Vol 21

Psychological Science

Volume 21, Issue 10

2010 · 28 articles

  1. Power PosingDana R. Carney, Amy J.C. Cuddy, Andy J. YapVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1363-1368
  2. Explaining the Effect of Education on HealthEllen Peters, David P. Baker, Nathan F. Dieckmann, Juan Leon, John CollinsVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1369-1376
  3. When Mental Inflexibility Facilitates Executive ControlLee J. Altamirano, Akira Miyake, Anson J. WhitmerVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1377-1382
  4. Overheard Cell-Phone ConversationsLauren L. Emberson, Gary Lupyan, Michael H. Goldstein, Michael J. SpiveyVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1383-1388
  5. The Implicit “Go”Guido H.E. Gendolla, Nicolas SilvestriniVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1389-1393
  6. The Outcast-Lash-Out Effect in YouthAlbert Reijntjes, Sander Thomaes, Brad J. Bushman, Paul A. Boelen, Bram Orobio de Castro, et al.Vol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1394-1398
  7. Psychopaths Are Impaired in Social Exchange and Precautionary ReasoningElsa Ermer, Kent A. KiehlVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1399-1405
  8. The Art of AngerHenk Aarts, Kirsten I. Ruys, Harm Veling, Robert A. Renes, Jasper H.B. de Groot, et al.Vol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1406-1410
  9. Stereotype Threat Affects Financial Decision MakingPriyanka B. Carr, Claude M. SteeleVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1411-1416
  10. The Emotional Timeline of September 11, 2001Mitja D. Back, Albrecht C.P. Küfner, Boris EgloffVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1417-1419
  11. Thin-Slicing DivorceAshley E. Mason, David A. Sbarra, Matthias R. MehlVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1420-1422
  12. Dirty Hands and Dirty MouthsSpike W.S. Lee, Norbert SchwarzVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1423-1425
  13. Oxytocin Selectively Improves Empathic AccuracyJennifer A. Bartz, Jamil Zaki, Niall Bolger, Eric Hollander, Natasha N. Ludwig, et al.Vol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1426-1428
  14. Are Coarse Scales Sufficient for Fast Detection of Visual Threat?Martial Mermillod, Sylvie Droit-Volet, Damien Devaux, Alexandre Schaefer, Nicolas VermeulenVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1429-1437
  15. Comparing Gains and LossesA. Peter McGraw, Jeff T. Larsen, Daniel Kahneman, David SchkadeVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1438-1445
  16. From the Most Fleeting of GlimpsesDaniel A. Gajewski, John W. Philbeck, Stephen Pothier, David ChichkaVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1446-1453
  17. Right Orbitofrontal Cortex Mediates Conscious Olfactory PerceptionWen Li, Leonardo Lopez, Jason Osher, James D. Howard, Todd B. Parrish, et al.Vol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1454-1463
  18. Direct Evidence for the Role of Inhibition in Resolving Interference in MemoryM. Karl Healey, Karen L. Campbell, Lynn Hasher, Lynn OssherVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1464-1470
  19. Relational Mobility Explains Between- and Within-Culture Differences in Self-Disclosure to Close FriendsJoanna Schug, Masaki Yuki, William MadduxVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1471-1478
  20. Company, Country, ConnectionsHal Ersner-Hershfield, Adam D. Galinsky, Laura J. Kray, Brayden G. KingVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1479-1486
  21. How Magic Changes Our Expectations About AutismGustav Kuhn, Anastasia Kourkoulou, Susan R. LeekamVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1487-1493
  22. Deconstructing Early Life ExperiencesCynthia B. de Medeiros, Stephanie L. Rees, Maheleth Llinas, Alison S. Fleming, David CrewsVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1494-1501
  23. Spatial Resolution of Conscious Visual Perception in InfantsFaraz Farzin, Susan M. Rivera, David WhitneyVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1502-1509
  24. Missing the Forest for the TreesFabian A. Soto, Edward A. WassermanVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1510-1517
  25. Abstract Structural Representations of Goal-Directed BehaviorKachina Allen, Steven Ibara, Amy Seymour, Natalia Cordova, Matthew BotvinickVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1518-1524
  26. A Spontaneous Self-Reference Effect in MemorySelin Kesebir, Shigehiro OishiVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1525-1531
  27. Continuous Perception and Graded CategorizationJoseph C. Toscano, Bob McMurray, Joel Dennhardt, Steven J. LuckVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1532-1540
  28. Young Children Have a Specific, Highly Robust Bias to Trust TestimonyVikram K. Jaswal, A. Carrington Croft, Alison R. Setia, Caitlin A. ColeVol. 21, Iss. 10 · 2010 · pp. 1541-1547