Vohs, Kathleen D.
كاثلين فوهس عالمة سلوك أمريكية
Vohs, Kathleen D., 19..-....
VIAF ID: 66760272 (Personal)
Permalink: http://viaf.org/viaf/66760272
Preferred Forms
- 200 _ | ‡a Vohs ‡b Kathleen D.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D
- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D.
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- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D.
- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D. ‡d 19..-...
- 100 1 _ ‡a Vohs, Kathleen D., ‡d 19..-....
- 100 0 _ ‡a كاثلين فوهس ‡c عالمة سلوك أمريكية
4xx's: Alternate Name Forms (8)
5xx's: Related Names (5)
- 510 2 _ ‡a Carlson School of Management
- 510 2 _ ‡a Carlson School of Management ‡e Affiliation
- 510 2 _ ‡a Guilford Press
- 510 2 _ ‡a Oxford University Press
- 510 2 _ ‡a ebrary, Inc
Works
Title | Sources |
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The agentic self | |
Aspects of the self : applications and extensions | |
Correcting Some Misrepresentations About Gender and Sexual Economics Theory | |
Could the resource depletion model of self-control help the field to better understand momentary processes that lead to binge eating? | |
Differentiation of individual selves facilitates group-level benefits of ultrasociality. | |
Diverging effects of clean versus dirty money on attitudes, values, and interpersonal behavior. | |
Do emotions help or hurt decision making? : a hedgefoxian perspective | |
Dwie strony pieniądza | |
The effects of self-esteem and ego threat on interpersonal appraisals of men and women: a naturalistic study. | |
Ego depletion decreases trust in economic decision making. | |
Encyclopedia of social psychology | |
Everyday temptations: an experience sampling study of desire, conflict, and self-control. | |
Everyday Thoughts in Time: Experience Sampling Studies of Mental Time Travel | |
Exploding the self-esteem myth. | |
Exposure to movie smoking, antismoking ads and smoking intensity: an experimental study with a factorial design | |
Fearing the Future? Future-Oriented Thought Produces Aversion to Risky Investments, Trust, and Immorality | |
Feeling duped: Emotional, motivational, and cognitive aspects of being exploited by others | |
Free will and consciousness how might they work ? | |
Free will and punishment: a mechanistic view of human nature reduces retribution. | |
Free will beliefs predict attitudes toward unethical behavior and criminal punishment | |
The "freshman fifteen" (the "freshman five" actually): predictors and possible explanations | |
Handbook of self-regulation research, theory and applications | |
Hindsight Bias | |
How emotion shapes behavior: feedback, anticipation, and reflection, rather than direct causation | |
How leaders self-regulate their task performance: evidence that power promotes diligence, depletion, and disdain. | |
Human self as information agent: Functioning in a social environment based on shared meanings | |
Illusions of Learning: Irrelevant Emotions Inflate Judgments of Learning | |
The influence of group membership and individual differences in psychopathy and perspective taking on neural responses when punishing and rewarding others. | |
Intellectual performance and ego depletion: role of the self in logical reasoning and other information processing. | |
Introduction to the special issue: The science of prospection | |
Is the allure of self-esteem a mirage after all? | |
It's not going to be that fun: negative experiences can add meaning to life | |
The meaning maintenance model: on the coherence of social motivations | |
Mere exposure to money increases endorsement of free-market systems and social inequality | |
The mere thought of money makes you feel less pain. | |
Mit dobrego samopoczucia | |
Money and mimicry: when being mimicked makes people feel threatened | |
Money Cues Increase Agency and Decrease Prosociality Among Children: Early Signs of Market-Mode Behaviors. | |
Money, moral transgressions, and blame | |
Money priming can change people's thoughts, feelings, motivations, and behaviors: An update on 10 years of experiments. | |
No match for money: Even in intimate relationships and collectivistic cultures, reminders of money weaken sociomoral responses | |
Nostalgia Weakens the Desire for Money | |
On near misses and completed tasks: the nature of relief | |
Ordinary people associate addiction with loss of free will. | |
Out of Control | |
Peacocks, Porsches, and Thorstein Veblen: conspicuous consumption as a sexual signaling system | |
Personal Philosophy and Personnel Achievement: Belief in Free Will Predicts Better Job Performance | |
Physical order produces healthy choices, generosity, and conventionality, whereas disorder produces creativity | |
Plotka jako narzędzie kulturowego uczenia się | |
Power increases the socially toxic component of narcissism among individuals with high baseline testosterone | |
Pragmatic prospection: How and why people think about the future | |
The price had better be right: women's reactions to sexual stimuli vary with market factors. | |
The psychological consequences of money. | |
Psychological science, mind, brain, and behaviour. - | |
Psychology as the Science of Self-Reports and Finger Movements: Whatever Happened to Actual Behavior? | |
Psychology. The poor's poor mental power. | |
Revisiting Our Reappraisal of the (Surprisingly Few) Benefits of High Self-Esteem. | |
Rituals enhance consumption | |
Self-affirmation and self-control: affirming core values counteracts ego depletion. | |
Self-affirmation can enable goal disengagement. | |
Self and identity | |
Self and relationships connecting intrapersonal and interpersonal processes | |
Self-concept and self-esteem | |
Self-other asymmetries in the perceived validity of the Implicit Association Test | |
Self-Regulation and Self-Presentation: Regulatory Resource Depletion Impairs Impression Management and Effortful Self-Presentation Depletes Regulatory Resources | |
Self-regulation and the extended now: controlling the self alters the subjective experience of time. | |
The sense of moral obligation facilitates information agency and culture | |
Sex in Advertising: Gender Differences and the Role of Relationship Commitment | |
Sexual Economics, Culture, Men, and Modern Sexual Trends | |
Sexual economics: sex as female resource for social exchange in heterosexual interactions. | |
Social Exclusion Causes People to Spend and Consume Strategically in the Service of Affiliation | |
Social Rejection Can Reduce Pain and Increase Spending: Further Evidence That Money, Pain, and Belongingness Are Interrelated | |
Social Rejection, Control, Numbness, and Emotion: How Not to be Fooled by Gerber and Wheeler (2009) | |
Some Good News About Rumination: Task-Focused Thinking After Failure Facilitates Performance Improvement | |
Some key differences between a happy life and a meaningful life | |
Spent Resources: Self‐Regulatory Resource Availability Affects Impulse Buying | |
Stereotype Threat in the Marketplace: Consumer Anxiety and Purchase Intentions | |
The Sticky Anchor Hypothesis: Ego Depletion Increases Susceptibility to Situational Cues | |
The Strength Model of Self-Regulation: Conclusions From the Second Decade of Willpower Research | |
The Sum of Friends' and Lovers' Self-Control Scores Predicts Relationship Quality | |
Too much of a good thing? Exploring the inverted-U relationship between self-control and happiness. | |
The value of believing in free will: encouraging a belief in determinism increases cheating | |
Victims, perpetrators, or both? The vicious cycle of disrespect and cynical beliefs about human nature | |
The visualization trap | |
What people desire, feel conflicted about, and try to resist in everyday life | |
What's the use of happiness? It can't buy you money | |
When is the unfamiliar the uncanny? Meaning affirmation after exposure to absurdist literature, humor, and art | |
World without free will | |
Yes, but are they happy? Effects of trait self-control on affective well-being and life satisfaction. | |
You didn't have to do that: belief in free will promotes gratitude. |