Matthew T. Gailliot, Ph.D.

Affiliations: 
Zirve University 
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"Matthew Gailliot"
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Publications

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Gailliot MT, Zell AL. (2014) Self-Regulation to Maintain Moderate Self-Views: Prior Self-Regulation Increases Biases Related to Self-Esteem Oalib. 1: 1-6
Gailliot MT, Zell A, Baumeister RF. (2014) Having Used Self-Control Reduces Emotion Regulation—Emotion Regulation as Relying on Interchangeably Used “Self-Control Energy” Oalib. 1: 1-13
Gailliot MT. (2013) Hunger and Reduced Self-Control in the Laboratory and across the World: Reducing Hunger as a Self-Control Panacea Psychology. 4: 59-66
Maner JK, Gailliot MT, Menzel AJ, et al. (2012) Dispositional anxiety blocks the psychological effects of power. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 38: 1383-95
Gailliot MT, Gitter SA, Baker MD, et al. (2012) Breaking the Rules: Low Trait or State Self-Control Increases Social Norm Violations Psychology. 3: 1074-1083
Gailliot MT. (2012) Improved Self-Control Associated with Using Relatively Large Amounts of Glucose: Learning Self-Control Is Metabolically Expensive Psychology. 3: 987-990
DeWall CN, Deckman T, Gailliot MT, et al. (2011) Sweetened blood cools hot tempers: physiological self-control and aggression. Aggressive Behavior. 37: 73-80
Gailliot MT, Hildebrandt B, Eckel LA, et al. (2010) A theory of limited metabolic energy and premenstrual syndrome symptoms: Increased metabolic demands during the luteal phase divert metabolic resources from and impair self-control Review of General Psychology. 14: 269-282
Dewall CN, Baumeister RF, Schurtz DR, et al. (2010) Acting on Limited Resources: The Interactive Effects of Self-Regulatory Depletion and Individual Differences Handbook of Personality and Self-Regulation. 243-262
Schmeichel BJ, Gailliot MT, Filardo EA, et al. (2009) Terror management theory and self-esteem revisited: the roles of implicit and explicit self-esteem in mortality salience effects. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 96: 1077-87
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