Savvy or savage?: How worldviews shape appraisals of antagonistic leaders.
Christine Q. Nguyen, Daniel R. Ames
págs. 1007-1036
Social bias blind spots: Attractiveness bias is seemingly tolerated because people fail to notice the bias.
Bastian Jaeger, Gabriele Paolacci, Johannes Boergershausen
págs. 1037-1053
She sees the trees, he sees the forest: Descriptive gender stereotypes of concreteness and abstractness.
Samantha J. Dodson, Rachael D. Goodwin, Cheryl J. Wakslak, Kristina A. Diekmann, Jesse Graham
págs. 1054-1082
The head, heart, and soul: Lay theories of decision conflict and the role of the true self.
Daniel J. Chiacchia, George E. Newman, Rachel L. Ruttan
págs. 1083-1101
People overestimate how harshly they are evaluated for disengaging from passion pursuit.
Zachariah Berry, Brian J. Lucas, Jon M. Jachimowicz
págs. 1102-1129
Attitude moralization in the context of collective action: How participation in collective action may foster moralization over time.
Ana Leal, Martijn van Zomeren, Roberto González, Ernestine H. Gordijin, Pía Carozzi, Michal Reifen Tagar, Belén Álvarez, Cristián Frigolett, Eran Halperin
págs. 1130-1150
Aleta Pleasant, Pat Barclay
págs. 1151-1162
Behavioral variability as a function of people, situations, and their interaction.
Muchen Xi, Joshua J. Jackson
págs. 1163-1184
págs. 1185-1201
Perplexing patterns of personality codevelopment: Findings from a 17-year longitudinal study of Mexican-origin families.
Evan A. Warfel, Angelina R. Sutin, Emorie D. Beck, Richard W. Robins
págs. 1202-1217
Knowing yourself and your partner: Accuracy of personality judgment in recently cohabiting couples.
Janina Larissa Bühler, Louisa Scheling, Cornelia Wrzus
págs. 1218-1239
Better together: Coexperienced positive emotions and cortisol secretion in the daily lives of older couples.
Tomiko B. Yoneda, Katherine A. Lewis, Theresa Pauly, Karolina Kolodziejczak Krupp, Johanna Drewelies, Nilam Ram, Maureen C. Ashe, Kenneth M. Madden, Denis Gerstorf, Claudia M. Haase, Christiane Hoppmann
págs. 1240-1256
ML-SPEAK: A theory-guided machine learning method for studying and predicting conversational turn-taking patterns.
Lisa R. O'Bryan, Madeline Navarro, Juan Segundo Hevia, Hernán Santiago Segarra Cevallos
págs. 1257-1280



