- Social and Intergroup Psychology
- Behavioral and Psychological Studies
- Migration, Ethnicity, and Economy
- Energetic Materials and Combustion
- Racial and Ethnic Identity Research
- Psychometric Methodologies and Testing
- Education Systems and Policy
- Psychological Testing and Assessment
- Social Media and Politics
- Higher Education Research Studies
- Cultural Differences and Values
- Electoral Systems and Political Participation
- Sociopolitical Dynamics in Russia
- Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment
New York University
2018-2024
In this article, we respond to commentaries by Friesen et al . (2019, Br. J. Soc. Psychol ., 58, 315), Osborne 340), and Owuamalam 362) on the occasion of twenty‐fifth anniversary system justification theory. The first two are highly favourable in their evaluation state theory research justification, they provide insightful suggestions for new directions. third commentary is far more critical We address each objection some detail, seeking correct a number misconceptions about clarify fact...
White Americans may find diversity threatening in part because they construe non-White as a coherent social and political force. We argue that this perception manifests belief minority groups collude against people should act bloc to defend ingroup interests. In 3-year longitudinal study, the collusion support for identity politics increased significantly among nationally representative sample of 2,635 Americans. Compared Democrats, Republicans more strongly endorsed beliefs politics, these...
Americans tend to overestimate the ideological extremity of Democrats' and Republicans' attitudes, exacerbating cross-partisan antipathy undermining democratic norms. Combating such "false polarization" requires an understanding inferential processes underlying partisan perceptions. To this end, present work leverages four nationally-representative datasets illuminate sources error in cross-party judgment. We first examine role partisanship itself distorting perceptions political outgroups,...
<p xmlns="http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/JATS1">In an era of increased political polarization, it is important to measure how receptive US American citizens are diverse views. Being more open viewpoints—openness pluralism—may involve holding emotional and intellectual tolerance, non-rigidity, proactive motivation seek out different perspectives. In three preregistered studies residents, we present a new self-report openness pluralism (OPP) consisting 25 items. Study 1 (MTurk n = 400), verified...