Yingyi Hong

Affiliations: 
Psychology Columbia University, New York, NY 
Google:
"Yingyi Hong"
Mean distance: 16.77 (cluster 6)
 
BETA: Related publications

Publications

You can help our author matching system! If you notice any publications incorrectly attributed to this author, please sign in and mark matches as correct or incorrect.

Liu Y, Hou Y, Hong YY. (2023) The Profiles, Predictors, and Intergroup Outcomes of Cultural Attachment. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 1461672231190753
Tse DCK, Lau VW, Hong YY, et al. (2021) Prosociality and hoarding amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A tale of four countries. Journal of Community & Applied Social Psychology
Christopoulos GI, Hong YY. (2020) The multicultural mind as an epistemological test and extension for the thinking through other minds approach. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 43: e97
Cheon BK, Melani I, Hong Y. (2020) How USA-Centric Is Psychology? An Archival Study of Implicit Assumptions of Generalizability of Findings to Human Nature Based on Origins of Study Samples Social Psychological and Personality Science. 11: 928-937
Cheon BK, Hong Y. (2020) Aversive Response Towards Culture Fusion Is Moderated by the Source of Foreign Cultural Inflow Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. 51: 370-386
Sprong S, Jetten J, Wang Z, et al. (2019) "Our Country Needs a Strong Leader Right Now": Economic Inequality Enhances the Wish for a Strong Leader. Psychological Science. 956797619875472
Yap WJ, Cheon B, Hong YY, et al. (2019) Cultural Attachment: From Behavior to Computational Neuroscience. Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 13: 209
Yang Y, Hong Y, Sanchez-Burks J. (2019) Emotional Aperture Across East and West: How Culture Shapes the Perception of Collective Affect: Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. 50: 751-762
Chen W, Wang X, Gao H, et al. (2019) Understanding consumer ethics in China’s demographic shift and social reforms Asia Pacific Journal of Marketing and Logistics. 31: 627-646
Tadmor CT, Hong YY, Chao MM, et al. (2018) The tolerance benefits of multicultural experiences depend on the perception of available mental resources. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
See more...