Read the actual science by @boglarkanyul.bsky.social,
Inna Ksenofontov, Alexandra Fleischmann, and Rotem Kahalon!
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Posts by JESP
When women are labeled “intimidating,” it may reflect social expectations more than behavior. This write up features JESP research showing “brilliance” is seen as less typical in women—so the same competence can be judged differently.
www.ma-grande-taille.com/en/societe/f...
Read the actual science out of @cornelluniversity.bsky.social and @usc.edu here!
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Do “two wrongs make a right”? 🤔
New JESP research featured here by MSN suggests people judge rude behavior more leniently when it’s a response to someone else’s rudeness than when it starts the conflict.
www.msn.com/en-us/news/t...
Congrats, to everyone recognized the year! We would love to see your science shine even more in JESP!! ⭐️✨🌟💫🤩
🚨New paper alert🚨
Celebrate the fabulous Tisa Bertlich and her paper “Just a means to an end? Individuals support direct democracy instrumentally, irrespective of conspiracy mentality” with @zakfio.bsky.social and me just published in @jexpsocpsych.bsky.social: authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S...
Why do people form stereotypes? In a new study
Diane Pecher et al. found that memory plays an important role: People confuse individuals who look similar and reconstruct their memory based on unfounded statements about groups. This happened even when these individuals are friendly looking aliens!
Chicago skyline at night
Goodnight, Chicago!
Now the real work: write up the science you presented and submit it. Let’s make sure those great ideas don’t stay in the conference room @spspnews.bsky.social #spsp2026
Can’t wait to see all of the new science at #spsp2026 Remember to think of JESP as a home for your work! See you all in Chicago!
Read the actual science by Yphtach Lelkes, Jon Krosnick, David Marx, Charles Judd, & Bernadette Park here!
@stanforduniversity.bsky.social @sandiegostate.bsky.social @colorado.edu
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Anonymous reviews don’t just “free people to be honest” they can amplify negative emotion. Past work in our journal shows anonymity increases stronger negative reactions, which can skew evaluations. Something to keep in mind when browsing Rate My Professor!
pepperdine-graphic.com/rant-student...
A simple nod of agreement can lock in first impressions. Across 4 studies, brief social verification made evaluations of job applicants more consistent and stable. Shared reality doesn’t just feel real—it consolidates what we think. @m-atteomasi.bsky.social Gerrit Lamers & Gerald Echterhoff
Moral framing has long been proposed as a way to shift attitudes. @marlenevoit.bsky.social @mtwardawski.bsky.social & Moritz Fischer tested this with conservatives who are often skeptical about climate change and found it didn’t work. Thus, there are understudied limits of moral reframing.
New work by Mohamed Hussein, Zakary Tormala, & S Christian Wheeler shows that when political issues become identity-relevant, people favor radical candidates. Identity—not just policy—drives polarization. @columbiauniversity.bsky.social @stanforduniversity.bsky.social
www.psypost.org/linking-pers...
Are leaders blamed for disasters that eventually did not occur? The answer points to the crucial impact of partisanship in assigning blame for events that almost happened. @jexpsocpsych.bsky.social w/ Matejas Mackin, @danieleffron.bsky.social, and Neal Roese
authors.elsevier.com/sd/article/S...
This @psychologytoday.com piece by @rossgwhite.com explores what fuels dehumanization, citing past work by Francesca Prati, Richard Crisp, & Monica Rubini showing that counter-stereotype exposure reduces prejudice and helps re‑humanize others. 🧠💙
www.psychologytoday.com/us/blog/the-...
On holiday break this week? Some new reading below!! ⬇️⬇️
Read the actual science out of @sfu.ca here by @anurada.bsky.social, Kelton Travis, Kristina Castaneto, Tiara Cash, & Lara Aknin!
www.sciencedirect.com/science/arti...
Ever wonder if saying “thank you” makes people more likely to help? Results are mixed. Gratitude, whether for a kind act or character, sometimes increased generosity but wording didn’t matter. The appreciation itself is what counts @greatergoodedu.bsky.social
greatergood.berkeley.edu/article/item...
Even when we try to think harder, we still excuse ourselves. 🧠
A new study by Katarzyna Miazek & Konrad Bocian finds that the self-interest bias—judging bad acts as less wrong when they benefit us—persists even under time pressure or mental load. Fixing it may require awareness, not just willpower.
Looking for some new reading!? 📖
Why do we feel good when a star athlete or coach stumbles? 🏈
This article cites a past study showing people enjoy others’ setbacks—especially when they seem hypocritical or undeserving. Even in sports, our sense of “justice” fuels schadenfreude. ⚖️
thedebrief.org/why-we-love-...