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Michael E McCullough

Showing results (1-10 of 76) with videos related to

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The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|January 15, 2024
On the evolved psychological mechanisms that make peace and reconciliation between groups possibleMichael E McCullough, David Pietraszewski
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|March 4, 2005
Religiousness and the trajectory of self-rated health across adulthoodMichael E McCullough, Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
Health Psychology : Official Journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association|November 18, 2004
Gender and the natural history of self-rated health: a 59-year longitudinal studyMichael E McCullough, Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|December 6, 2013
Is ego depletion too incredible? Evidence for the overestimation of the depletion effectEvan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Evolutionary Psychology : an International Journal of Evolutionary Approaches to Psychology and Behavior|July 6, 2022
Retrospective Self-Reported Childhood Experiences in Enriched Environments Uniquely Predict Prosocial Behavior and Personality Traits in AdulthoodThomas G McCauley, Michael E McCullough
Frontiers in Psychology|August 16, 2014
Publication bias and the limited strength model of self-control: has the evidence for ego depletion been overestimated?Evan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|July 14, 2015
The effects of implicit religious primes on dictator game allocations: A preregistered replication experimentCristina M Gomes, Michael E McCullough
Biological Psychology|May 21, 2011
Perceived transgressor agreeableness decreases cortisol response and increases forgiveness following recent interpersonal transgressionsBenjamin A Tabak, Michael E McCullough
Current Opinion in Psychology|January 18, 2021
Does religion make people more self-controlled? A review of research from the lab and lifeZeve J Marcus, Michael E McCullough
BMC Psychology|January 8, 2015
After a pair of self-control-intensive tasks, sucrose swishing improves subsequent working memory performanceEvan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Pageof 8

Showing results (1-10 of 76) with videos related to

Sort By:
Pageof 8
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|January 15, 2024
On the evolved psychological mechanisms that make peace and reconciliation between groups possibleMichael E McCullough, David Pietraszewski
Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin|March 4, 2005
Religiousness and the trajectory of self-rated health across adulthoodMichael E McCullough, Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
Health Psychology : Official Journal of the Division of Health Psychology, American Psychological Association|November 18, 2004
Gender and the natural history of self-rated health: a 59-year longitudinal studyMichael E McCullough, Jean-Philippe Laurenceau
The Behavioral and Brain Sciences|December 6, 2013
Is ego depletion too incredible? Evidence for the overestimation of the depletion effectEvan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Evolutionary Psychology : an International Journal of Evolutionary Approaches to Psychology and Behavior|July 6, 2022
Retrospective Self-Reported Childhood Experiences in Enriched Environments Uniquely Predict Prosocial Behavior and Personality Traits in AdulthoodThomas G McCauley, Michael E McCullough
Frontiers in Psychology|August 16, 2014
Publication bias and the limited strength model of self-control: has the evidence for ego depletion been overestimated?Evan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Journal of Experimental Psychology. General|July 14, 2015
The effects of implicit religious primes on dictator game allocations: A preregistered replication experimentCristina M Gomes, Michael E McCullough
Biological Psychology|May 21, 2011
Perceived transgressor agreeableness decreases cortisol response and increases forgiveness following recent interpersonal transgressionsBenjamin A Tabak, Michael E McCullough
Current Opinion in Psychology|January 18, 2021
Does religion make people more self-controlled? A review of research from the lab and lifeZeve J Marcus, Michael E McCullough
BMC Psychology|January 8, 2015
After a pair of self-control-intensive tasks, sucrose swishing improves subsequent working memory performanceEvan C Carter, Michael E McCullough
Pageof 8