The political is personal: The costs of daily politics.
Brett Q. Ford, Matthew Feinberg, Bethany Lassetter, Sabrina Thai, Arasteh Gatchpazian
págs. 1-28
Heroization and ironic funneling effects.
Matthew L. Stanley, Steven Shepherd, Aaron C. Kay
págs. 29-56
Are there dominant response tendencies for social reactions?: Trust trumps mistrust—evidence from a Dominant Behavior Measure (DBM).
Maayan Katzir, Ann-Christin Posten
págs. 57-81
Judging a book by its cover: Cultural differences in inference of the inner state based on the outward appearance.
Li-Jun Ji, Albert Lee, Zhiyong Zhang, Ye Li, Xin-Qiang Wang, Debra Torok, Sam Rosenbaum
págs. 82-99
Do your friends stress you out?: A field study of the spread of stress through a community network.
Shihan Li, David Krackhardt, Nynke M. D. Niezink
págs. 100-116
Jacquie D. Vorauer, Corey Petsnik
págs. 117-140
Who benefits from which activity?: On the relations between personality traits, leisure activities, and well-being.
Niclas Kuper, Lara Kroencke, Gabriella M. Harari, Jaap J. A. Denissen
págs. 141-172
Deep lexical hypothesis: Identifying personality structure in natural language.
Andrew Cutler, David M. Condon
págs. 173-197
págs. 198-218
What social lives do single people want?: A person-centered approach to identifying profiles of social motives among singles.
Yoobin Park, Geoff MacDonald, Emily A. Impett, Rebecca Neel
págs. 219-236