|
|
|
Education
-
Ph.D. , University of California, Santa Barbara, 2000
Description of Research
Summary Statement of Research Interests
Professor Lickel studies the cognitive proceses underlying people's everyday understanding of social groups, investigating how people make complex social judgments pertaining to morality. He investigates when and why people make judgments of collective responsibility - when all of the members of a social group are held responsible and are punished for the blameworthy actions of a single member of the group. This line of research on collective responsibility includes cultural differences between Japan, China, and the U.S. regarding when and why collective responsibility judgments are made.
Publications
Journal Article
-
Ronquillo, J., Lickel, B. A., Denson, T. F., Lu, Z. L., Nandy, A. A., Maddox, K. B.
(2007).
The effects of skin tone on race-related amygdala activity: An fMRI investigation. Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience.
Vol. 2 (39), pp. 44.
-
Mendes, W. B., Blascovich, J., Hunter, S., Lickel, B. A., Jost, J. T.
(2007).
Threatened by the unexpected: Physiological responses during social interactions with expectancy-violating partners. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.
Vol. 92 (698), pp. 716.
-
Iyer, A., Schmader, T., Lickel, B. A.
(2007).
Why individuals protest the perceived transgressions of their country: The role of anger, shame, and guilt. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.
Vol. 33 (572), pp. 587.
-
Lickel, B., Rutchick, A., Hamilton, D. L., Sherman, S. L.
(2006).
Intuitive theories of group types and relational principles. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.
Vol. 42, pp. 28-39..
-
Lickel, B. A., Lickel, B., Miller, N., Stenstrom, D. M., Denson, T. F., Schmader, T.
(2006).
Vicarious retribution: The role of collective blame in intergroup aggression. Personality and Social Psychology Review.
Vol. 10 (372), pp. 390.
-
Johns, M., Schmader, T., Lickel, B. A.
(2005).
Ashamed to be an American? The role of identification in predicting vicarious shame for Anti-Arab prejudice after 9-11. Self and Identity.
Vol. 4, pp. 331-348.
|
|