Browsing Department of Psychology by Title

Navigation

Display Options

Results

  • Cromer, Lisa D.; Freyd, Jennifer J. (2004-11)
    Participants (N=337) were presented with four vignettes in which an adult confided to a friend about being sexually or physically abused at age 9 by either a stranger or father. The memory was presented as either continuous ...
  • Gray, Mary E.; Cromer, Lisa D.; Freyd, Jennifer J. (2005-11)
    Since European contact, Native Americans have experienced loss of life, land, and culture causing intergenerational trauma and unresolved grief (Yellow Horse Brave Heart & DeBruyn, 1998). Not surprisingly, identification ...
  • Hughes, Bradley T.; Costello, Cory K.; Pearman, Joshua J.; Razavi, Pooya; Bedford-Petersen, Cianna; Ludwid, Rita M.; Srivastava, Sanjay (University of California Press, 2021-06-10)
    Associations between socioeconomic status (SES) and personality traits have important implications for theory and application. Progress in understanding these associations depends on valid measurement, unbiased estimation, ...
  • Cheng, Theresa W.; Mills, Kathryn L.; Miranda Dominguez, Oscar; Zeithamova, Dagmar; Perrone, Anders; Sturgeon, Darrick; Feldstein Ewing, Sarah W.; Fisher, Philip A.; Pfeifer, Jennifer H.; Fair, Damian A.; Mackiewicz Seghete, Kristen L. (Elsevier, 2020)
    Characterizing typologies of childhood adversity may inform the development of risk profiles and corresponding interventions aimed at mitigating its lifelong consequences. A neurobiological grounding of these typologies ...
  • Foynes, M. Ming; Freyd, Jennifer J.; DePrince, Anne P. (2006-11)
    The present study examined the association between perpetrator relationship and disclosure latency (DL) for physical and emotional abuse using a survey methodology with a sample of 202 undergraduate participants. Based on ...
  • Becker-Blease, Kathryn; Friend, Daniel; Freyd, Jennifer J. (2006-11)
    Previous studies indicate that approximately 21% of undergraduate men report attraction to “little children”, 4 – 9 % report having fantasies about sex with a child, and 5 – 6% report masturbating to these fantasies. ...
  • Markowitz, David M.; Hancock, Jeffery T.; Woodworth, Michael T.; Ely, Maxwell (Frontiers in Psychology, 2023-02-07)
    Most deception scholars agree that deception production and deception detection effects often display mixed results across settings. For example, some liars use more emotion than truth-tellers when discussing fake opinions ...
  • Giuliani, Nicole R.; Kelly, Nichole R. (Frontiers Media, 2021-03-19)
    Poor ability to regulate one's own food intake based on hunger cues may encourage children to eat beyond satiety, leading to increased risk of diet-related diseases. Self-regulation has multiple forms, yet no one has ...
  • Adams-Clark, Alexis A.; Lee, Angela H.; Everett, Yoel; Zarosinski, Arianna; Martin, Christina Gamache; Zalewski, Maureen (BMC, 2022-08-15)
    Background: Effective emotion regulation abilities are essential for engaging in positive, validating parenting practices. Yet, many parents report difficulties with both emotion regulation and positive parenting, and ...
  • Klest, Bridget K. (Bridget Kristen); Freyd, Jennifer J. (2005-11)
    Previous research has consistently found a positive correlation between history of trauma and dissociation, and recent research (DePrince and Freyd, 1999; 2004) suggests that people who score high on a measure of dissociation ...
  • DePrince, Anne P.; Freyd, Jennifer J. (Blackwell, 1999)
    Two groups of college students were selected on the basis of their scores on the Dissociative Experiences Scale (DES). The high-DES group and low-DES group both completed the standard and a new dual-task version of the ...
  • Zabelina, Darya; Condon, David; Beeman, Mark (Frontiers in Psychology, 2014)
    Previous research provides disparate accounts of the putative association between creativity and psychopathology, including schizotypy, psychoticism, hypomania, bipolar disorder, ADHD, and autism spectrum disorders. To ...
  • Cook, Jonathan E.; Arrow, Holly; Malle, Bertram F. (SAGE Publications, 2011)
    An experience sampling study examined the degree to which feeling stereotyped predicts feelings of low power and inhibition among stigmatized and nonstigmatized individuals. For 7 days, participants with a concealable (gay ...
  • Smith, Zachary; Arrow, Holly (Journal of the Evolutionary Studies Consortium, 2010)
    Religion is a cultural universal that has puzzled evolutionists since Darwin. The moral, social, emotional, and explanatory components that make up complex religious systems offer both evolutionary benefits and costs. ...
  • Cholankeril, Annmarie; Freyd, Jennifer J.; Pears, K.C.; Becker-Blease, Kathryn; Fisher, P.A. (2006-11)
    The purpose of this study is to examine dissociation in a population of preschool-age foster children with documented cases of maltreatment. Data were collected from participants in the Early Intervention Foster Care program ...
  • Allard, Carolyn B. (Carolyn Brigitte), 1968-; Freyd, Jennifer J.; Momiyama, Takenori (2004-08)
    In Pennebaker's writing paradigm, participants are instructed either to write about emotional events or neutral topics. Those assigned to the emotional writing condition typically display physical and psychological health ...
  • DePrince, Anne P.; Freyd, Jennifer J. (2004-02-20)
    Previous work reported in this journal (DePrince & Freyd, 1999) suggested that the cognitive capacities of high dissociators are impaired under conditions of focused (selective) attention, but not under conditions of divided ...
  • Klest, Bridget K. (Bridget Kristen); Freyd, Jennifer J. (2004-11)
    Past research has demonstrated in a variety of contexts that writing about emotional topics can benefit physical health and general well being. Most of this prior research has used a computer program, but not global essay ...
  • Edwards, Valerie J.; Freyd, Jennifer J.; Dube, Shanta R.; Anda, Robert F.; Felitti, Vincent J. (2006-11)
    Betrayal trauma theory (Freyd, 1999) postulates that abuse perpetrated by a caregiver or someone close to you results in worse outcomes than abuse perpetrated by someone less central to your well-being. We used data from ...

Search Scholars' Bank


Advanced Search

Browse

My Account

Statistics