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MBmjbsp.bsky.social

A social targets warmth and competence interact to predict trust: "perceived warmth promoted intergroup trust only when the target outgroup was perceived as competent" #polisky##SocialPsyc#psychsciskyonlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/full/10....

Paper title: Earning trust in intergroup contexts: The interplay of perceived warmth and competence
Abstract: Previous research on intergroup trust has focused predominantly on trustors' dispositional profiles while overlooking the pivotal role of perceptions of the target outgroup and their intricate interactions. Building on the โ€œBig-Twoโ€ model of social perception, four studies (Nโ€‰=โ€‰802) examined the proposition that intergroup trust is a joint function of the target outgroup's perceived warmth and competence. Studies 1 and 2 investigated how American and Chinese people's perceptions of each other regarding warmth and competence impact their mutual trust, respectively. Study 3 manipulated social perceptions of a virtual group by presenting warmth- and competence-related cues and captured the resulting intergroup trust behavior. Study 4 examined intergroup trust toward four natural groups generally perceived to have different levels of warmth and competence in both cooperative and co
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NRnatrevpsych.bsky.social

A multiple-goal framework for exploring goal disengagement Review by Abigail A. Scholer, Candice Hubley & Kentaro Fujita Web: go.nature.com/4esE2zPrdcu.be/dVURR#psychology#psychscisky

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AFpsychscience.bsky.social

ICYMI: Trailblazers in the study of resilience, working memory, burnout, and diversity are among the 13 psychological scientists being honored with 2025 APS lifetime achievement awards. ๐ŸŽ‰ #PsychSciSky

APS Honors 13 Psychological Scientists With 2025 Lifetime Achievement Awards
APS Honors 13 Psychological Scientists With 2025 Lifetime Achievement Awards

Trailblazers in the study of resilience, working memory, burnout, and diversity are among the 13 scientists being honored with 2025 APS Lifetime Achievement Awards.

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DLlucyfoulkes.bsky.social

Romanticisation of mental health problems in adolescence: what's the deal with that? ๐ŸŒŸ NEW PREPRINT by Awa Ndour and me ๐ŸŒŸ (Romanticise = to portray something as more desirable or positive than it really is) Brief summary below (๐Ÿงต) osf.io/preprints/os...#PsychSciSky#DevPsychSky#ClinPsychSky

Romanticisation is the perception and portrayal of a phenomenon as more attractive, interesting, cool, profound or desirable than it really is. There are concerns that mental health problems are increasingly romanticised, particularly among adolescents, but there is limited research on this topic. This narrative review investigated: (1) what romanticisation is in the context of adolescent mental health problems, (2) why adolescents might romanticise mental health problems, (3) the implications of romanticising mental health problems in adolescence, and (4) what interventions might reduce this phenomenon. Sixty-one publications were reviewed, including qualitative and quantitative analyses, cross-sectional and longitudinal self-report studies and conceptual reviews. Most investigated romanticisation of mental health problems online. Identity formation, popular media influences and peer influences arose as potential explanatory factors. Negative outcomes to romanticisation were indicated
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