Duckee Achievements: Miscellaneous
Publications Acknowledging the Duck Conference
McConnell, A. R. (In Press). The Multiple Self-aspects Framework: Self-concept representation and its implications. Personality and Social Psychology Review.
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McConnell, A. R., & Brown, C. M. (2010). Dissonance averted: Self-concept organization moderates the effect of hypocrisy on attitude change. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 46. 361-366.
McConnell, A. R., Rydell, R. J., & Brown, C. M. (2009). On the experience of self-relevant feedback: How self-concept organization influences affective responses and self-evaluations. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 45. 695-707.
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McConnell, A. R., Strain, L. M., Brown, C. M., & Rydell, R. J. (2009). The simple life: On the benefits of low self-complexity. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 34, 823-835.
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Rydell, R. J. & Gawronski, B. (2009). I like you, I like you not: Understanding the formation of context-dependent automatic attitudes. Cognition and Emotion, 23, 1118-1152.
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Clarkson, J.J., Tormala, Z.L., & Rucker, D.D. (2008). A new look at the consequences of attitude certainty: The amplification hypothesis. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 95, 810-825.
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Gawronski, B., & LeBel, E. P. (2008). Understanding patterns of attitude change: When implicit measures show change, but explicit measures do not, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 44, 1355-1361.
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McConnell, A. R., Renaud, J. M., Dean, K. K., Green, S. P., Lamoreaux, M. J., Hall, C. E., & Rydell, R. J. (2005). Whose self is it anyway? Self-aspect control moderates the relation between self-complexity and well-being. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 41, 1-18.
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Schleicher, D. J., & McConnell, A. R. (2005). The complexity of self-complexity: An Associated Systems Theory approach. Social Cognition, 23, 387-416.
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Skowronski, Carlston, Mae & Crawford (1998). Spontaneous trait transference: Communicators take on the qualities they describe in others. Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, 74, 837-848.
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Skowronski & Shook (1997). Facilitation in repeated trait judgments: Implications for the structure of trait concepts. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 33, 21-46.
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Carlston, Skowronski & Mae (1995). Savings in relearning: II. On the Formation of behavior-based trait associations and inferences. Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, 69, 420-436.
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Carlston & Skowronski (1994). Savings in relearning of trait information as evidence for spontaneous inference generation. Journal of Social and Personality Psychology, 66, 840-856.
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Sedikides & Skowronski (1993). The self in impression formation: Trait Centraility and social perception. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 29, 347-357.
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Collaborations Growing out of the Duck Conference
Don Carlston edited the first edition of the Oxford Handbook of Social Cognition, which included chapters by Duckees David Amodio, Emily Balcetis, Denise Beike, Irene Blair, Don Carlston, Tanya Chartrand, Melissa Ferguson, Grainne Fitzsimons. Bertram Gawronski, Ana Guinote, David Hamilton, Kurt Hugenberg, Lisa Libby, Keith Markman, Allen McConnell, Margo Montieth, Keith Payne, Fred Schauer, Jonathan Schooler, Gun Semin, Jeff Sherman, Jim Sherman, John Skowronski, Eliot Smith, Bobbie Spellman, Jim Uleman, Duane Wegener and 23 non-Duckees.
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Collaboration between Liz Dunn and Allen McConnell, resulting in: McConnell, A. L., Dunn, E.W., Austin, S.N., Rawn, C.D. (in press). Blind spots in the search for happiness: implicit attitudes and nonverbal leakage predict affective forecasting errors. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.
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Collaboration between Liz Dunn and Kerry Kawakami, resulting in:
Kawakami, K., Dunn, E. W., Karmali, F., & Dovidio, J. F. (2009). Mispredicting affective and behavioral responses to racism. Science, 323, 276-278.
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Collaboration between Grainne Fitzsimons and Eli Finkel, resulting in: Fitzsimons, G. M., & Finkel, E. J. (2010). Interpersonal Influences on Self-regulation. Current Directions in Psychological Science,19, 101-105
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Collaboration between BJ Rydell and Bertram Gawronski, resulting in: Rydell, R. J., & Gawronski, B. (2008). I like you, I like you not: Understanding the formation of context dependent automatic attitudes. Manuscript submitted for publication.
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Bertram Gawronski and Keith Payne, who both attended the 2006 and 2007 Duck Conferences, co-edited the Handbook of Implicit Social Cognition, with chapters being contributed by fellow Duckees David Amodio, Don Carlston, Melissa Ferguson, Allen McConnell, Brian Nosek, BJ Rydell and Bethany Teachman, with whom they shared one or more Duck Conferences, as well as Duckees John Cacioppo, Jeff Sherman and Patrick Vargas, who attended Duck Conferences in other years.