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Supporting the status quo is weakly associated with subjective well-being: A comparison of the palliative function of ideology across social status groups using a meta-analytic approach. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Salvador Vargas Salfate,Julia Spielmann,D A Briley
Research has suggested that the endorsement of ideologies supporting the status quo leads to higher subjective psychological well-being-an idea labeled as the palliative function of ideology within system justification theory. Furthermore, this approach has suggested that this association should be moderated by social status. Specifically, the association between the endorsement of ideologies supporting
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Who am I? A second-order meta-analytic review of correlates of the self in childhood and adolescence. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Thorben Jansen,Jennifer Meyer,John Hattie,Jens Möller
People's subjective beliefs about themselves affect what people think and, consequently, what they do. Positive self-beliefs are important for many life outcomes, from academic success to well-being, especially during K-12 education as a crucial developmental period. Many empirical studies and meta-analyses have examined correlates of self-beliefs. The present second-order meta-analytic review integrates
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Reporting bias, not external focus: A robust Bayesian meta-analysis and systematic review of the external focus of attention literature. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-01 Brad McKay,Abbey E Corson,Jeswende Seedu,Celeste S De Faveri,Hibaa Hasan,Kristen Arnold,Faith C Adams,Michael J Carter
Evidence has ostensibly been accumulating over the past 2 decades suggesting that an external focus on the intended movement effect (e.g., on the golf club during a swing) is superior to an internal focus on body movements (e.g., on your arms during a swing) for skill acquisition. Seven previous meta-studies have all reported evidence of external focus superiority. The most comprehensive of these concluded
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When connecting with LGBTQ+ communities helps and why it does: A meta-analysis of the relationship between connectedness and health-related outcomes. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-11-01 G Tyler Lefevor,Sydney A Sorrell,Samuel J Skidmore,Kiet D Huynh,Rachel M Golightly,Eleanor Standifird,Kyrstin Searle,Madelyn Call
We conducted a multilevel meta-analysis of 390 effect sizes from 167 studies with 157,923 participants examining the relationship between connectedness with lesbian, gay, bisexual, transgender, and queer/questioning (LGBTQ+) communities and health-related outcomes, following Preferred Reporting Items for Systematic Reviews and Meta-Analyses guidelines. We conducted our initial search in January 2023
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Defining social reward: A systematic review of human and animal studies. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-21 Ana Stijovic,Magdalena Siegel,Asena U Kocan,Isidora Bojkovska,Sebastian Korb,Giorgia Silani
Social rewards are strong drivers of behavior and fundamental to well-being, yet there is a lack of consensus regarding what actually defines a reward as "social." Because a systematic overview of existing social reward operationalizations is currently absent, a review of the literature seems necessary to advance toward a unified framework and to better guide research and theory. To bridge this gap
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Associations between cognitive appraisals and emotions: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-14 Gerard C Yeo,Desmond C Ong
The core premise of cognitive appraisal theories of emotion is that emotions are produced from our interpretation of what we experience. Compared to other major theoretical frameworks in emotion, the appraisal perspective emphasizes the centrality of these cognitive interpretations in giving rise to emotions. Decades of research have yielded numerous studies that broadly agree on the centrality of
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Fadeout and persistence of intervention impacts on social-emotional and cognitive skills in children and adolescents: A meta-analytic review of randomized controlled trials. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Emma R Hart,Drew H Bailey,Sha Luo,Pritha Sengupta,Tyler W Watts
Researchers and policymakers aspire for educational interventions to change children's long-run developmental trajectories. However, intervention impacts on cognitive and achievement measures commonly fade over time. Less is known, although much is theorized, about social-emotional skill persistence. The current meta-analysis investigated whether intervention impacts on social-emotional skills demonstrated
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Categories of training to improve empathy: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Xiao Wu,Su-Chen Yao,Xue-Jing Lu,Yu-Qing Zhou,Ya-Zhuo Kong,Li Hu
Due to the vital role of empathy in promoting prosocial behaviors and nurturing social bonds, there is a growing interest in cultivating empathy. Yet, the effectiveness of existing training methods on empathy, especially on different dimensions of empathy (i.e., affective, cognitive, motivational, and behavioral empathy), varies tremendously, and the underlying causes for this heterogeneity remain
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Does the apple fall far from the tree? A meta-analysis linking parental factors to children's intrinsic and extrinsic goals. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Kelly A Ferber,Emma L Bradshaw,Michael Noetel,Tsz Ying Wong,Jiseul S Ahn,Philip D Parker,Richard M Ryan
Self-determination theory (Ryan & Deci, 2017) has highlighted the differential roles that intrinsic life goals (for personal growth, close relationships, community connections, and physical health) and extrinsic life goals (i.e., for wealth, image, and status) play in supporting well-being. Less is known about how orientations toward these two types of aspirations develop. It is likely that early environmental
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Early childhood executive function predicts concurrent and later social and behavioral outcomes: A review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-10-01 Nicole J Stucke,Sabine Doebel
Executive function (EF), the set of mental processes and skills involved in goal-oriented planning, organizing, and controlling behavior, is believed to support child development across many domains of life. However, although ample evidence suggests a relation between childhood EF and academic skills, it is less clear what its role is in domains beyond academics. We report a meta-analysis of relations
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Age-related changes in emotion recognition across childhood: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-09-01 Christopher Riddell,Milica Nikolić,Elise Dusseldorp,Mariska E Kret
Children's ability to accurately recognize the external emotional signals produced by those around them represents a milestone in their socioemotional development and is associated with a number of important psychosocial outcomes. A plethora of individual studies have examined when, and in which order, children acquire emotion knowledge over the course of their development. Yet, very few attempts have
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The unpleasantness of thinking: A meta-analytic review of the association between mental effort and negative affect. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-05 Louise David,Eliana Vassena,Erik Bijleveld
Influential theories in psychology, neuroscience, and economics assume that the exertion of mental effort should feel aversive. Yet, this assumption is usually untested, and it is challenged by casual observations and previous studies. Here, we meta-analyze (a) whether mental effort is generally experienced as aversive and (b) whether the association between mental effort and aversive feelings depends
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Gender differences in sex drive: Reply to Conley and Yang (2024). Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Julius Frankenbach,Marcel Weber,David D Loschelder,Helena Kilger,Malte Friese
Our meta-analysis on gender differences in sex drive found a stronger sex drive in men compared to women (Frankenbach et al., 2022). Conley and Yang (2024) criticized how we interpreted the findings and provided suggestions regarding the origins of these gender differences, an undertaking that we had refrained from doing in our original work. We concur with several important points made by Conley and
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"All we have to fear is fear itself": Paradigms for reducing fear by preventing awareness of it. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-08-01 Paul Siegel,Bradley S Peterson
Research on unconscious fear responses has recently been translated into experimental paradigms for reducing fear that bypass conscious awareness of the phobic stimulus and thus do not induce distress. These paradigms stand in contrast to exposure therapies for anxiety disorders, which require direct confrontation of feared situations and thus are distressing. We systematically review these unconscious
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Evaluating the robustness of parameter estimates in cognitive models: A meta-analytic review of multinomial processing tree models across the multiverse of estimation methods. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-27 Henrik Singmann,Daniel W Heck,Marius Barth,Edgar Erdfelder,Nina R Arnold,Frederik Aust,Jimmy Calanchini,Fabian E Gümüsdagli,Sebastian S Horn,David Kellen,Karl C Klauer,Dora Matzke,Franziska Meissner,Martha Michalkiewicz,Marie Luisa Schaper,Christoph Stahl,Beatrice G Kuhlmann,Julia Groß
Researchers have become increasingly aware that data-analysis decisions affect results. Here, we examine this issue systematically for multinomial processing tree (MPT) models, a popular class of cognitive models for categorical data. Specifically, we examine the robustness of MPT model parameter estimates that arise from two important decisions: the level of data aggregation (complete-pooling, no-pooling
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Negativity bias in intergroup contact: Meta-analytical evidence that bad is stronger than good, especially when people have the opportunity and motivation to opt out of contact. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-27 Stefania Paolini,Meghann Gibbs,Brett Sales,Danielle Anderson,Kylie McIntyre
Seventy years of research on intergroup contact, or face-to-face interactions between members of opposing social groups, demonstrates that positive contact typically reduces prejudice and increases social cohesion. Extant syntheses, however, have not considered the full breadth of contact valence (positive/negative) and have treated self-selection as a threat to validity. This research bridges intergroup
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Health-promotion interventions targeting multiple behaviors: A meta-analytic review of general and behavior-specific processes of change. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-24 Angela L Zhang,Sicong Liu,Benjamin X White,Xi C Liu,Marta Durantini,Man-Pui Sally Chan,Wenhao Dai,Yubo Zhou,Melody Leung,Qijia Ye,Devlin O'Keefe,Lidia Palmese,Dolores Albarracín
Although health-promotion interventions that recommend changes across multiple behavioral domains are a newer alternative to single-behavior interventions, their general efficacy and their mechanisms of change have not been fully ascertained. This comprehensive meta-analysis (6,878 effect sizes from 803 independent samples from 364 research reports, N = 186,729 participants) examined the association
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A systematic review and Bayesian meta-analysis of 30 years of stress generation research: Clinical, psychological, and sociodemographic risk and protective factors for prospective negative life events. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-20 Richard T Liu,Jessica L Hamilton,Simone Imani Boyd,Melissa J Dreier,Rachel F L Walsh,Ana E Sheehan,Margarid R Turnamian,Anna R C Workman,Saskia L Jorgensen
Stress generation posits that (a) individuals at-risk for psychopathology may inadvertently experience higher rates of prospective dependent stress (i.e., stressors that are in part influenced by their thoughts and behaviors) but not independent stress (i.e., stressors occurring outside their influence), and (b) this elevated dependent stress, in some measure, is what places these individuals at-risk
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A systematic review and meta-analysis of predictors of response to trauma-focused psychotherapy for posttraumatic stress disorder. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-17 Dharani Keyan,Nadine Garland,Jasmine Choi-Christou,Jenny Tran,Meaghan O'Donnell,Richard A Bryant
Although trauma-focused psychotherapy (T-F psychotherapy) is the treatment of choice for posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD), up to one half of patients do not respond to this treatment. Attempts to improve response to T-F psychotherapy have focused on augmenting fear extinction-based factors. Here, a systematic and meta-analytic review of predictors of T-F psychotherapy outcome was conducted with
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Parent-child boundary dissolution and children's psychological difficulties: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-17 Morgan J Thompson,Cory R Platts,Patrick T Davies
Boundary dissolution has broadly been defined as the breakdown of boundaries and loss of psychological distinctiveness in the parent-child subsystem. Qualitative reviews have highlighted the developmental and clinical value of examining boundary dissolution as a multidimensional construct. Though prior work suggests patterns share minimal variance, research has yet to quantitatively synthesize the
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Influences of past moral behavior on future behavior: A review of sequential moral behavior studies using meta-analytic techniques. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Rose Ferguson,Leah Kaufmann,Aimee Brown,Xochitl de la Piedad Garcia
Experimental research on sequential moral behavior (SMB) has found that engaging in an initial moral (or immoral) behavior can sometimes lead to moral balancing (i.e., switching between positive and negative behavior) and sometimes to moral consistency (i.e., maintaining a consistent pattern of positive or negative behavior). In two meta-analyses, we present the first comprehensive syntheses of SMB
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Exposure to community violence and parenting behaviors: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Daneele Thorpe,Rebecca Mirhashem,Tori Peña,Jill Smokoski,Kristin Bernard
This meta-analysis examines the association between exposure to community violence and parenting behaviors (i.e., positive parenting, harsh/neglectful parenting, parent-child relationship quality, and behavior control). A systematic search yielded 437 articles that measured community violence exposure before or at the time of parenting, assessed parenting, and were available in English. There were
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Development of narcissism across the life span: A meta-analytic review of longitudinal studies. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-06-01 Ulrich Orth,Samantha Krauss,Mitja D Back
This meta-analytic review investigated the development of narcissism across the life span, by synthesizing the available longitudinal data on mean-level change and rank-order stability. Three factors of narcissism were examined: agentic, antagonistic, and neurotic narcissism. Analyses were based on data from 51 samples, including 37,247 participants. As effect size measures, we used the standardized
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Digital data and personality: A systematic review and meta-analysis of human perception and computer prediction. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-16 Joanne Hinds,Adam N Joinson
In recent years, our increasing use of technology has resulted in the production of vast amounts of data. Consequently, many researchers have analyzed digital data in attempt to understand its relationship with individuals' personalities. Such endeavors have inspired efforts from divergent fields, resulting in widely dispersed findings that are seldom synthesized. In this two-part study, we draw from
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Maternal and paternal sensitivity: Key determinants of child attachment security examined through meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-05-06 Sheri Madigan,Audrey-Ann Deneault,Robbie Duschinsky,Marian J Bakermans-Kranenburg,Carlo Schuengel,Marinus H van IJzendoorn,Anh Ly,R M Pasco Fearon,Rachel Eirich,Marije L Verhage
Sensitive caregiving behavior, which involves the ability to notice, interpret, and quickly respond to a child's signals of need and/or interest, is a central determinant of secure child-caregiver attachment. Yet, significant heterogeneity in effect sizes exists across the literature, and sources of heterogeneity have yet to be explained. For all child-caregiver dyads, there was a significant and positive
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The impact of creativity training on creative performance: A meta-analytic review and critical evaluation of 5 decades of creativity training studies. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-18 Ut Na Sio,Hugues Lortie-Forgues
Creativity is widely considered a skill essential to succeeding in the modern world. Numerous creativity training programs have been developed, and several meta-analyses have attempted to summarize the effectiveness of these programs and identify the features influencing their impact. Unfortunately, previous meta-analyses share a number of limitations, most notably overlooking the potentially strong
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On the relationship between unprompted thought and affective well-being: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-15 Julia W Y Kam,Aaron Y Wong,Raela F Thiemann,Fiza Hasan,Jessica R Andrews-Hanna,Caitlin Mills
There is a growing recognition that thoughts often arise independently of external demands. These thoughts can span from reminiscing your last vacation to contemplating career goals to fantasizing about meeting your favorite musician. Often referred to as mind wandering, such frequently occurring unprompted thoughts have widespread impact on our daily functions, with the dominant narrative converging
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Committed (dis)honesty: A systematic meta-analytic review of the divergent effects of social commitment to individuals or honesty oaths on dishonest behavior. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-04-15 Janis H Zickfeld,Simon T S Karg,Sebastian S Engen,Ana Sofía Ramirez Gonzalez,John Michael,Panagiotis Mitkidis
People feel committed to other individuals, groups, organizations, or moral norms in many contexts of everyday life. Such social commitment can lead to positive outcomes, such as increased job satisfaction or relationship longevity; yet, there can also be detrimental effects to feeling committed. Recent high-profile cases of fraud or corruption in companies like Enron or Volkswagen are likely influenced
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Mind-wandering increases in frequency over time during task performance: An individual-participant meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-29 Anthony P Zanesco,Ekaterina Denkova,Amishi P Jha
Attention has a seemingly inevitable tendency to turn inward toward our thoughts. Mind-wandering refers to moments when this inward focus diverts attention away from the current task-at-hand. Mind-wandering is thought to be ubiquitous, having been estimated to occur between 30% and 50% of our waking moments. Yet, it is unclear whether this frequency is similar within-task performance contexts and unknown
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Religiosity predicts prosociality, especially when measured by self-report: A meta-analysis of almost 60 years of research. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-26 John Michael Kelly,Stephanie R Kramer,Azim F Shariff
This meta-analysis explores the long-standing and heavily debated question of whether religiosity is associated with prosocial and antisocial behavior at the individual level. In an analysis of 701 effects across 237 samples, encompassing 811,663 participants, a significant relationship of r = .13 was found between religiosity and prosociality (and antisociality, which was treated as its inverse).
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Wipe it off: A meta-analytic review of the psychological consequences and antecedents of physical cleansing. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Spike W S Lee,Kathleen Chen,Cecilia Ma,Joe Hoang
Physical cleansing is a human universal. It serves health and survival functions. It also carries rich psychological meanings that interest scholars across disciplines. What psychological effects result from cleansing? What psychological states trigger cleansing? The present meta-analysis takes stock of all experimental studies examining the psychological consequences and antecedents of cleansing-related
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Can sociocultural and contextual factors explain gender differences in sex drive? A response to Frankenbach et al. (2022). Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-15 Terri D Conley,T Ariel Yang
Most theories predict, and most studies demonstrate, that men have a higher sex drive than women do. A spirited debate has emerged surrounding the origins of gender differences in sex drive; Frankenbach et al. (2022) commented on this controversy in the context of their impressive meta-analysis. We provide a different interpretation of these findings: Specifically, women get worse sex than men do.
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A meta-analytic review of the relation between spatial anxiety and spatial skills. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Elyssa A Geer,Connie Barroso,Rachel A Conlon,Jamie M Dasher,Colleen M Ganley
Spatial skills are key predictors of achievement in science, technology, engineering, and mathematics disciplines, despite being acquired through everyday life and not formally taught in schools. Spatial skills include a diverse group of abilities broadly related to reasoning about properties of space such as distance and direction. Recently, more research has investigated the link between spatial
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The immediate effect of discrimination on mental health: A meta-analytic review of the causal evidence. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Christine Emmer,Julia Dorn,Jutta Mata
This meta-analysis synthesizes experimental studies on the immediate effects of discrimination on mental health, exploring the effects of different paradigms and discrimination types on diverse facets of mental health. We analyzed data from a systematic literature search (73 studies; 12,097 participants; 245 effect sizes) for randomized controlled trials with manipulation of discrimination as a predictor
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A meta-analytic review of the associations of personality, intelligence, and physical size with social status. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Michael P Grosz,Robbie C M van Aert,Mitja D Back
Theories have proposed diverse reasons for why individual differences such as personality traits lead to social status attainment in face-to-face groups. We integrated these different theoretical standpoints into a model with four paths from individual differences to status: a dominance, a competence, a virtue, and a micropolitics path. To investigate these paths, we meta-analyzed over 100 years of
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The stability of cognitive abilities: A meta-analytic review of longitudinal studies. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-08 Moritz Breit,Vsevolod Scherrer,Elliot M Tucker-Drob,Franzis Preckel
Cognitive abilities, including general intelligence and domain-specific abilities such as fluid reasoning, comprehension knowledge, working memory capacity, and processing speed, are regarded as some of the most stable psychological traits, yet there exist no large-scale systematic efforts to document the specific patterns by which their rank-order stability changes over age and time interval, or how
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Home learning environments and children's language and literacy skills: A meta-analytic review of studies conducted in low- and middle-income countries. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Sonali Nag,Shaher Banu Vagh,Katrina May Dulay,Margaret Snowling,Enrica Donolato,Monica Melby-Lervåg
A robust finding from research in high-income countries is that children living in resource-poor homes are vulnerable to difficulties with language and literacy but less is known about this association in low- and middle-income (LMI) countries. We present a meta-analysis of 6,678 correlations from studies in 43 LMI countries. Overall, the results indicate a small but significant association (r = .08)
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Parental self-regulation and engagement in emotion socialization: A systematic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-02-01 Katherine Edler,Kristin Valentino
Parental emotion-related socialization behaviors (ERSBs)-including reactions to emotions, emotional expressiveness, and emotion-related discussion-can foster or hinder children and adolescents' self-regulation development. Toward a goal of identifying specific mechanisms by which children and adolescents develop skillful, adaptive self-regulation or, conversely, self-regulation difficulties and psychopathology
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Empathy, sympathy, and emotion regulation: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-01 H Melis Yavuz,Tyler Colasante,Emma Galarneau,Tina Malti
Empathy, sympathy, and emotion regulation are core components of social-emotional development. Regulating vicariously induced negative emotions is thought to support feeling empathy and sympathy for others in need, but empirical evidence for such effects is mixed. Moreover, despite the longstanding conceptual distinction between empathy and sympathy, most researchers refer to and measure these constructs
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The multifaceted role of emotion regulation in suicidality: Systematic reviews and meta-analytic evidence. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Guyonne Rogier,Carlo Chiorri,Sara Beomonte Zobel,Stefania Muzi,Cecilia Serena Pace,Mike W-L Cheung,Patrizia Velotti
Despite the number of empirical contributions on the topic, scientists have offered contrasting perspectives on the role of adaptive versus maladaptive emotion regulation (ER) strategies in suicidality. Moreover, suicidal attempts and suicidal ideation are likely to be differentially related to single ER strategies. To provide more systematic knowledge that can be used to draw sound conclusions and
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Unpacking the effects of socialization programs on newcomer retention: A meta-analytic review of field experiments. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2024-01-01 Songqi Liu,Daniel Watts,Jie Feng,Ying Wu,Jingfeng Yin
Decades of research conducted using field experiments and quasi-experiments have enabled us to accumulate causal evidence on the effectiveness of onboarding and socialization programs (SPs) across various contexts including employment, higher education, and military services. However, the literature is devoid of an integrated conceptual framework and a quantitative review evaluating the effect of such
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Suicidality among individuals with gambling problems: A meta-analytic literature review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-12-14 Joakim Hellumbråten Kristensen,Ståle Pallesen,Jonas Bauer,Tony Leino,Mark D Griffiths,Eilin K Erevik
Gambling problems have consistently been linked to suicidality, including suicidal ideation, attempts, and suicide. However, the magnitude of the relationship has varied significantly across studies and the potential causal link between gambling problems and suicidality is currently unclear. A meta-analytic literature review was conducted to (a) synthesize pooled prevalence rates of suicidality among
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Prenatal stress and externalizing behaviors in childhood and adolescence: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-16 Irene Tung,Alison E Hipwell,Philip Grosse,Lindsey Battaglia,Elena Cannova,Gabrielle English,Allysa D Quick,Bianca Llamas,Megan Taylor,Jill E Foust
Accumulating evidence suggests that psychological distress during pregnancy is linked to offspring risk for externalizing outcomes (e.g., reactive/aggressive behaviors, hyperactivity, and impulsivity). Effect sizes across studies have varied widely, however, due to differences in study design and methodology, including control for the confounding continuation of distress in the postnatal period. Clarifying
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Project harmony: A systematic review and network meta-analysis of psychotherapy and pharmacologic trials for comorbid posttraumatic stress, alcohol, and other drug use disorders. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-16 Denise A Hien,Santiago Papini,Lissette M Saavedra,Alexandria G Bauer,Lesia M Ruglass,Chantel T Ebrahimi,Skye Fitzpatrick,Teresa López-Castro,Sonya B Norman,Therese K Killeen,Sudie E Back,Antonio A Morgan-López
We conducted a systematic review and network meta-analyses (NMA) of psychotherapy and pharmacologic treatments for individuals with co-occurring posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) and alcohol or other drug use disorder (AOD). A comprehensive search spanning 1995-2019 yielded a pool of 39 studies for systematic review, including 24 randomized controlled trials for the NMA. Study interventions were
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The efficacy of combining cognitive training and noninvasive brain stimulation: A transdiagnostic systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-11-13 Anika Poppe,Franziska D E Ritter,Leonie Bais,James E Pustejovsky,Marie-José van Tol,Branislava Ćurčić-Blake,Gerdina H M Pijnenborg,Lisette van der Meer
Over the past decade, an increasing number of studies investigated the innovative approach of supplementing cognitive training (CT) with noninvasive brain stimulation (NIBS) to increase the effects on outcomes. In this review, we aim to summarize the evidence for this treatment combination. We identified 72 published and unpublished studies (reporting 773 effect sizes), including 2,518 participants
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A systematic review of the ambivalent sexism literature: Hostile sexism protects men's power; benevolent sexism guards traditional gender roles. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-10-12 Orly Bareket,Susan T Fiske
According to ambivalent sexism theory (Glick & Fiske, 1996), the coexistence of gendered power differences and mutual interdependence creates two apparently opposing but complementary sexist ideologies: hostile sexism (HS; viewing women as manipulative competitors who seek to gain power over men) coincides with benevolent sexism (BS; a chivalrous view of women as pure and moral, yet weak and passive
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Comparing gesture frequency between autistic and neurotypical individuals: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-10-09 Nicola McKern,Nicole Dargue,Naomi Sweller
While diagnostic assessments for autism routinely screen for reduced frequency of gestures, evidence supporting reduced gesture production in autism is inconsistent. This systematic review and meta-analysis aimed to clarify differences in frequency of gestures between autistic and neurotypical individuals. Included studies compared frequency of gestures between autistic and neurotypical individuals
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Cortical, subcortical, and cerebellar contributions to language processing: A meta-analytic review of 403 neuroimaging experiments. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-09-28 Sabrina Turker,Philipp Kuhnke,Simon B Eickhoff,Svenja Caspers,Gesa Hartwigsen
Language is a key human faculty for communication and interaction that provides invaluable insight into the human mind. Previous work has dissected different linguistic operations, but the large-scale brain networks involved in language processing are still not fully uncovered. Particularly, little is known about the subdomain-specific engagement of brain areas during semantic, syntactic, phonological
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Fenneman et al.'s (2022) review of formal impulsivity models: Implications for theory and measures of impulsivity. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-09-25 Simon T van Baal,Jakob Hohwy,Antonio Verdejo-García,Emmanouil Konstantinidis,Lukasz Walasek
In Fenneman et al.'s (2022) review of theories and integrated impulsivity model, the authors distinguish between information impulsivity (i.e., acting without considering consequences) and temporal impulsivity (i.e., the tendency to pick sooner outcomes over later ones). The authors find that both types of impulsivity can be adaptive in different contexts. For example, when individuals experience scarcity
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Knowing before doing: Review and mega-analysis of action understanding in prereaching infants. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-29 Shari Liu,Melyssa Almeida
The relationship between experience and knowledge is one of the oldest and deepest questions in psychology. In developmental science, research on this question has focused on prereaching infants who cannot yet retrieve objects by reaching for and grasping them. Over the past 2 decades, behavioral research in this population has produced two seemingly contradictory findings: After first-person experience
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The conspiratorial mind: A meta-analytic review of motivational and personological correlates. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-26 Shauna M Bowes,Thomas H Costello,Arber Tasimi
A tidal wave of research has tried to uncover the motivational and personological correlates of conspiratorial ideation, often studying these two classes of correlates in parallel. Here, we synthesize this vast and piecemeal literature through a multilevel meta-analytic review that spanned 170 studies, 257 samples, 52 variables, 1,429 effect sizes, and 158,473 participants. Overall, we found that the
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Child maltreatment and alexithymia: A meta-analytic review. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Julia Ditzer,Eileen Y Wong,Rhea N Modi,Maciej Behnke,James J Gross,Anat Talmon
Alexithymia refers to difficulties identifying and describing one's emotions. Growing evidence suggests that alexithymia is a key transdiagnostic risk factor. Despite its clinical importance, the etiology of alexithymia is largely unknown. The present study employs meta-analytic methods to summarize findings on the role of one hypothesized antecedent of adult alexithymia, namely child maltreatment
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The vicious cycle of psychopathology and stressful life events: A meta-analytic review testing the stress generation model. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-06-01 Katerina Rnic,Angela C Santee,Jennifer-Ashley Hoffmeister,Hallie Liu,Katharine K Chang,Rachel X Chen,Richard W J Neufeld,Daniel A Machado,Lisa R Starr,David J A Dozois,Joelle LeMoult
Stress generation theory initially posited that depression elevates risk for some stressful events (i.e., dependent events) but not others (i.e., independent events). This preregistered meta-analytic review examined whether stress generation occurs transdiagnostically by examining 95 longitudinal studies with 38,228 participants (537 total effect sizes) from over 30 years of research. Our multilevel
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Priming behavior: A meta-analysis of the effects of behavioral and nonbehavioral primes on overt behavioral outcomes. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-03-13 Wenhao Dai,Tianshu Yang,Benjamin X White,Ryan Palmer,Emily K Sanders,Jack A McDonald,Melody Leung,Dolores Albarracín
Past meta-analyses of the effects of priming on overt behavior have not examined whether the effects and processes of priming behavioral or nonbehavioral concepts (e.g., priming action through the word go and priming religion through the word church) differ, even though these possibilities are important to our understanding of concept accessibility and behavior. Hence, we meta-analyzed 351 studies
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Ignorance by choice: A meta-analytic review of the underlying motives of willful ignorance and its consequences. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Linh Vu,Ivan Soraperra,Margarita Leib,Joël van der Weele,Shaul Shalvi
People sometimes avoid information about the impact of their actions as an excuse to be selfish. Such "willful ignorance" reduces altruistic behavior and has detrimental effects in many consumer and organizational contexts. We report the first meta-analysis on willful ignorance, testing the robustness of its impact on altruistic behavior and examining its underlying motives. We analyze 33,603 decisions
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How do cognitive behavioral therapy and interpersonal psychotherapy improve youth depression? Applying meta-analytic structural equation modeling to three decades of randomized trials. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Mei Yi Ng,Katherine A DiVasto,Nazc-A-Ru Gonzalez,Samantha Cootner,Mark W Lipsey,John R Weisz
Investigating the mechanisms through which psychotherapy brings about desired change can inform efforts to improve therapies. We applied meta-analytic structural equation modeling (MASEM) to assess putative change mechanisms for cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT) as mediators of youth depression treatment outcome. Then, we tested whether candidate mediators (CMs) showed evidence of treatment-specificity
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A meta-analytic review of accuracy and bias in romantic partner perceptions. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Jessica E LaBuda,Judith Gere
People's perceptions of their romantic partners are somewhat accurate but also contain biases. In the current meta-analytic review, we sought to examine overall levels of accuracy and bias in romantic partner perceptions and moderators of accuracy and bias. We examined tracking accuracy (k = 157), projection (k = 157), indirect accuracy (k = 69), and mean-level bias (k = 153) in perceptions of a romantic
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Endogenous oxytocin and human social interactions: A systematic review and meta-analysis. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Olga V Burenkova,Tatiana A Dolgorukova,Iuliia An,Tatiana A Kustova,Aleksei A Podturkin,Ekaterina M Shurdova,Oksana I Talantseva,Marina A Zhukova,Elena L Grigorenko
While there has been an increase in studies investigating the relationship between endogenous oxytocin (OXT) concentrations and human social interactions over the past decades, these studies still seem far from converging, both in methodological terms and in terms of their results. This systematic review and meta-analysis were aimed at a comprehensive evaluation and synthesis of empirical evidence
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Why Meta-Analyses of Growth Mindset and Other Interventions Should Follow Best Practices for Examining Heterogeneity: Commentary on Macnamara and Burgoyne (2023) and Burnette et al. (2023). Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Elizabeth Tipton,Christopher Bryan,Jared Murray,Mark McDaniel,Barbara Schneider,David S Yeager
Meta-analysts often ask a yes-or-no question: Is there an intervention effect or not? This traditional, all-or-nothing thinking stands in contrast with current best practice in meta-analysis, which calls for a heterogeneity-attuned approach (i.e., focused on the extent to which effects vary across procedures, participant groups, or contexts). This heterogeneity-attuned approach allows researchers to
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The daily association between affect and alcohol use: A meta-analysis of individual participant data. Psychological Bulletin (IF 17.3) Pub Date : 2023-01-01 Jonas Dora,Marilyn Piccirillo,Katherine T Foster,Kelly Arbeau,Stephen Armeli,Marc Auriacombe,Bruce Bartholow,Adriene M Beltz,Shari M Blumenstock,Krysten Bold,Erin E Bonar,Abby Braitman,Ryan W Carpenter,Kasey G Creswell,Tracy De Hart,Robert D Dvorak,Noah Emery,Matthew Enkema,Catharine Fairbairn,Anne M Fairlie,Stuart G Ferguson,Teresa Freire,Fallon Goodman,Nisha Gottfredson,Max Halvorson,Maleeha Haroon
Influential psychological theories hypothesize that people consume alcohol in response to the experience of both negative and positive emotions. Despite two decades of daily diary and ecological momentary assessment research, it remains unclear whether people consume more alcohol on days they experience higher negative and positive affect in everyday life. In this preregistered meta-analysis, we synthesized