Farrell, Amy. "Academia's Anti-Fat Problem." Bitch Media (blog). June 6, 2013. https://bitchmedia.org/post/academias-anti-fat-problem, "Dear obese PhD applicants: if you don't have the willpower to stop eating carbs, you won't...
For more information on the published version, visit SAGE's Website., Shepperd, James A., Marie Helweg-Larsen, and Ligia Ortega. "Are Comparative Risk Judgments Consistent Across Time and Events?" Personality and Social...
The 23-item Attitudes About Sadomasochism Scale (ASMS; Yost, 2010) assesses stereotypical and prejudicial attitudes about individuals involved in consensual, sexual sadomasochism. The full scale score may be used, but the scale...
Previous experiments have compared the processes of perception and visual mental imagery at the visual cortex. Many researchers have reported that the visual cortex is activated during visual imagery, although some believe that...
For more information on the published version, visit ScienceDirect's Website., Helweg-Larsen, Marie, Mette Kjøller, and Henrik Thoning. "Do Age and Social Relations Moderate the Relationship Between Self-Rated Health and...
The optimistic bias is defined as judging one's own risk as less than the risk of others. Researchers have identified numerous personal and situational factors that moderate the extent to which people display the bias. It is...
That we obsess about fat is evident. We have only to note our $60.5 billion weight loss industry in the United States, the 179,000 weight loss surgeries performed every year, or the annual BMI (Body Mass Index) report cards...
Farrell, Amy. “Fat Shame: A Conversation with Amy Farrell.” Psychology Today's Eating Mindfully (blog). September 17, 2014. https://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/eating-mindfully/201409/fat-shame., For more information on the...
Yost, Megan R., and Genéa D. Thomas. "Gender and Binegativity: Men's and Women's Attitudes Toward Male and Female Bisexuals." Archives of Sexual Behavior 41, no. 3 (2012): 691-702., This study assessed the influence of gender...
For more information on the published version, visit Science Direct's Website., According to the hubris hypothesis, observers respond more unfavorably to individuals who express their positive self-views comparatively than to...