Arnold K. Ho, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
2011 Harvard University, Cambridge, MA, United States 
Google:
"Arnold Ho"
Mean distance: 53433
 

Parents

Sign in to add mentor
James Sidanius grad student 2011 Harvard
 (The Role of Legitimizing Beliefs and Hypodescent in the Production of Stable Hierarchies.)
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.

Sheehy-Skeffington J, Kteily NS, Ho AK, et al. (2022) James H. (Jim) Sidanius (1945-2021). The American Psychologist
Waldfogel HB, Sheehy-Skeffington J, Hauser OP, et al. (2021) Ideology selectively shapes attention to inequality. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America. 118
Roberts SO, Ho AK, Gelman SA. (2020) Should Individuals Think Like Their Group? A Descriptive-to-Prescriptive Tendency Toward Group-Based Beliefs. Child Development
Ho AK, Kteily NS. (2020) The role of group-based egalitarianism in collective action. Current Opinion in Psychology. 35: 108-113
Ho AK, Kteily NS, Chen JM. (2020) Introducing the Sociopolitical Motive × Intergroup Threat Model to Understand How Monoracial Perceivers' Sociopolitical Motives Influence Their Categorization of Multiracial People. Personality and Social Psychology Review : An Official Journal of the Society For Personality and Social Psychology, Inc. 1088868320917051
Roberts SO, Ho AK, Gülgöz S, et al. (2019) The Roles of Group Status and Group Membership in the Practice of Hypodescent. Child Development
Kteily NS, Rocklage MD, McClanahan K, et al. (2019) Political ideology shapes the amplification of the accomplishments of disadvantaged vs. advantaged group members. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Roberts SO, Ho AK, Gelman SA. (2018) The role of group norms in evaluating uncommon and negative behaviors. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General
Chen JM, Kteily NS, Ho AK. (2018) Whose Side Are You On? Asian Americans' Mistrust of Asian-White Biracials Predicts More Exclusion From the Ingroup. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 146167218798032
McClanahan KJ, Ho AK, Kteily NS. (2018) Which group to credit (and blame)? Whites make attributions about White-minority biracials’ successes and failures based on their own (anti-)egalitarianism and ethnic identification Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. 22: 631-654
See more...