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1. Ideological diversity of media consumption predicts COVID-19 vaccination

2. When election expectations fail: Polarized perceptions of election legitimacy increase with accumulating evidence of election outcomes and with polarized media.

3. Seeing Red: Anger Increases How Much Republican Identification Predicts Partisan Attitudes and Perceived Polarization.

4. Elite influence on public attitudes about climate policy

6. The exchange between citizens and elected officials: a social psychological framework for citizen climate activists

7. Behavioural climate policy

8. Salience theory of mere exposure: Relative exposure increases liking, extremity, and emotional intensity

9. Temporally Asymmetric Psychology

10. Politicians polarize and experts depolarize public support for COVID-19 management policies across countries

11. Structured reflection increases intentions to reduce others’ health risks during Covid-19

12. Social norms explain prioritization of climate policy

14. Party over pandemic: Polarized trust in political leaders and experts explains public support for COVID-19 policies

15. False polarization: Cognitive mechanisms and potential solutions

17. Behavioural frameworks to understand public perceptions of and risk response to carbon dioxide removal

18. Attention increases environmental risk perception

19. Using Augmented Virtuality to Examine How Emotions Influence Construction-Hazard Identification, Risk Assessment, and Safety Decisions

20. Above and beyond the content: Feelings influence mental simulations

21. Toward Surmounting the Psychological Barriers to Climate Policy—Appreciating Contexts and Acknowledging Challenges: A Reply to Weber (2018)

22. Partisan Barriers to Bipartisanship

23. When election expectations fail: Polarized perceptions of election legitimacy increase with accumulating evidence of election outcomes and with polarized media

24. Consumer Choice and Autonomy in the Age of Artificial Intelligence and Big Data

25. Attention Drives Emotion: Voluntary Visual Attention Increases Perceived Emotional Intensity

26. VanBoven_OpenPracticesDisclosure_rev – Supplemental material for Attention Drives Emotion: Voluntary Visual Attention Increases Perceived Emotional Intensity

27. Partisan underestimation of the polarizing influence of group discussion

28. Psychological Barriers to Bipartisan Public Support for Climate Policy

29. It depends: Partisan evaluation of conditional probability importance

30. Using Augmented Virtuality to Understand the Situational Awareness Model

31. Simulational fluency reduces feelings of psychological distance

32. VanBoven_Supplemental_Material – Supplemental material for Psychological Barriers to Bipartisan Public Support for Climate Policy

33. Supplemental Material, SPPS758709_suppl_mat - Partisan Barriers to Bipartisanship: Understanding Climate Policy Polarization

34. The Tripartite Foundations of Temporal Psychological Distance: Metaphors, Ecology, and Teleology

35. Attentional accounting: Voluntary spatial attention increases budget category prioritization

36. Stumbling in Their Shoes

37. Abstract construals make the emotional rewards of prosocial behavior more salient

38. Too much experience: A desensitization bias in emotional perspective taking

39. The Secrecy Heuristic: Inferring Quality from Secrecy in Foreign Policy Contexts

40. Self-Identity and Consumer Behavior Dissociative versus Associative Responses to Social Identity Threat: The Role of Consumer Self-Construal Self-Affirmation through the Choice of Highly Aesthetic Products It's Not Me, It's You: How Gift Giving Creates Giver Identity Threat as a Function of Social Closeness Identifiable but Not Identical: Combining Social Identity and Uniqueness Motives in Choice The Signature Effect: Signing Influences Consumption-Related Behavior by Priming Self-Identity An Interpretive Frame Model of Identity-Dependent Learning: The Moderating Role of Content-State Association

41. Emotional States and Their Impact on Hazard Identification Skills

42. Prototypical prospection: future events are more prototypically represented and simulated than past events

43. Boys don't cry: Cognitive load and priming increase stereotypic sex differences in emotion memory

44. Whom to help? Immediacy bias in judgments and decisions about humanitarian aid

45. The illusion of courage in self-predictions: Mispredicting one's own behavior in embarrassing situations

46. Feeling close: Emotional intensity reduces perceived psychological distance

47. Feelings Not Forgone

48. Stigmatizing Materialism: On Stereotypes and Impressions of Materialistic and Experiential Pursuits

49. Immediacy bias in emotion perception: Current emotions seem more intense than previous emotions

50. Perceiving political polarization in the United States: party identity strength and attitude extremity exacerbate the perceived partisan divide

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