Publications
Found 16 results
Author [ Title] Type Year Filters: First Letter Of Last Name is V [Clear All Filters]
The connections—and misconnections—between the public and politicians over climate policy: A social psychological perspective.
Social Issues and Policy Review.
(2024). Elite influence on public attitudes about climate policy.
Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences.
(2021).
(2021). In the aftermath of terrorism: Effects of self- versus group-affirmation on support for discriminatory policies.
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology .
(2017). It depends: Partisan evaluation of conditional probability importance.
Cognition. 188, 51 - 63.
(2019). Partisan barriers to bipartisanship: Understanding climate policy.
Social Psychological and Personality Science.
(2018). Party over pandemic: Trust in political leaders and experts explains public support for COVID-19 policies.
Group Processes & Intergroup Relations.
(2023). Political polarization projection: social projection of partisan attitude extremity and attitudinal processes.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 103, 84.
(2012). Politicians polarize and experts depolarize public support for COVID-19 management policies across countries.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
(2022). Politicians polarize and experts depolarize public support for COVID-19 management policies across countries.
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences.
(2022). Psychological barriers to bipartisan public support for climate policy.
Perspectives on Psychological Sciences.
(2018). Social norms explain prioritization of climate policy.
Climatic Change.
(2022).
(2022).
(2022). Towards surmounting the psychological barriers to climate policy: Appreciating contexts and acknowledging challenges (comment on Weber, 2018).
Perspectives on Psychological Sciences.
(2018).