Tanya Chartrand
Affiliations: | Ohio State University, Columbus, Columbus, OH |
Area:
Social Psychology, Cognitive PsychologyGoogle:
"Tanya Chartrand"Mean distance: 106866
BETA: Related publications
See more...
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. |
Leander NP, vanDellen MR, Rachl-Willberger J, et al. (2016) Is Freedom Contagious? A Self-Regulatory Model of Reactance and Sensitivity to Deviant Peers. Motivation Science. 2: 256-267 |
Chartrand TL, Lakin JL. (2013) The antecedents and consequences of human behavioral mimicry. Annual Review of Psychology. 64: 285-308 |
Rim S, Min KE, Uleman JS, et al. (2013) Seeing others through rose-colored glasses: An affiliation goal and positivity bias in implicit trait impressions Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 49: 1204-1209 |
Leander NP, Chartrand TL, Bargh JA. (2012) You give me the chills: embodied reactions to inappropriate amounts of behavioral mimicry. Psychological Science. 23: 772-9 |
Schroepfer KK, Rosati AG, Chartrand T, et al. (2011) Use of "entertainment" chimpanzees in commercials distorts public perception regarding their conservation status. Plos One. 6: e26048 |
Moore SG, Ferguson MJ, Chartrand TL. (2011) Affect in the aftermath: how goal pursuit influences implicit evaluations. Cognition & Emotion. 25: 453-65 |
Leander NP, Shah JY, Chartrand TL. (2011) The object of my protection: Shielding fundamental motives from the implicit motivational influence of others Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 47: 1078-1087 |
Leander NP, Chartrand TL, Wood W. (2011) Mind your mannerisms: Behavioral mimicry elicits stereotype conformity Journal of Experimental Social Psychology. 47: 195-201 |
Dalton AN, Chartrand TL, Finkel EJ. (2010) The schema-driven chameleon: how mimicry affects executive and self-regulatory resources. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 98: 605-17 |
Lakin JL, Chartrand TL, Arkin RM. (2008) I am too just like you: nonconscious mimicry as an automatic behavioral response to social exclusion. Psychological Science. 19: 816-22 |