Vol 29
Psychological Science
Volume 29, Issue 4
- Inaugurating Rationalization: Three Field Studies Find Increased Rationalization When Anticipated Realities Become Current
- Seeing What You Feel: Affect Drives Visual Perception of Structurally Neutral Faces
- Do People Inherently Dislike Uncertain Advice?
- Easier Seen Than Done: Merely Watching Others Perform Can Foster an Illusion of Skill Acquisition
- When Action-Inaction Framing Leads to Higher Escalation of Commitment: A New Inaction-Effect Perspective on the Sunk-Cost Fallacy
- To What Extent and Under Which Circumstances Are Growth Mind-Sets Important to Academic Achievement? Two Meta-Analyses
- Prenatal Stress as a Risk—and an Opportunity—Factor
- The Gender-Equality Paradox in Science, Technology, Engineering, and Mathematics Education
- Early Socioemotional Intervention Mediates Long-Term Effects of Atypical Rearing on Structural Covariation in Gray Matter in Adult Chimpanzees
- Propagation of Economic Inequality Through Reciprocity and Reputation
- Reading Your Mind While You Are Reading—Evidence for Spontaneous Visuospatial Perspective Taking During a Semantic Categorization Task
- After Aylan Kurdi: How Tweeting About Death, Threat, and Harm Predict Increased Expressions of Solidarity With Refugees Over Time
- Déjà Vu: An Illusion of Prediction
- Is Source Information Automatically Available in Working Memory?
- <i>P</i> -Curving a More Comprehensive Body of Research on Postural Feedback Reveals Clear Evidential Value for Power-Posing Effects: Reply to Simmons and Simonsohn (2017)
- Specifically Penile-Vaginal Intercourse Frequency Is Associated With Better Relationship Satisfaction: A Commentary on Hicks, McNulty, Meltzer, and Olson (2016)
- A Dual-Process Perspective on How Sexual Experiences Shape Automatic Versus Explicit Relationship Satisfaction: Reply to Brody, Costa, Klapilová, and Weiss (2018)
- Corrigendum: Constructing Rich False Memories of Committing Crime