David J. Lick
Affiliations: | 2011-2015 | Psychology | University of California, Los Angeles, Los Angeles, CA |
Google:
"David Lick"Mean distance: 24.79
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. |
Neuenswander KL, Gillespie GSR, Lick DJ, et al. (2024) Social evaluative implications of sensory adaptation to human voices. Royal Society Open Science. 11: 231348 |
Alt NP, Lick DJ, Johnson KL. (2020) The straight categorization bias: A motivated and altruistic reasoning account. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology |
Alt NP, Lick DJ, Hunger JM, et al. (2019) Evaluative implications of intersecting body weight and other social categories: The role of typicality. Body Image. 31: 19-23 |
Lick DJ, Johnson KL, Rule NO, et al. (2019) Perceivers Infer Base Rates From Social Context to Judge Perceptually Ambiguous Social Identities Social Cognition. 37: 596-623 |
Goodale BM, Alt NP, Lick DJ, et al. (2018) Groups at a glance: Perceivers infer social belonging in a group based on perceptual summaries of sex ratio. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General. 147: 1660-1676 |
Lick DJ, Johnson KL. (2018) Facial Cues to Race and Gender Interactively Guide Age Judgments Social Cognition. 36: 497-516 |
Pauker K, Carpinella CM, Lick DJ, et al. (2018) Malleability in Biracial Categorizations: The Impact of Geographic Context and Targets' Racial Heritage Social Cognition. 36: 461-480 |
Lick DJ, Alter AL, Freeman JB. (2017) Superior Pattern Detectors Efficiently Learn, Activate, Apply, and Update Social Stereotypes. Journal of Experimental Psychology. General |
Alt NP, Goodale B, Lick DJ, et al. (2017) Threat in the Company of Men: Ensemble Perception and Threat Evaluations of Groups Varying in Sex Ratio Social Psychological and Personality Science. 10: 152-159 |
Lick DJ, Johnson KL. (2016) Straight until proven gay: A systematic bias toward straight categorizations in sexual orientation judgments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology. 110: 801-817 |