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pro vyhledávání: '"Todd J. Williams"'
Autor:
Michael B. Wolfe, Todd J. Williams, Elizabeth N. Dewey, James E. Mitchell, Alfons Pomp, Bruce M. Wolfe
Publikováno v:
Health Psychology. 42:403-410
Autor:
Michael B. W. Wolfe, Todd J. Williams
Publikováno v:
Discourse Processes. 54:446-462
We examined the influence of reading a one-sided text on informal argument evaluation. After reporting initial beliefs in a separate online prescreening, subjects with polarized beliefs read a beli...
Autor:
David Webber, Todd J. Williams, Jeff Schimel, Andrea L. Howard, Erik H. Faucher, Joseph Hayes
Publikováno v:
Self and Identity. 14:521-548
Although numerous studies have examined compensatory reactions to ideological threats such as derogation, relatively little research has focused on alternative forms of defense. One such alternative, termed accommodation, involves accepting and incor
Autor:
Michael B. W. Wolfe, Todd J. Williams
Publikováno v:
Quarterly journal of experimental psychology (2006). 71(9)
When people change beliefs as a result of reading a text, are they aware of these changes? This question was examined for beliefs about spanking as an effective means of discipline. In two experiments, subjects reported beliefs about spanking effecti
Publikováno v:
The International Journal for the Psychology of Religion. 24:282-297
A religious prosociality stereotype exists such that religiosity and prosociality are presumed to be positively associated, as evidenced by proxy measures such as personality traits. However, studies using self- and peer-ratings of Agreeableness and
Publikováno v:
European Journal of Social Psychology. 42:602-616
Terror management theory posits that cultural worldviews buffer people from thoughts and concerns about death. In support of this claim, numerous studies have shown that mortality salience (MS) increases an individual's motivation to uphold and defen
Publikováno v:
European Journal of Social Psychology. 40:300-320
Over the last decade a number of theorists have advanced a multifaceted conceptualization of self-esteem. Central to this idea is the notion that self-esteem is less secure and more defensive when individuals are more focused on extrinsic contingenci