Modeling of food intake is moderated by salient psychological group membership
暂无分享,去创建一个
Michael J. Platow | Tegan Cruwys | Jia Min Chang | M. Platow | T. Cruwys | Sarah A. Angullia | Sema E. Diler | Joanne L. Kirchner | Charlotte E. Lentfer | Ying Jun Lim | Aleisha Quarisa | Veronica W.L. Tor | Amanda L. Wadley | J. Chang | Aleisha Quarisa
[1] Leila T. Worth,et al. Processing of persuasive in-group messages. , 1990, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[2] A. van Knippenberg,et al. The influence of permeability of group boundaries and stability of group status on strategies of individual mobility and social change. , 1990, The British journal of social psychology.
[3] J. Polivy,et al. Effects of a model on eating behavior: the induction of a restrained eating style. , 1979, Journal of personality.
[4] J. Polivy,et al. Matching effects on eating: Do individual differences make a difference? , 2005, Appetite.
[5] J. Jetten,et al. Taking the strain: social identity, social support, and the experience of stress. , 2005, The British journal of social psychology.
[6] Russell Spears,et al. Visibility and anonymity effects on attraction and group cohesiveness , 2007 .
[7] L. Miles,et al. Implicit Behavioral Mimicry: Investigating the Impact of Group Membership , 2006 .
[8] S. Haslam,et al. A closer look at the role of social influence in the development of attitudes to eating , 1998 .
[9] Michael J. Platow,et al. “It’s not funny if they’re laughing”: Self-categorization, social influence, and responses to canned laughter , 2005 .
[10] Maya D. Guendelman,et al. Fitting In but Getting Fat , 2011, Psychological science.
[11] J. Conger,et al. The effect of social cues on the eating behavior of obese and normal subjects. , 1980, Journal of personality.
[12] C. Peter Herman,et al. Is the effect of a social model on eating attenuated by hunger? , 1991, Appetite.
[13] Sarah K. Murnen,et al. Femininity, masculinity, and disordered eating: a meta-analytic review. , 1997, The International journal of eating disorders.
[14] Bertjan Doosje,et al. Group-level self-definition and self-investment: a hierarchical (multicomponent) model of in-group identification. , 2008, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[15] D. Dolinski,et al. Social Influence , 2007 .
[16] U. Hess,et al. The impact of social context on mimicry , 2008, Biological Psychology.
[17] S. Chaiken,et al. Eating, social motives, and self-presentation in women and men , 1990 .
[18] M. Hogg,et al. Knowing what to think by knowing who you are: self-categorization and the nature of norm formation, conformity and group polarization. , 1990, The British journal of social psychology.
[19] J. Polivy,et al. Effects of the presence of others on food intake: a normative interpretation. , 2003, Psychological bulletin.
[20] J. Polivy,et al. Self-presentational conflict in social eating situations: a normative perspective , 2001, Appetite.
[21] M. Platow,et al. In‐group reassurance in a pain setting produces lower levels of physiological arousal: direct support for a self‐categorization analysis of social influence , 2007 .
[22] Stephanie A. Fryberg,et al. Identity-based motivation and health. , 2007, Journal of personality and social psychology.
[23] K. Brownell,et al. Bias, discrimination, and obesity. , 2001, Obesity research.