Matthew L. Newman, Ph.D.
Affiliations: | University of Texas at Austin, Austin, Texas, U.S.A. |
Area:
social endocrinologyGoogle:
"Matthew Newman"Mean distance: 18.69 (cluster 8)
Parents
Sign in to add mentorRobert Josephs | grad student | 2003 | UT Austin | |
(Testosterone, status, and social stereotypes: Implications for cognitive performance.) |
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Publications
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Newman ML. (2014) Here we go again: bullying history and cardiovascular responses to social exclusion. Physiology & Behavior. 133: 76-80 |
Bauman S, Newman ML. (2013) Testing assumptions about cyberbullying: Perceived distress associated with acts of conventional and cyber bullying Psychology of Violence. 3: 27-38 |
Newman ML, Keough KA, Lee RM. (2009) Group identification and college adjustment: the experience of encountering a novel stereotype. The Journal of Social Psychology. 149: 694-708 |
Newman ML, Josephs RA. (2009) Testosterone as a personality variable Journal of Research in Personality. 43: 258-259 |
Hamilton LD, Newman ML, Delville CL, et al. (2008) Physiological stress response of young adults exposed to bullying during adolescence. Physiology & Behavior. 95: 617-24 |
Josephs RA, Sellers JG, Newman ML, et al. (2006) The mismatch effect: when testosterone and status are at odds. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 90: 999-1013 |
Newman ML, Sellers JG, Josephs RA. (2005) Testosterone, cognition, and social status. Hormones and Behavior. 47: 205-11 |
Newman ML, Pennebaker JW, Berry DS, et al. (2003) Lying words: predicting deception from linguistic styles. Personality & Social Psychology Bulletin. 29: 665-75 |
Josephs RA, Newman ML, Brown RP, et al. (2003) Status, testosterone, and human intellectual performance: stereotype threat as status concern. Psychological Science. 14: 158-63 |
Campbell RS, Gibbs BN, Guinn JS, et al. (2002) A biased view of liberal bias. The American Psychologist. 57: 297-8 |