Results 241 to 250 of about 169,975 (290)

What Could Have Been: Predicted and Actual Exclusion by Potential Romantic Partners and Platonic Friends

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Romantic partners are instrumental to more goals than friends, and therefore, people have more to lose when denied a romantic relationship than a friendship. We explored people's forecasted and experienced rejection by a potential romantic partner or friend.
Natasha R. Wood   +5 more
wiley   +1 more source

On the Verge of Exclusion: The Unique Psychological Profile of the Threat of Social Exclusion

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Past research, often using Cyberball—an online ball‐tossing game with two or more preprogrammed players—showed that being socially excluded produces various negative emotions and lower need satisfaction. However, in everyday life, people may experience the threat of social exclusion more frequently than actual exclusion. Across two experiments
Tiara R. Widiastuti   +3 more
wiley   +1 more source

m6A-dependent translation of circPICALM encodes a novel metastasis-promoting oncoprotein in intrahepatic cholangiocarcinoma. [PDF]

open access: yesMol Cancer
Li H   +15 more
europepmc   +1 more source

An Experience‐Sampling Study on the Frequency and Diversity of Positive and Negative Affective States

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Ecological models explain social phenomena by assuming specific properties of the world an individual lives in. The evaluative information ecology model (Unkelbach et al. 2019) assumes two such properties: Positive information is more frequent (i.e., positivity prevalence), but negative information is more diverse (i.e., negativity diversity).
Anne I. Weitzel, Christian Unkelbach
wiley   +1 more source

Left Wanting and Left Unheard: A Dual Grievance Model of Populism Across Six European Countries

open access: yesEuropean Journal of Social Psychology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT This study tests a dual grievance model of populism by examining whether relative deprivation and external political inefficacy are linked to two core dimensions of populist beliefs (people sovereignty and anti‐elitism) via aversive political emotions (anger, sadness and fear) and institutional distrust across six European countries (N = 5487).
Anna Cortijos‐Bernabeu   +2 more
wiley   +1 more source

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