Gregory S. Morgan, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2011 Psychology University of Illinois at Chicago, Chicago, IL, United States 
Google:
"Gregory Morgan"
Mean distance: 22.67
 

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
Linda J. Skitka grad student 2011 University of Illinois, Chicago
 (Toward a Model of Morally Motivated Behavior: Investigating Mediators of the Moral Conviction-Action Link.)
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.

Morgan GS, Wisneski DC. (2017) The Structure of Political Ideology Varies Between and Within People: Implications for Theories About Ideology's Causes Social Cognition. 35: 395-414
Washburn AN, Morgan GS, Skitka LJ. (2015) A checklist to facilitate objective hypothesis testing in social psychology research. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 38: e161
Morgan GS, Skitka LJ, Wisneski DC. (2014) Political ideology is contextually variable and flexible rather than fixed. The Behavioral and Brain Sciences. 37: 321-2
Skitka LJ, Morgan GS. (2014) The social and political implications of moral conviction Political Psychology. 35: 95-110
Reifen Tagar M, Morgan GS, Halperin E, et al. (2014) When ideology matters: Moral conviction and the association between ideology and policy preferences in the Israeli-Palestinian conflict European Journal of Social Psychology. 44: 117-125
Morgan GS, Wisneski DC, Skitka LJ. (2011) The expulsion from Disneyland: the social psychological impact of 9/11. The American Psychologist. 66: 447-54
Morgan GS, Mullen E, Skitka LJ. (2010) When values and attributions collide: liberals' and conservatives' values motivate attributions for alleged misdeeds. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 36: 1241-54
Morgan GS, Skitka LJ, Wisneski DC. (2010) Moral and religious convictions and intentions to vote in the 2008 presidential election Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy. 10: 307-320
Skitka LJ, Bauman CW, Aramovich NP, et al. (2006) Confrontational and preventative policy responses to terrorism: Anger wants a fight and fear wants "them" to go away Basic and Applied Social Psychology. 28: 375-384
See more...