Demeaning: Dehumanizing others by minimizing the importance of their psychological needs
Juliana Schroeder, Nicholas Epley
págs. 765-791
Front in the mouth, front in the word: The driving mechanisms of the in-out effect
Ira Theresa Maschmann, Anita Körner, Lea Boecker, Sascha Topolinski
págs. 792-807
págs. 808-823
Acquiring group bias: Observing other people’s nonverbal signals can create social group biases
Allison L. Skinner, Kristina R. Olson, Andrew N. Meltzoff
págs. 824-838
Lynda Boothroyd, Jean-Luc Jucker, Tracey Thornborrow, Robert A. Barton, D. Michael Burt, Elizabeth Evans, Mark Jamieson, Martin J. Tovée
págs. 839-860
Forgiveness takes place on an attitudinal continuum from hostility to friendliness: Toward a closer union of forgiveness theory and measurement
Daniel E. Forster, Joseph Billingsley, Michelle V. Russell, Thomas G. McCauley, Adam Smith, Jeni L. Burnette, Yohsuke Ohtsubo, Joanna Schug, Debra Lieberman, Michael McCullough
págs. 861-880
Until death do us part: The codevelopment of life satisfaction in couples preceding the death of one partner
Jenna Wünsche, Rebekka Weidmann, Alexander Grob
págs. 881-900
The morality of organization versus organized members: Organizations are attributed more control and responsibility for negative outcomes than are equivalent members
Simone Tang, Christy Zhou Koval, Richard P. Larrick, Lasana Harris
págs. 901-919
The empirical structure of narrative identity: The initial Big Three
Kate C. McLean, Moin Syed, Monisha Pasupathi, Jonathan M. Adler, William L. Dunlop, David Drustrup, Robyn Fivush, Matthew E. Graci, Jennifer P. Lilgendahl, Jennifer Lodi Smith, Dan P. McAdams, Tara P. McCoy
págs. 920-944
Self-concept clarity lays the foundation for self-continuity: The restorative function of autobiographical memory
Tonglin Jiang, Zhansheng Chen, Constantine Sedikides
págs. 945-959
Narrative identity processes and patterns of adjustment across the transition to college: A developmentally contextualized approach
Jennifer Pals Lilgendahl, Kate C. McLean
págs. 960-977