RESEARCH
|
BY THEORETICAL TOPIC |
|||
|
BY APPLIED DOMAIN |
|||
Self-Initiated
Implicit Attitude Change [menu]
Most Recent
Akalis, S. A.,
Nannapaneni, J., & Banaji, M. R. (under review). Manual shifts in automatic
preferences: The
effect of
self-generated associations on implicit attitudes.
SPSP 2006 Poster
@ Palm Springs, CA - January 27, 2006
"Do-It-Yourself
Mental Makeovers: How Self-Generated Thoughts Shift Implicit Attitudes"
Previous Generations
ASSC9 Poster @
"Implicit Attitude Change: Can Do-It-Yourself Debiasing Work?"
Presentation in Mahzarin
Banaji's Implicit Social Cognition lab @ Harvard -
"Do-It-Yourself Debiasing: Implicit Attitude Change via Concentration"
SPSP Conference
Poster @
"Meditating on Malleability: Implicit Attitude Change via Concentration"
Social Psych
Lunch Talk @ Harvard -
"Compassion & Context-Independent Implicit Attitude Change"
Second-Year Project Report:
"Buddha, Big Bellies, & Blizzards: Implicit Attitude Malleability via Concentration"
Second-Year
Project Presentation @ Harvard -
"Buddha, Big Bellies, & Blizzards: Implicit Attitude Malleability via Concentration"
Marketing & Implicit Attitude Change [menu]
Most Recent
Presentation
in Mahzarin Banaji's Implicit Social Cognition Lab @ Harvard - October 11,
2005:
"Dual
Processes in Implicit Attitude Change: Keeps Nice New Clothes Wonderfully Far
from Clean"
Implicit Associations toward Losses & Gains [menu]
Most Recent
Akalis, S. A.
(2008). A new spin on losses looming larger than gains: Asymmetric implicit
associations
from slot
machine experience. Journal of Behavioral Decision Making, 21, 378-398.
Oral
Defense of Dissertation (abbrev.) @ Harvard - May 2, 2007
Previous Generations
SPSP Judgment & Decision-Making 2007 Poster @ Memphis, TN - January 25, 2007
"Las Vegas in the Lab: Implicit Experiences of Losses Looming Larger than Gains"
Presentation in Mahzarin Banaji's Implicit Social Cognition Lab @ Harvard - February 7, 2006:
"Lessons from the One-Armed Bandit: Implicit Experiences of Gains & Losses"
Implicit Biases in Sports Officiating [menu]
Most Recent
Presentation in Mahzarin Banaji's Implicit Social Cognition
Lab @ Harvard - October 2, 2006:
Effect of Community Crime Alerts on Implicit Prejudice [menu]
Most Recent
Akalis, S. A.,
Banaji, M. R., & Kosslyn, S. M. (2008). Crime alert!: How thinking about a
single suspect automatically
shifts
stereotypes toward an entire group. DuBois Review, 5.
Previous Generations
Presentation in Mahzarin Banaji's Implicit Social
Cognition Lab @ Harvard – October 2, 2006:
“Does a Community Crime Alert Hurt? How Suspect Descriptions Affect Biases toward Entire Groups”
Anthropomorphism [menu]
Most Recent
Epley, N.,
Akalis, S., Waytz, A., & Cacioppo, J. T. (2008). Creating social connection
through inferential
reproduction: Loneliness
and perceived agency in gadgets, gods, and greyhounds. Psychological
Science, 19, 114-120.
Epley, N.,
Waytz, A., Akalis, S., & Cacioppo, J. T. (2008). When we need a human:
Motivational determinants
of
anthropomorphism. Social Cognition, 26, 143-155.
Newsweek
coverage – December 21, 2007:
Previous Generations
Presentation in Nick
Epley’s Lab @ Harvard – December 8, 2004:
"Man's Best Friend When? Anthropomorphism & Agent-seeking Emotions"
Religion &
Social Cognition [menu]
Most Recent
SPSP Conference Poster @ Austin, TX - January 30, 2004:
"Prime & Prejudice: Exploratory Studies on Eliciting Tolerance"
Previous Generation
Social Psych
Lunch Talk @ Harvard -
"God & Groups: A Divine Perspective on Social Cognition"