Shelly Chaiken, PhD
Affiliations: | Psychology | New York University, New York, NY, United States |
Area:
Attitudes, social cognitionGoogle:
"Shelly Chaiken"Children
Sign in to add traineeRoger Giner-Sorolla | grad student | University of Kent | |
Gordon B. Moskowitz | grad student | (Neurotree) | |
Kimberly L. Duckworth | grad student | 2002 | NYU |
BETA: Related publications
See more...
Publications
You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect. |
Ledgerwood A, Trope Y, Chaiken S. (2010) Flexibility now, consistency later: psychological distance and construal shape evaluative responding. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 99: 32-51 |
Hunt CV, Kim A, Borgida E, et al. (2010) Revisiting the self-interest versus values debate: The role of temporal perspective Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 46: 1155-1158 |
Fujita K, Eyal T, Chaiken S, et al. (2008) Influencing Attitudes Toward Near and Distant Objects. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 227: 9044-9062 |
Ledgerwood A, Chaiken S. (2007) Priming us and them: automatic assimilation and contrast in group attitudes. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 93: 940-56 |
Eagly AH, Chaiken S. (2007) The advantages of an inclusive definition of attitude Social Cognition. 25: 582-602 |
Darke PR, Chaiken S. (2005) The pursuit of self-interest: self-interest bias in attitude judgment and persuasion. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 89: 864-83 |
Duckworth KL, Bargh JA, Garcia M, et al. (2002) The automatic evaluation of novel stimuli. Psychological Science. 13: 513-9 |
Giner-Sorolla R, Chaiken S, Lutz S. (2002) Validity beliefs and ideology can influence legal case judgments differently. Law and Human Behavior. 26: 507-26 |
Eagly AH, Kulesa P, Chen S, et al. (2001) Do attitudes affect memory? Tests of the congeniality hypothesis Current Directions in Psychological Science. 10: 5-9 |
Eagly AH, Chen S, Chaiken S, et al. (1999) The impact of attitudes on memory: an affair to remember. Psychological Bulletin. 125: 64-89 |