Zobrazeno 1 - 10
of 19
pro vyhledávání: '"Matthew J. Lindberg"'
Autor:
Joshua B. Grubbs, Matthew J. Lindberg, Julie J. Exline, Kenneth I. Pargament, Nick Stauner, Joshua A. Wilt
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Positive Psychology. 13:240-251
Struggle with ultimate meaning reflects concerns about whether one’s life has a deeper meaning or purpose. We examined whether this construct could be distinguished from presence of meaning in life and search for meaning. In two US samples – a we
Publikováno v:
Psychology of Religion and Spirituality. 9:137-147
Publikováno v:
The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. 27:26-34
Struggles with religious/spiritual (r/s) doubt occur when uncertainty, questions, and hesitancy about aspects of r/s beliefs and experiences become a source of conflict. Cross-sectional research suggests that doubt-related struggles correlate with an
Autor:
Claudia Gonzalez Vallejo, Jason L. Harman, Janna Chimeli, Francis S. Bellezza, Jiuqing Cheng, G. Daniel Lassiter, Nathaniel D. Phillips, Matthew J. Lindberg
Publikováno v:
Journal of Behavioral Decision Making. 27:209-225
Evaluation judgments were affected by information order and not by subsequent unconscious versus conscious deliberation. In three experiments, we examined the influence of early positive information on final evaluations of four objects. Based on a ta
Autor:
G. Daniel Lassiter, Victoria M. Jager, Adam E. Hasinski, Matthew J. Lindberg, Jennifer K. Elek, Jennifer J. Ratcliff
Publikováno v:
Psychology, Public Policy, and Law. 16:200-218
Evaluations of videotaped criminal confessions can be influenced by the camera perspective taken during recording. Interrogations and confessions recorded with the camera directing observers’ visual attention onto the suspect lead to biased judgmen
Publikováno v:
The Journal of Psychiatry & Law. 38:177-192
Many of the wrongful convictions that have been brought to light over the last decade have their roots in the interrogation phase of criminal investigations where coerced or false confessions are sometimes extracted from detained crime suspects. A
Autor:
G. Daniel Lassiter, Nathaniel D. Phillips, Francis S. Bellezza, Claudia González-Vallejo, Matthew J. Lindberg
Publikováno v:
Psychological Science. 20:671-675
Proponents of unconscious-thought theory assert that letting the unconscious “mull it over” can enhance decisions. In a series of recent studies, researchers demonstrated that participants whose attention was focused on solving a complex problem
Publikováno v:
Behavioral Sciences & the Law. 27:451-466
Although an equal-focus camera perspective-suspect and interrogator each displayed in profile-produces relatively unbiased assessments of videotaped interrogations-confessions, many in law enforcement may consider it less than satisfactory because a
Publikováno v:
Review of General Psychology. 12:282-296
Based on Unconscious Thought Theory (UTT) and a series of experimental and correlational studies, Dijksterhuis and his colleagues conclude that when making complex choices/decisions, conscious thought—deliberation while attention is directed at the
Publikováno v:
Social Cognition. 26:347-356
When people unambiguously outperform another person, they subsequently rate that person's ability higher than do uninvolved observers. Lassiter and Munhall (2001) contend that this genius effect occurs because people spontaneously use the self as a r