762 results on '"Vohs, Kathleen D."'
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52. Money Cues Increase Agency and Decrease Prosociality Among Children: Early Signs of Market-Mode Behaviors
53. Self-Regulatory Strength: Neural Mechanisms and Implications for Training
54. Correcting Some Misrepresentations About Gender and Sexual Economics Theory: Comment on Rudman and Fetterolf (2014)
55. Out of Control: Identifying the Role of Self-Control Strength in Family Violence
56. Loss of control stimulates approach motivation
57. Social Psychology Articles from the 1980s and 1990s: Some New Classics and Overlooked Gems
58. Ego depletion decreases trust in economic decision making
59. Money, moral transgressions, and blame
60. Intellectual performance and ego depletion
61. What people desire, feel conflicted about, and try to resist in everyday life
62. Strength model of self-regulation as limited resource
63. How leaders self-regulate their task performance
64. Nostalgia Weakens the Desire for Money
65. Free Will and Punishment: A Mechanistic View of Human Nature Reduces Retribution
66. the world without free will
67. Mere Exposure to Money Increases Endorsement of Free-Market Systems and Social Inequality
68. The Psychological Meaning of Money
69. Sweatshop labor is wrong unless the shoes are cute: Cognition can both help and hurt moral motivated reasoning
70. The Price Had Better Be Right: Women's Reactions to Sexual Stimuli Vary With Market Factors
71. Escaping the Self Consumes Regulatory Resources: A Self-Regulatory Model of Suicide
72. Physical Order Produces Healthy Choices, Generosity, and Conventionality, Whereas Disorder Produces Creativity
73. Rituals Enhance Consumption
74. The Poor's Poor Mental Power
75. Ego Depletion Induces Mental Passivity: Behavioral Effects Beyond Impulse Control
76. Reducing self-control depletion effects through enhanced sensitivity to implementation: Evidence from fMRI and behavioral studies
77. Awe Expands People's Perception of Time, Alters Decision Making, and Enhances Well-Being
78. Hindsight Bias
79. What People Desire, Feel Conflicted About, and Try to Resist in Everyday Life
80. On Near Misses and Completed Tasks: The Nature of Relief
81. Cultivating admiration in brands: Warmth, competence, and landing in the "golden quadrant"
82. RETRACTED: Reminders of Money Elicit Feelings of Threat and Reactance in Response to Social Influence
83. The material and immaterial in conflict: Spirituality reduces conspicuous consumption
84. Eine Welt ohne freien Willen?
85. Money and Mimicry: When Being Mimicked Makes People Feel Threatened
86. Stereotype Threat in the Marketplace: Consumer Anxiety and Purchase Intentions
87. What's the use of happiness? It can't buy you money
88. Social Exclusion Causes People to Spend and Consume Strategically in the Service of Affiliation
89. Nonprofits Are Seen as Warm and For‐Profits as Competent: Firm Stereotypes Matter
90. Le sexe en publicité : différences selon le genre et rôle de l'engagement relationnel
91. Social Rejection, Control, Numbness, and Emotion: How Not To Be Fooled by Gerber and Wheeler (2009)
92. Sex in Advertising: Gender Differences and the Role of Relationship Commitment
93. The Symbolic Power of Money: Reminders of Money Alter Social Distress and Physical Pain
94. Acts of Benevolence: A Limited‐Resource Account of Compliance with Charitable Requests
95. Social Rejection Can Reduce Pain and Increase Spending: Further Evidence That Money, Pain, and Belongingness Are Interrelated
96. Merely Activating the Concept of Money Changes Personal and Interpersonal Behavior
97. The Value of Believing in Free Will: Encouraging a Belief in Determinism Increases Cheating
98. Free will in consumer behavior: Self-control, ego depletion, and choice
99. Being of two minds: Switching mindsets exhausts self-regulatory resources
100. The Strength Model of Self-Control
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