has historically focused either on understanding how observers utilize visual cues in the face and body to make judgments of others or on understanding the downstream consequences that occur following social categorizat