17 results on '"Formanowicz, M"'
Search Results
2. Trust predicts COVID-19 prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions in 23 countries
- Author
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Pagliaro, S, Sacchi, S, Pacilli, M, Brambilla, M, Lionetti, F, Bettache, K, Bianchi, M, Biella, M, Bonnot, V, Boza, M, Butera, F, Ceylan-Batur, S, Chong, K, Chopova, T, Crimston, C, Álvarez, B, Cuadrado, I, Ellemers, N, Formanowicz, M, Graupmann, V, Gkinopoulos, T, Kyung Jeong, E, Jasinskaja-Lahti, I, Jetten, J, Kabir, M, Mao, Y, Mccoy, C, Mehnaz, F, Minescu, A, Sirlopú, D, Simić, A, Travaglino, G, Uskul, A, Zanetti, C, Zinn, A, Zubieta, E, Pacilli, MG, Crimston, CR, Kabir MB, Mao Y, McCoy, C, Travaglino, GA, Uskul, AK, Pagliaro, S, Sacchi, S, Pacilli, M, Brambilla, M, Lionetti, F, Bettache, K, Bianchi, M, Biella, M, Bonnot, V, Boza, M, Butera, F, Ceylan-Batur, S, Chong, K, Chopova, T, Crimston, C, Álvarez, B, Cuadrado, I, Ellemers, N, Formanowicz, M, Graupmann, V, Gkinopoulos, T, Kyung Jeong, E, Jasinskaja-Lahti, I, Jetten, J, Kabir, M, Mao, Y, Mccoy, C, Mehnaz, F, Minescu, A, Sirlopú, D, Simić, A, Travaglino, G, Uskul, A, Zanetti, C, Zinn, A, Zubieta, E, Pacilli, MG, Crimston, CR, Kabir MB, Mao Y, McCoy, C, Travaglino, GA, and Uskul, AK
- Abstract
The worldwide spread of a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) since December 2019 has posed a severe threat to individuals well-being. While the world at large is waiting that the released vaccines immunize most citizens, public health experts suggest that, in the meantime, it is only through behavior change that the spread of COVID-19 can be controlled. Importantly, the required behaviors are aimed not only at safeguarding one s own health. Instead, individuals are asked to adapt their behaviors to protect the community at large. This raises the question of which social concerns and moral principles make people willing to do so. We considered in 23 countries (N = 6948) individuals willingness to engage in prescribed and discretionary behaviors, as well as country-level and individual-level factors that might drive such behavioral intentions. Results from multilevel multiple regressions, with country as the nesting variable, showed that publicized number of infections were not significantly related to individual intentions to comply with the prescribed measures and intentions to engage in discretionary prosocial behaviors. Instead, psychological differences in terms of trust in government, citizens, and in particular toward science predicted individuals behavioral intentions across countries. The more people endorsed moral principles of fairness and care (vs. loyalty and authority), the more they were inclined to report trust in science, which, in turn, statistically predicted prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions. Results have implications for the type of intervention and public communication strategies that should be most effective to induce the behavioral changes that are needed to control the COVID-19 outbreak.
- Published
- 2021
3. Verbs as Linguistic Markers of Social Agency - The Social Side of Grammar
- Author
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Formanowicz, M, Roessel, J, Suitner, Caterina, and Maass, Anne
- Subjects
language ,social judgement ,agency, social judgement, linguistic category model, verbs, language ,agency ,verbs ,linguistic category model
4. Trust predicts COVID-19 prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions in 23 countries
- Author
-
Pagliaro, Stefano, Sacchi, Simona, Pacilli, Maria Giuseppina, Brambilla, Marco, Lionetti, Francesca, Bettache, Karim, Bianchi, Mauro, Biella, Marco, Bonnot, Virginie, Boza, Mihaela, Butera, Fabrizio, Ceylan-Batur, Suzan, Chong, Kristy, Chopova, Tatiana, Crimston, Charlie R, Álvarez, Belén, Cuadrado, Isabel, Ellemers, Naomi, Formanowicz, Magdalena, Graupmann, Verena, Gkinopoulos, Theofilos, Kyung Jeong, Evelyn Hye, Jasinskaja-Lahti, Inga, Jetten, Jolanda, Muhib Bin, Kabir, Mao, Yanhui, McCoy, Christine, Mehnaz, Farah, Minescu, Anca, Sirlopú, David, Simić, Andrej, Travaglino, Giovanni, Uskul, Ayse K, Zanetti, Cinzia, Zinn, Anna, Zubieta, Elena, Social identity: Morality and diversity, Leerstoel Ellemers, Sub SOC, Pagliaro, S., Sacchi, S., Pacilli, M. G., Brambilla, M., Lionetti, F., Bettache, K., Bianchi, M., Biella, M., Bonnot, V., Boza, M., Butera, F., Batur, S. C., Chong, K., Chopova, T., Crimston, C. R., Alvarez, B., Cuadrado, I., Ellemers, N., Formanowicz, M., Graupmann, V., Gkinopoulos, T., Jeong, E. H. K., Lahti, I. J., Jetten, J., Bin, K. M., Mao, Y., Mccoy, C., Mehnaz, F., Minescu, A., Sirlopu, D., Simic, A., Travaglino, G., Uskul, A. K., Zanetti, C., Zinn, A., Zubieta, E., University of Perugia, Politecnico di Milano [Milan] (POLIMI), Monash University, Laboratoire de Psychologie Sociale : contextes et régulation (LPS (URP_4471)), Université de Paris (UP), Social identity: Morality and diversity, Leerstoel Ellemers, Sub SOC, Faculty Common Matters (Faculty of Social Sciences), Social Psychology, Helsinki Inequality Initiative (INEQ), Social Psychologists Studying Intergroup Relations (ESSO), Pagliaro, S, Sacchi, S, Pacilli, M, Brambilla, M, Lionetti, F, Bettache, K, Bianchi, M, Biella, M, Bonnot, V, Boza, M, Butera, F, Ceylan-Batur, S, Chong, K, Chopova, T, Crimston, C, Álvarez, B, Cuadrado, I, Ellemers, N, Formanowicz, M, Graupmann, V, Gkinopoulos, T, Kyung Jeong, E, Jasinskaja-Lahti, I, Jetten, J, Kabir, M, Mao, Y, Mccoy, C, Mehnaz, F, Minescu, A, Sirlopú, D, Simić, A, Travaglino, G, Uskul, A, Zanetti, C, Zinn, A, Zubieta, E, and Topa, Gabriela (ed.)
- Subjects
Social Cognition ,Male ,Viral Diseases ,Science and Technology Workforce ,Epidemiology ,Health Behavior ,DISCRETIONARY BEHAVIORAL INTENTIONS ,[SHS.PSY]Humanities and Social Sciences/Psychology ,Social Sciences ,050109 social psychology ,Intention ,Safeguarding ,Careers in Research ,Biochemistry ,DISEASE ,Disease Outbreaks ,Governments ,Medical Conditions ,Sociology ,Loyalty ,HUMAN-VALUES ,Medicine and Health Sciences ,Psychology ,Public and Occupational Health ,purl.org/becyt/ford/5.1 [https] ,media_common ,Disease Outbreak ,Multidisciplinary ,purl.org/becyt/ford/5 [https] ,Agricultural and Biological Sciences(all) ,05 social sciences ,Behavior change ,Social Communication ,SCIENCE ,Middle Aged ,IMMUNIZATION ,3. Good health ,Professions ,5144 Social psychology ,Infectious Diseases ,Prosocial behavior ,Government ,[SCCO.PSYC]Cognitive science/Psychology ,H1 ,Medicine ,Female ,Public Health ,Coronavirus Infections ,Social psychology ,Human ,Research Article ,MORALITY ,Adult ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Social Psychology ,TRANSMISSION ,Science Policy ,Political Science ,media_common.quotation_subject ,WELL-BEING ,Trust ,050105 experimental psychology ,PUBLIC TRUST ,medicine ,Humans ,0501 psychology and cognitive sciences ,General Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology ,General Agricultural and Biological Sciences ,General Medicine ,General ,Pandemics ,M-PSI/05 - PSICOLOGIA SOCIALE ,Aged ,Behavior ,Biochemistry, Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Coronavirus Infection ,SARS-CoV-2 ,Public health ,Cognitive Psychology ,Biology and Life Sciences ,COVID-19 ,Covid 19 ,Communications ,Prosocial Behavior ,People and Places ,Well-being ,Public trust ,IDENTITY ,Scientists ,Cognitive Science ,Population Groupings ,Genetics and Molecular Biology(all) ,Neuroscience - Abstract
The worldwide spread of a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) since December 2019 has posed a severe threat to individuals well-being. While the world at large is waiting that the released vaccines immunize most citizens, public health experts suggest that, in the meantime, it is only through behavior change that the spread of COVID-19 can be controlled. Importantly, the required behaviors are aimed not only at safeguarding one s own health. Instead, individuals are asked to adapt their behaviors to protect the community at large. This raises the question of which social concerns and moral principles make people willing to do so. We considered in 23 countries (N = 6948) individuals willingness to engage in prescribed and discretionary behaviors, as well as country-level and individual-level factors that might drive such behavioral intentions. Results from multilevel multiple regressions, with country as the nesting variable, showed that publicized number of infections were not significantly related to individual intentions to comply with the prescribed measures and intentions to engage in discretionary prosocial behaviors. Instead, psychological differences in terms of trust in government, citizens, and in particular toward science predicted individuals behavioral intentions across countries. The more people endorsed moral principles of fairness and care (vs. loyalty and authority), the more they were inclined to report trust in science, which, in turn, statistically predicted prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions. Results have implications for the type of intervention and public communication strategies that should be most effective to induce the behavioral changes that are needed to control the COVID-19 outbreak. Fil: Pagliaro, Stefano. Universidad de Chieti Pescara; Italia Fil: Sacchi, Simona. University of Milano Bicocca; Italia Fil: Pacilli, Maria Giuseppina. Università di Perugia; Italia Fil: Brambilla, Marco. Università degli Studi di Milano; Italia Fil: Lionetti, Francesca. Universidad de Chieti Pescara; Italia Fil: Bettache, Karim. Monash University; Australia Fil: Bianchi, Mauro. Universidade Lusófona; Portugal Fil: Biella, Marco. Eberhard Karls Universitat Tubingen; Alemania Fil: Bonnot, Virginie. Universite de Paris; Francia Fil: Boza, Mihaela. University Alexandru Ioan Cuza; Rumania Fil: Butera, Fabrizio. Universite de Lausanne; Suiza Fil: Batur, Suzan Ceylan. University of Economics and Technology; Turquía Fil: Chong, Kristy. Monash University; Australia Fil: Chopova, Tatiana. Utrecht University; Países Bajos Fil: Crimston, Charlie R.. University of Queensland; Australia Fil: Alvarez, Belen. University of Queensland; Australia Fil: Cuadrado, Isabel. Universidad de Almería; España Fil: Ellemers, Naomi. University of Utrecht; Países Bajos Fil: Formanowicz, Magdalena. University Social Sciences and Humanities; Polonia. Nicolaus Copernicus University; Polonia Fil: Graupmann, Verena. DePaul University; Estados Unidos Fil: Gkinopoulos, Theofilos. University of Greenwich; Reino Unido Fil: Jeong, Evelyn Hye Kyung. University of Limerick; Irlanda Fil: Lahti, Inga Jasinskaja. University of Helsinki; Finlandia Fil: Jetten, Jolanda. University of Queensland; Australia Fil: Bin, Kabir Muhib. University of Limerick; Irlanda Fil: Mao, Yanhui. Southwest Jiaotong University; China Fil: McCoy, Christine. The University of Queensland; Australia Fil: Mehnaz, Farah. University of Limerick; Irlanda Fil: Minescu, Anca. University of Limerick; Irlanda Fil: Sirlopu, David. Universidad del Desarrollo; Chile Fil: Simic, Andrej. Università degli Studi di Milano; Italia Fil: Travaglino, Giovanni. University Of Kent; Reino Unido. Chinese University Of Hong Kong; Hong Kong Fil: Uskul, Ayse K.. University Of Kent; Reino Unido Fil: Zanetti, Cinzia. Universite de Lausanne; Suiza Fil: Zinn, Anna. University of Exeter; Reino Unido Fil: Zubieta, Elena Mercedes. Consejo Nacional de Investigaciones Científicas y Técnicas; Argentina. Universidad de Buenos Aires. Facultad de Psicología; Argentina
- Published
- 2021
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5. Can agentic messages help? Linguistic strategies to counteract voice-based sexual orientation discrimination.
- Author
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Fasoli F and Formanowicz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Male, Adult, Female, Young Adult, Sexual and Gender Minorities psychology, Middle Aged, Self Concept, Bisexuality psychology, Personnel Selection, Adolescent, Homosexuality, Male psychology
- Abstract
Gay men who believe to sound 'gay' expect to be discriminated against because of their voices and gay-sounding men are discriminated against in the hiring process. We examined whether uttering an agency-based message decreased discrimination expectancy and enactment. In Study 1a (N = 256; gay and bisexual men) and Study 1b (N = 216; gay men), speakers uttered agentic (vs. neutral) messages. We assessed their self-perception as gay sounding, agency self-attribution and discrimination expectancy. Uttering agentic (vs. neutral) messages made the speakers self-perceive as more agentic and this decreased discrimination expectancy. Additionally, self-perception as gay sounding predicted discrimination expectancy. In Study 2 (N = 466), heterosexual participants listened to gay- and straight-sounding speakers uttering either neutral or agentic messages and rated them in terms of agency and employability. Gay-sounding speakers uttering agentic messages were less likely to be discriminated against than when uttering neutral messages. Results show the positive impact of linguistic strategies involving agentic messages to reduce discrimination expectancy and hiring biases., (© 2024 British Psychological Society.)
- Published
- 2024
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6. Mobilize Is a Verb: The Use of Verbs and Concrete Language Is Associated With Authors' and Readers' Perceptions of a Text's Action Orientation and Persuasiveness.
- Author
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Formanowicz M, Beneda M, Witkowska M, Nikadon J, and Suitner C
- Abstract
In three studies, we investigated the role of linguistic features characterizing texts aiming to mobilize others. In Study 1 ( N = 728), participants produced a leaflet either mobilizing others to engage in an action or expressing their thoughts about that action, and evaluated how action-oriented their text was. Mobilizing texts included more verbs and concrete words, and the presence of these linguistic characteristics was positively linked to participants' evaluations of their messages as action-oriented. In Studies 2 and 3 ( N = 557 and N = 556), independent groups of participants evaluated texts produced in Study 1. Readers' perceptions of texts as action-oriented were associated with the same linguistic features as in Study 1 and further positively linked to perceived message effectiveness (Study 2) and behavioral intention (Study 3). The studies reveal how encoding and decoding of verbs and concrete words serve as distinct persuasive tools in calls to action., Competing Interests: Declaration of Conflicting InterestsThe author(s) declared no potential conflicts of interest with respect to the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
- Published
- 2024
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7. Linguistic and emotional responses evoked by pseudoword presentation: An EEG and behavioral study.
- Author
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Daria Dołżycka J, Nikadon J, Peter Weis P, Herbert C, and Formanowicz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Semantics, Language, Emotions, Evoked Potentials physiology, Electroencephalography, Linguistics
- Abstract
When the semantic properties of words are turned off, such as in pseudowords, the grammatical properties of the stimuli indicated through suffixes may provide cues to the meaning. The application of electroencephalography (EEG), combined with the pseudoword paradigm, allows for evaluating the effects of verbs and nouns as linguistic categories within the time course of processing. To contribute to the ongoing discussion regarding the functional processing of words from different grammatical classes, we conducted an EEG experiment, followed by a behavioral lexical decision task (LDT). The EEG and LDT indicated different neural and behavioral reactions to the presented grammar classes, allowing for a deeper understanding of the neuro- and psycholinguistic dimensions of grammar., Competing Interests: Declaration of Competing Interest The authors declare that they have no known competing financial interests or personal relationships that could have appeared to influence the work reported in this paper., (Copyright © 2023 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.)
- Published
- 2023
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8. Emotional framing in online environmental activism: Pairing a Twitter study with an offline experiment.
- Author
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Sanford M, Witkowska M, Gifford R, and Formanowicz M
- Abstract
As the consequences of anthropogenic climate change become more apparent, social media has become a central tool for environmental activists to raise awareness and to mobilize society. In two studies, we examine how the emotional framing of messages posted by environmental activists influences engagement and behavioral intentions toward environmental action. In the first study, tweets ( N = 510k) of 50 environmental activists posted between November 2015 and December 2020 are examined to measure their emotional content and its relation to tweet diffusion. Environment-related tweets are found to be shared more the less they contain positive emotion and the more they contain negative emotion. This result supports the negativity bias on social media. In Study 2 ( N = 200), we experimentally test whether negatively vs. positively framed environmental content leads to increased reported intent to engage with collective action, and whether mood mediates that link. We find both direct and indirect effects on reported climate action intentions when mood is used as a mediator. The negative mood resulting from seeing negative tweets makes participants more likely to report higher action intention (indirect effect)-congruent with Study 1. However, seeing negative tweets also makes participants less inclined to act (direct effect), indicating a suppression effect and the presence of other factors at work on the pathway between information and action intent formation. This work highlights the complex and multifaceted nature of this relation and motivates more experimental work to identify other relevant factors, as well as how they relate to one another., Competing Interests: The authors declare that the research was conducted in the absence of any commercial or financial relationships that could be construed as a potential conflict of interest., (Copyright © 2023 Sanford, Witkowska, Gifford and Formanowicz.)
- Published
- 2023
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9. Phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate signaling regulates dense granule biogenesis and exocytosis in Toxoplasma gondii .
- Author
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Arabiotorre A, Formanowicz M, Bankaitis VA, and Grabon A
- Abstract
Phosphoinositide metabolism defines the foundation of a major signaling pathway that is conserved throughout the eukaryotic kingdom. The 4-OH phosphorylated phosphoinositides such as phosphatidylinositol-4-phosphate (PtdIns4P) and phosphatidylinositol-4,5-bisphosphate are particularly important molecules as these execute intrinsically essential activities required for the viability of all eukaryotic cells studied thus far. Using intracellular tachyzoites of the apicomplexan parasite Toxoplasma gondii as model for assessing primordial roles for PtdIns4P signaling, we demonstrate the presence of PtdIns4P pools in Golgi/trans-Golgi (TGN) system and in post-TGN compartments of the parasite. Moreover, we show that deficits in PtdIns4P signaling result in structural perturbation of compartments that house dense granule cargo with accompanying deficits in dense granule exocytosis. Taken together, the data report a direct role for PtdIns4P in dense granule biogenesis and exocytosis. The data further indicate that the biogenic pathway for secretion-competent dense granule formation in T. gondii is more complex than simple budding of fully matured dense granules from the TGN.
- Published
- 2023
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10. Gender bias in special issues: evidence from a bibliometric analysis.
- Author
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Formanowicz M, Witkowska M, Hryniszak W, Jakubik Z, and Cisłak A
- Abstract
Even though the majority of psychologists are women, they are outnumbered by men in senior academic ranks. One reason for this representation bias in academia is that men favor other men in decision-making, especially when the stakes are high. We tested the possibility of such bias in a bibliometric analysis, in which we coded editors' and authors' gender in regular and special issues, the latter considered of higher scientific prominence. We examined all special issues from five prominent scientific outlets in the fields of personality and social psychology published in the twenty-first century. Altogether, we analyzed 1911 articles nested in 93 sets comprising a special issue and a neighboring regular issue treated as a control condition. For articles published in special (but not regular) issues, when there were more men editors, more men first-authored and co-authored the work. This pattern suggests how gender bias can be perpetuated within academia and calls for revising the editorial policies of leading psychology journals., Competing Interests: Conflict of interestThe authors have no competing interests to declare that are relevant to the content of this article., (© The Author(s) 2023.)
- Published
- 2023
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11. Constructing Pseudowords with Constraints on Morphological Features - Application for Polish Pseudonouns and Pseudoverbs.
- Author
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Dołżycka JD, Nikadon J, and Formanowicz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Poland, Reading, Speech, Language, Psycholinguistics
- Abstract
Pseudowords allow researchers to investigate multiple grammatical or syntactic aspects of language processing. In order to serve that purpose, pseudoword stimuli need to preserve certain properties of real language. We provide a Python-based pipeline for the generation of pseudoword stimuli that sound/read naturally in a given language. The pseudowords are designed to resemble real words and clearly indicate their grammatical class for languages that use specific suffixes from parts of speech. We also provide two sets of pseudonouns and pseudoverbs in Polish that are outcomes of the applied pipeline. The sets are equipped with psycholinguistically relevant properties of words, such as orthographic Levenshtein distance 20. We also performed two studies (overall N = 640) to test the validity of the algorithmically constructed stimuli in a human sample. Thus, we present stimuli that were deprived of direct meaning yet are clearly classifiable as grammatical categories while being orthographically and phonologically plausible., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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12. The verb-self link: An implicit association test study.
- Author
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Weis PP, Nikadon J, Herbert C, and Formanowicz M
- Subjects
- Humans, Linguistics, Language, Reading
- Abstract
Agency is defined as the ability to assign and pursue goals. Given people's focus on achieving their own goals, agency has been found to be strongly linked to the self. In two studies (N = 168), we examined whether this self-agency link is visible from a linguistic perspective. As the preferred grammatical category to convey agency is verbs, we hypothesize that, in the Implicit Association Test (IAT), verbs (vs. nouns) would be associated more strongly with the self (vs. others). Our results confirmed this hypothesis. Participants exhibited particularly fast responses when reading self-related stimuli (e.g., "me" or "my") and verb stimuli (e.g., "deflect" or "contemplate") both necessitated pressing an identical rather than different response keys in the IAT (d = .25). The finding connects two streams of literature-on the link between agency and verbs and on the link between self and agency-suggesting a triad between self, agency, and verbs. We argue that this verb-self link (1) opens up new perspectives for understanding linguistic expressions of agency and (2) expands our understanding of how word choice impacts socio-cognitive processing., (© 2022. The Author(s).)
- Published
- 2022
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13. Trust predicts COVID-19 prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions in 23 countries.
- Author
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Pagliaro S, Sacchi S, Pacilli MG, Brambilla M, Lionetti F, Bettache K, Bianchi M, Biella M, Bonnot V, Boza M, Butera F, Ceylan-Batur S, Chong K, Chopova T, Crimston CR, Álvarez B, Cuadrado I, Ellemers N, Formanowicz M, Graupmann V, Gkinopoulos T, Kyung Jeong EH, Jasinskaja-Lahti I, Jetten J, Muhib Bin K, Mao Y, McCoy C, Mehnaz F, Minescu A, Sirlopú D, Simić A, Travaglino G, Uskul AK, Zanetti C, Zinn A, and Zubieta E
- Subjects
- Adult, Aged, COVID-19 epidemiology, Coronavirus Infections epidemiology, Disease Outbreaks, Female, Government, Health Behavior physiology, Humans, Intention, Male, Middle Aged, Public Health, SARS-CoV-2 pathogenicity, COVID-19 prevention & control, COVID-19 psychology, Trust psychology
- Abstract
The worldwide spread of a new coronavirus (SARS-CoV-2) since December 2019 has posed a severe threat to individuals' well-being. While the world at large is waiting that the released vaccines immunize most citizens, public health experts suggest that, in the meantime, it is only through behavior change that the spread of COVID-19 can be controlled. Importantly, the required behaviors are aimed not only at safeguarding one's own health. Instead, individuals are asked to adapt their behaviors to protect the community at large. This raises the question of which social concerns and moral principles make people willing to do so. We considered in 23 countries (N = 6948) individuals' willingness to engage in prescribed and discretionary behaviors, as well as country-level and individual-level factors that might drive such behavioral intentions. Results from multilevel multiple regressions, with country as the nesting variable, showed that publicized number of infections were not significantly related to individual intentions to comply with the prescribed measures and intentions to engage in discretionary prosocial behaviors. Instead, psychological differences in terms of trust in government, citizens, and in particular toward science predicted individuals' behavioral intentions across countries. The more people endorsed moral principles of fairness and care (vs. loyalty and authority), the more they were inclined to report trust in science, which, in turn, statistically predicted prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions. Results have implications for the type of intervention and public communication strategies that should be most effective to induce the behavioral changes that are needed to control the COVID-19 outbreak., Competing Interests: The authors have declared that no competing interests exist. This research was supported by a “Covid-19 Grant” awarded from the European Association of Social Psychology to Stefano Pagliaro and by the Pomilio Blumm Communication Agency. This does not alter our adherence to PLOS ONE policies on sharing data and materials.
- Published
- 2021
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14. The regulation of recurrent negative emotion in the aftermath of a lost election.
- Author
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Mehta A, Formanowicz M, Uusberg A, Uusberg H, Gross JJ, and Suri G
- Subjects
- Adult, Female, Humans, Male, Young Adult, Emotional Regulation, Politics, Surveys and Questionnaires statistics & numerical data
- Abstract
For some American voters, the news of Mr. Trump's victory in the 2016 presidential election caused recurrent emotions that were negative, persistent, and intense enough to elicit repeated attempts at emotion regulation. This afforded a rare opportunity to analyse the regulation of recurrent emotions in a natural, non-laboratory context. The regulation of recurrent emotion involves additional considerations relative to single-instance emotion, such as representations of past and future encounters with the emotion-eliciting variables, ongoing consequences of each regulatory episode, and a tendency to repeatedly deploy emotion regulation strategies that one is most familiar with in the context of the particular recurrent emotion. Despite the ubiquitous nature of recurrent emotions, its associated regulatory processes have been infrequently examined and are not well-understood. Over eight days (11/10/16-11/18/16), we administered four surveys to 202 participants who voted against Mr. Trump. We examined the determinants and outcomes of regulatory strategies in the context of recurrent emotion. We found that (1) reappraisal (compared to distraction and acceptance) was associated with greater decline in emotion intensity, (2) high-intensity emotions were more likely to be distracted, whereas low-intensity emotions were more likely to be reappraised, and (3) strategy variability was associated with greater affective adaptation.
- Published
- 2020
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15. Bias against research on gender bias.
- Author
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Cislak A, Formanowicz M, and Saguy T
- Abstract
The bias against women in academia is a documented phenomenon that has had detrimental consequences, not only for women, but also for the quality of science. First, gender bias in academia affects female scientists, resulting in their underrepresentation in academic institutions, particularly in higher ranks. The second type of gender bias in science relates to some findings applying only to male participants, which produces biased knowledge. Here, we identify a third potentially powerful source of gender bias in academia: the bias against research on gender bias. In a bibliometric investigation covering a broad range of social sciences, we analyzed published articles on gender bias and race bias and established that articles on gender bias are funded less often and published in journals with a lower Impact Factor than articles on comparable instances of social discrimination. This result suggests the possibility of an underappreciation of the phenomenon of gender bias and related research within the academic community. Addressing this meta-bias is crucial for the further examination of gender inequality, which severely affects many women across the world.
- Published
- 2018
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16. Can Gender-Fair Language Reduce Gender Stereotyping and Discrimination?
- Author
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Sczesny S, Formanowicz M, and Moser F
- Abstract
Gender-fair language (GFL) aims at reducing gender stereotyping and discrimination. Two principle strategies have been employed to make languages gender-fair and to treat women and men symmetrically: neutralization and feminization. Neutralization is achieved, for example, by replacing male-masculine forms (policeman) with gender-unmarked forms (police officer), whereas feminization relies on the use of feminine forms to make female referents visible (i.e., the applicant… he or she instead of the applicant… he). By integrating research on (1) language structures, (2) language policies, and (3) individual language behavior, we provide a critical review of how GFL contributes to the reduction of gender stereotyping and discrimination. Our review provides a basis for future research and for scientifically based policy-making.
- Published
- 2016
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17. Salience and asymmetric judgments of physical distance.
- Author
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Formanowicz M and Karylowski JJ
- Subjects
- Analysis of Variance, Attention physiology, Cues, Humans, Orientation physiology, Space Perception physiology, Distance Perception physiology, Judgment physiology, Mental Recall physiology
- Abstract
Previous research has shown that distance estimates made from memory are often asymmetric. Specifically, when A is a prominent location (a landmark) and B is not, people tend to recall a longer distance from A to B than from B to A. Results of two experiments showed that asymmetric judgments of distance are not restricted to judgments made from memory but occur also for judgments made when all relevant visual cues are still present. Furthermore, results indicated that situational salience is sufficient to produce asymmetric judgments and that distinctiveness (such as in the case of architectural landmarks) is not necessary.
- Published
- 2011
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