“What was meant to be” versus “what might have been”.: Effects of culture and control on counterfactual thinking.
Angela T. Maitner, Amy Summerville
págs. 1-27
Mindfulness meditation reduces guilt and prosocial reparation.
Andrew C. Hafenbrack, M. Lapalme, Isabelle Solal
págs. 28-54
How individuals react emotionally to others’ (mis)fortunes: A social comparison framework.
Lea Boecker, David D. Loschelder, Sascha Topolinski
págs. 55-83
New parental positivity: The role of positive emotions in promoting relational adjustment during the transition to parenthood.
Brian P. Don, Jami Eller, Jeffry A. Simpson, Barbara L. Fredrickson, Sara B. Algoe, W. Steven Rholes, Kristin Mickelson
págs. 84-106
Dynamic contact effects:: Individuals’ positive and negative contact history influences intergroup contact effects in a behavioral game.
Sarina J. Schäfer, M. Simsek, Eva Jaspers, Mathijs Kros, Miles Hewstone, Katharina Schmid, Benjamin F. Fell, Angela R. Dorrough, Andreas Glöckner, Oliver Christ
págs. 107-122
When alterations are violations:: Moral outrage and punishment in response to (even minor) alterations to rituals.
Dan Stein, Juliana Schroeder, Nicholas M. Hobson, Francesca Gino, Michael I. Norton
págs. 123-153
págs. 154-173
The interpersonal nature of self-talk:: Variations across individuals and occasions.
Jean Paul Lefebvre, Pamela Sadler, Ailill Hall, Eric Moody
págs. 174-191
An integrative framework for conceptualizing and assessing social, emotional, and behavioral skills:: The BESSI.
Christopher J. Soto, Christopher M. Napolitano, Madison N. Sewell, Hee J. Yoon, Brent W. Roberts
págs. 192-222
The global belief that “life gets better and better”:: National differences in recollected past, present, and anticipated future life satisfaction around the world, across time, and in relation to societal functioning.
Michael A. Busseri
págs. 223-247