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Jillian J Jordan

Showing results (1-10 of 17) with videos related to

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Nature Human Behaviour|April 14, 2019
Which accusations stick?Jillian J Jordan
Trends in Cognitive Sciences|July 19, 2023
A pull versus push framework for reputationJillian J Jordan
Science Advances|October 13, 2021
Virtuous victimsJillian J Jordan, Maryam Kouchaki
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|July 5, 2023
How reputation does (and does not) drive people to punish without lookingJillian J Jordan, Nour S Kteily
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|April 16, 2019
Signaling when no one is watching: A reputation heuristics account of outrage and punishment in one-shot anonymous interactionsJillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Journal of Theoretical Biology|April 10, 2017
Third-party punishment as a costly signal of high continuation probabilities in repeated gamesJillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|May 27, 2025
Punitive but discerning: Reputation can fuel ambiguously deserved punishment, but does not erode sensitivity to nuanceJillian J Jordan, Nour S Kteily
Cognition|December 3, 2014
Costly third-party punishment in young childrenKatherine McAuliffe, Jillian J Jordan, Felix Warneken
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|August 20, 2014
Development of in-group favoritism in children's third-party punishment of selfishnessJillian J Jordan, Katherine McAuliffe, Felix Warneken
Scientific Reports|October 29, 2014
Heuristics guide the implementation of social preferences in one-shot Prisoner's Dilemma experimentsValerio Capraro, Jillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Pageof 2

Showing results (1-10 of 17) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 2
Nature Human Behaviour|April 14, 2019
Which accusations stick?Jillian J Jordan
Trends in Cognitive Sciences|July 19, 2023
A pull versus push framework for reputationJillian J Jordan
Science Advances|October 13, 2021
Virtuous victimsJillian J Jordan, Maryam Kouchaki
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|July 5, 2023
How reputation does (and does not) drive people to punish without lookingJillian J Jordan, Nour S Kteily
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|April 16, 2019
Signaling when no one is watching: A reputation heuristics account of outrage and punishment in one-shot anonymous interactionsJillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Journal of Theoretical Biology|April 10, 2017
Third-party punishment as a costly signal of high continuation probabilities in repeated gamesJillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology|May 27, 2025
Punitive but discerning: Reputation can fuel ambiguously deserved punishment, but does not erode sensitivity to nuanceJillian J Jordan, Nour S Kteily
Cognition|December 3, 2014
Costly third-party punishment in young childrenKatherine McAuliffe, Jillian J Jordan, Felix Warneken
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America|August 20, 2014
Development of in-group favoritism in children's third-party punishment of selfishnessJillian J Jordan, Katherine McAuliffe, Felix Warneken
Scientific Reports|October 29, 2014
Heuristics guide the implementation of social preferences in one-shot Prisoner's Dilemma experimentsValerio Capraro, Jillian J Jordan, David G Rand
Pageof 2