Pavlović, Zoran

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Authority KeyName Variants
orcid::0000-0002-9231-5100
  • Pavlović, Zoran (114)
  • Pavlović, Z. (1)
Projects
Social Transformations in Processes of European Integration: A Multidisciplinary Approach Democratic models of developing social cohesion, tolerance, human rights and economic growth in political and institutional processes of EU integration in Serbia
Društvene transformacije u procesu evropskih integracija: multidisciplinarni pristup (br. 47010) Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development, Republic of Serbia, Grant no. 451-03-68/2020-14/200163 (University of Belgrade, Faculty of Philosophy)
Identification, measurement and development of the cognitive and emotional competences important for a Europe-oriented society Demokratski modeli unapređivanja društvene kohezije, tolerancije, ljudskih prava i privrednog razvitka u političkim i institucionalnim procesima evropskih integracija Srbije (broj projekta: 149017)
Education for knowledge based society Ministry of Trade, Tourism and Telecommunications of the Republic of Serbia
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) UNICEF, Serbia
Grant 47010 from the Ministry of Education, Science and Technological Development of the Republic of Serbia Hungarian OTKAOrszagos Tudomanyos Kutatasi Alapprogramok (OTKA) [K-111 789]
Japan Society for the Promotion of Science under Grants P17806 and 17F17806 National Natural Science Foundation of ChinaNational Natural Science Foundation of China (NSFC) [71873133]
NOMIS Stiftung (NOMIS Foundation) Obrazovanje za društvo znanja (149001)
Polish National Science Centre [2016/23/D/HS6/02946] Aarhus Universitets Forskningsfond (Aarhus University Research Foundation) - 28207
Aarhus Universitets Forskningsfond (Aarhus University Research Foundation) - AUFF-E-201 9-9-4 Aarhus University Research Foundation (grant no. 28207)
Aarhus University Research Foundation (grant no. AUFF-E-201 9-9-4) Academy of Finland (grant no. 323207)
Academy of Finland (Suomen Akatemia) Agence Nationale de la Recherche (French National Research Agency) - ANR-10-IDEX-0001-02 PSL
Agence Nationale de la Recherche (French National Research Agency) - ANR-17-EURE-0010 Agence Nationale de la Recherche (French National Research Agency) - ANR-17-EURE-0017
Agentúra na Podporu Výskumu a Vývoja (Slovak Research and Development Agency) - APVV-17-0596 ANID/FONDAP/15150012
ANID/FONDECYT Regular (1210195 and 1210176) ANR-Labex IAST

Author's Bibliography

Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages

Buchanan, Erin Michelle; Cuccolo, Kelly; Coles, Nicholas Alvaro; Heyman, Tom; Iyer, Aishwarya; Lewis, Neil Anthony; Peters, Kim Olivia; van Berkel, Niels; van 't Veer, Anna Elisabeth; Taylor, Jack Edward; Montefinese, Maria; Valentine, Kathrene D; Maxwell, Nicholas P.; Türkan, Nilay; Williams, Glenn Patrick; Oliveros, Juan Carlos; Röer, Jan Philipp; Fini, Chiara; Acar, Oguz Ali; McFall, Joseph Patrick; Pronizius, Ekaterina; Suchow, Jordan W; Batalha, Luisa; Özdoğru, Asil Ali; Godbersen, Hendrik; Butt, Muhammad Mussaffa; Buczny, Jacek; Jaeger, Bastian; Baker, Bradley James; Grim, Philip A.; Alsuhaibani, Zainab; Martínez, Martín; Protzko, John; Lynott, Dermot; Korbmacher, Max; Peker, Mhmet; Dixson, Barnaby; Elsherif, Mahmoud Medhat; Neta, Maital; Azevedo, Flavio; Ferreira, Paulo RS; Sigfrids, Fredrik; Lima, Tiago Jessé Souza; Geiger, Sandra Jeanette; Thapar, Anjali; Perea, Manuel; Szekely-Copîndean, Raluca Diana; Evans, Thomas Rhys; Verheyen, Steven; Moreau, David; Tran, Ulrich S.; El-Dakhs, Dina Abdel Salam; Ndukaihe, Izuchukwu Lawrence Gabriel; Pavlović, Tijana Vesić; Burin, DI; Arriaga, Patricia; Kasanov, Dauren; Keech, Jacob J; Fernández-López, María; Stewart, Suzanne; Vaidis, David C.; Besson, Théo; Batres, Carlota; Vaughn, Leigh Ann; Senderecka, Magdalena; Mazzuca, Claudia; Micheli, Leticia; Vasilev, Martin R.; Schmidt, Kathleen; Brick, Cameron; Schivinski, Bruno; Ruiz-Fernandez, Susana; Ilczuk, Ewa; Levitan, Carmel; Higgins, Emily; Pfuhl, Gerit; Lu, Jackson G.; Sirota, Miroslav; Pavlović, Zoran; Ambrosini, Ettore; Bohm, Nienke; Karaaslan, Aslan; Papadatou-Pastou, Marietta; Oner, Sezin; Baskin, Ernest; Mulgrew, Kate E.; Ulloa Fulgeri, Jose Luis; Szumowska, Ewa; Garrido-Vásquez, Patricia; Barzykowski, Krystian; Kosachenko, Alexandra I.; Cong, Chin Wen; Lamm, Claus; Dumbravă, Andrei; Era, Vanessa; Monteiro, Luis Carlos Pereira; Mallik, Peter Robert; Isloi, Chris; Al-Hoorie, Ali H.; Irrazabal, Natalia; Pavlov, Yuri G.; Kuzminska, Anna O.; Davis, William E.; Ribeiro, Gianni; Ross, Robert M; Sievers, Erin; Vadillo, Miguel A.; Bennett, Tia; vanpaemel, wolf; Arinze, Nwadiogo Chisom; Parzuchowski, Michal; Stieger, Stefan; Becker, Maja; Stevens, Laura; Aberson, Chris; Flowe, Heather D; Roettger, Timo Benjamin; Borghi, Anna M.; SAHLI, Fatima zahra; Chartier, Christopher R.; Burak, Elif Gizem Demirag; Aczel, Balazs; Atkinson, Tess M; Çoker, Ogeday; Ergiyen, Tolga; Yavuz-Ergiyen, Günce; Helmy, Mai; Paltoglou, Aspa; Loberg, Otto; Huang, Guanxiong; Hayre, Rumandeep Kaur; Varga, Marton Aron; Julliard, Yoann; Sanders, Abigail; Willinger, David; Chen, Sau-Chin; Fisher, Sarah E.; Paterlini, Julia; Blaison, Christophe; Ingham, Madeleine; Geller, Jason; Colloff, Melissa Fay; Foroni, Francesco; Kaser, Amanda; Meier, Zdenek; Morariu, Roxana E.; Wolfe, Kelly; Malinakova, Klara; Zidkova, Radka; Novák, Lukas; MacPherson, Sarah E.; Angele, Bernhard; Muller, Dominique; Tavel, Petr; Marciaga, Leonardo; Fellnhofer, Katharina; Sepehri, Amir; Lewis, Savannah C


                                            

                                            
Buchanan, E. M., Cuccolo, K., Coles, N. A., Heyman, T., Iyer, A., Lewis, N. A., Peters, K. O., van Berkel, N., van 't Veer, A. E., Taylor, J. E., Montefinese, M., Valentine, K. D., Maxwell, N. P., Türkan, N., Williams, G. P., Oliveros, J. C., Röer, J. P., Fini, C., Acar, O. A., McFall, J. P., Pronizius, E., Suchow, J. W., Batalha, L., Özdoğru, A. A., Godbersen, H., Butt, M. M., Buczny, J., Jaeger, B., Baker, B. J., Grim, P. A., Alsuhaibani, Z., Martínez, M., Protzko, J., Lynott, D., Korbmacher, M., Peker, M., Dixson, B., Elsherif, M. M., Neta, M., Azevedo, F., Ferreira, P. R., Sigfrids, F., Lima, T. J. S., Geiger, S. J., Thapar, A., Perea, M., Szekely-Copîndean, R. D., Evans, T. R., Verheyen, S., Moreau, D., Tran, U. S., El-Dakhs, D. A. S., Ndukaihe, I. L. G., Pavlović, T. V., Burin, D., Arriaga, P., Kasanov, D., Keech, J. J., Fernández-López, M., Stewart, S., Vaidis, D. C., Besson, T., Batres, C., Vaughn, L. A., Senderecka, M., Mazzuca, C., Micheli, L., Vasilev, M. R., Schmidt, K., Brick, C., Schivinski, B., Ruiz-Fernandez, S., Ilczuk, E., Levitan, C., Higgins, E., Pfuhl, G., Lu, J. G., Sirota, M., Pavlović, Z., Ambrosini, E., Bohm, N., Karaaslan, A., Papadatou-Pastou, M., Oner, S., Baskin, E., Mulgrew, K. E., Ulloa Fulgeri, J. L., Szumowska, E., Garrido-Vásquez, P., Barzykowski, K., Kosachenko, A. I., Cong, C. W., Lamm, C., Dumbravă, A., Era, V., Monteiro, L. C. P., Mallik, P. R., Isloi, C., Al-Hoorie, A. H., Irrazabal, N., Pavlov, Y. G., Kuzminska, A. O., Davis, W. E., Ribeiro, G., Ross, R. M., Sievers, E., Vadillo, M. A., Bennett, T., vanpaemel, w., Arinze, N. C., Parzuchowski, M., Stieger, S., Becker, M., Stevens, L., Aberson, C., Flowe, H. D., Roettger, T. B., Borghi, A. M., SAHLI, F. z., Chartier, C. R., Burak, E. G. D., Aczel, B., Atkinson, T. M., Çoker, O., Ergiyen, T., Yavuz-Ergiyen, G., Helmy, M., Paltoglou, A., Loberg, O., Huang, G., Hayre, R. K., Varga, M. A., Julliard, Y., Sanders, A., Willinger, D., Chen, S., Fisher, S. E., Paterlini, J., Blaison, C., Ingham, M., Geller, J., Colloff, M. F., Foroni, F., Kaser, A., Meier, Z., Morariu, R. E., Wolfe, K., Malinakova, K., Zidkova, R., Novák, L., MacPherson, S. E., Angele, B., Muller, D., Tavel, P., Marciaga, L., Fellnhofer, K., Sepehri, A.,& Lewis, S. C..Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages. 
Center for Open Science..
https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/q4fjy
Buchanan EM, Cuccolo K, Coles NA, Heyman T, Iyer A, Lewis NA, Peters KO, van Berkel N, van 't Veer AE, Taylor JE, Montefinese M, Valentine KD, Maxwell NP, Türkan N, Williams GP, Oliveros JC, Röer JP, Fini C, Acar OA, McFall JP, Pronizius E, Suchow JW, Batalha L, Özdoğru AA, Godbersen H, Butt MM, Buczny J, Jaeger B, Baker BJ, Grim PA, Alsuhaibani Z, Martínez M, Protzko J, Lynott D, Korbmacher M, Peker M, Dixson B, Elsherif MM, Neta M, Azevedo F, Ferreira PR, Sigfrids F, Lima TJS, Geiger SJ, Thapar A, Perea M, Szekely-Copîndean RD, Evans TR, Verheyen S, Moreau D, Tran US, El-Dakhs DAS, Ndukaihe ILG, Pavlović TV, Burin D, Arriaga P, Kasanov D, Keech JJ, Fernández-López M, Stewart S, Vaidis DC, Besson T, Batres C, Vaughn LA, Senderecka M, Mazzuca C, Micheli L, Vasilev MR, Schmidt K, Brick C, Schivinski B, Ruiz-Fernandez S, Ilczuk E, Levitan C, Higgins E, Pfuhl G, Lu JG, Sirota M, Pavlović Z, Ambrosini E, Bohm N, Karaaslan A, Papadatou-Pastou M, Oner S, Baskin E, Mulgrew KE, Ulloa Fulgeri JL, Szumowska E, Garrido-Vásquez P, Barzykowski K, Kosachenko AI, Cong CW, Lamm C, Dumbravă A, Era V, Monteiro LCP, Mallik PR, Isloi C, Al-Hoorie AH, Irrazabal N, Pavlov YG, Kuzminska AO, Davis WE, Ribeiro G, Ross RM, Sievers E, Vadillo MA, Bennett T, vanpaemel W, Arinze NC, Parzuchowski M, Stieger S, Becker M, Stevens L, Aberson C, Flowe HD, Roettger TB, Borghi AM, SAHLI FZ, Chartier CR, Burak EGD, Aczel B, Atkinson TM, Çoker O, Ergiyen T, Yavuz-Ergiyen G, Helmy M, Paltoglou A, Loberg O, Huang G, Hayre RK, Varga MA, Julliard Y, Sanders A, Willinger D, Chen S, Fisher SE, Paterlini J, Blaison C, Ingham M, Geller J, Colloff MF, Foroni F, Kaser A, Meier Z, Morariu RE, Wolfe K, Malinakova K, Zidkova R, Novák L, MacPherson SE, Angele B, Muller D, Tavel P, Marciaga L, Fellnhofer K, Sepehri A, Lewis SC. Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages..
doi:10.31219/osf.io/q4fjy .
Buchanan, Erin Michelle, Cuccolo, Kelly, Coles, Nicholas Alvaro, Heyman, Tom, Iyer, Aishwarya, Lewis, Neil Anthony, Peters, Kim Olivia, van Berkel, Niels, van 't Veer, Anna Elisabeth, Taylor, Jack Edward, Montefinese, Maria, Valentine, Kathrene D, Maxwell, Nicholas P., Türkan, Nilay, Williams, Glenn Patrick, Oliveros, Juan Carlos, Röer, Jan Philipp, Fini, Chiara, Acar, Oguz Ali, McFall, Joseph Patrick, Pronizius, Ekaterina, Suchow, Jordan W, Batalha, Luisa, Özdoğru, Asil Ali, Godbersen, Hendrik, Butt, Muhammad Mussaffa, Buczny, Jacek, Jaeger, Bastian, Baker, Bradley James, Grim, Philip A., Alsuhaibani, Zainab, Martínez, Martín, Protzko, John, Lynott, Dermot, Korbmacher, Max, Peker, Mhmet, Dixson, Barnaby, Elsherif, Mahmoud Medhat, Neta, Maital, Azevedo, Flavio, Ferreira, Paulo RS, Sigfrids, Fredrik, Lima, Tiago Jessé Souza, Geiger, Sandra Jeanette, Thapar, Anjali, Perea, Manuel, Szekely-Copîndean, Raluca Diana, Evans, Thomas Rhys, Verheyen, Steven, Moreau, David, Tran, Ulrich S., El-Dakhs, Dina Abdel Salam, Ndukaihe, Izuchukwu Lawrence Gabriel, Pavlović, Tijana Vesić, Burin, DI, Arriaga, Patricia, Kasanov, Dauren, Keech, Jacob J, Fernández-López, María, Stewart, Suzanne, Vaidis, David C., Besson, Théo, Batres, Carlota, Vaughn, Leigh Ann, Senderecka, Magdalena, Mazzuca, Claudia, Micheli, Leticia, Vasilev, Martin R., Schmidt, Kathleen, Brick, Cameron, Schivinski, Bruno, Ruiz-Fernandez, Susana, Ilczuk, Ewa, Levitan, Carmel, Higgins, Emily, Pfuhl, Gerit, Lu, Jackson G., Sirota, Miroslav, Pavlović, Zoran, Ambrosini, Ettore, Bohm, Nienke, Karaaslan, Aslan, Papadatou-Pastou, Marietta, Oner, Sezin, Baskin, Ernest, Mulgrew, Kate E., Ulloa Fulgeri, Jose Luis, Szumowska, Ewa, Garrido-Vásquez, Patricia, Barzykowski, Krystian, Kosachenko, Alexandra I., Cong, Chin Wen, Lamm, Claus, Dumbravă, Andrei, Era, Vanessa, Monteiro, Luis Carlos Pereira, Mallik, Peter Robert, Isloi, Chris, Al-Hoorie, Ali H., Irrazabal, Natalia, Pavlov, Yuri G., Kuzminska, Anna O., Davis, William E., Ribeiro, Gianni, Ross, Robert M, Sievers, Erin, Vadillo, Miguel A., Bennett, Tia, vanpaemel, wolf, Arinze, Nwadiogo Chisom, Parzuchowski, Michal, Stieger, Stefan, Becker, Maja, Stevens, Laura, Aberson, Chris, Flowe, Heather D, Roettger, Timo Benjamin, Borghi, Anna M., SAHLI, Fatima zahra, Chartier, Christopher R., Burak, Elif Gizem Demirag, Aczel, Balazs, Atkinson, Tess M, Çoker, Ogeday, Ergiyen, Tolga, Yavuz-Ergiyen, Günce, Helmy, Mai, Paltoglou, Aspa, Loberg, Otto, Huang, Guanxiong, Hayre, Rumandeep Kaur, Varga, Marton Aron, Julliard, Yoann, Sanders, Abigail, Willinger, David, Chen, Sau-Chin, Fisher, Sarah E., Paterlini, Julia, Blaison, Christophe, Ingham, Madeleine, Geller, Jason, Colloff, Melissa Fay, Foroni, Francesco, Kaser, Amanda, Meier, Zdenek, Morariu, Roxana E., Wolfe, Kelly, Malinakova, Klara, Zidkova, Radka, Novák, Lukas, MacPherson, Sarah E., Angele, Bernhard, Muller, Dominique, Tavel, Petr, Marciaga, Leonardo, Fellnhofer, Katharina, Sepehri, Amir, Lewis, Savannah C, "Measuring the Semantic Priming Effect Across Many Languages",
https://doi.org/10.31219/osf.io/q4fjy . .
2

The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science

Röseler, Lukas; Kaiser, Leonard; Doetsch, Christopher; Klett, Noah; Seida, Christian; Schütz, Astrid; Aczel, Balazs; Adelina, Nadia; Agostini, Valeria; Alarie, Samuel; Albayrak-Aydemir, Nihan; Aldoh, Alaa; Al-Hoorie, Ali H.; Azevedo, Flavio; Baker, Bradley J.; Barth, Charlotte Lilian; Beitner, Julia; Brick, Cameron; Brohmer, Hilmar; Chandrashekar, Subramanya Prasad; Chung, Kai Li; Cockcroft, Jamie P.; Cummins, Jamie; Diveica, Veronica; Dumbalska, Tsvetomira; Efendic, Emir; Elsherif, Mahmoud M.; Evans, Thomas R.; Feldman, Gilad; Fillon, Adrien A.; Förster, Nico; Frese, Joris; Genschow, Oliver; Giannouli, Vaitsa; Gjoneska, Biljana; Gnambs, Timo; Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, Amélie; Graham, Christopher J.; Hartmann, Helena; Haviva, Clove; Herderich, Alina; Hilbert, Leon Paul; Holgado, Darías; Hussey, Ian; Ilchovska, Zlatomira G.; Kalandadze, Tamara; Karhulahti, Veli-Matti; Kasseckert, Leon; Klingelhöfer-Jens, Maren; Koppold, Alina; Korbmacher, Max; Kulke, Louisa; Kuper, Niclas; LaPlume, Annalise A.; Leech, Gavin; Lohkamp, Feline; Lou, Nigel Mantou; Lynott, Dermot; Maier, Maximilian; Maria, Montefinese; Meier, Maria; Moreau, David; Mrkva, Kellen; Nemcova, Monika; Oomen, Danna; Packheiser, Julian; Pandey, Shubham; Papenmeier, Frank; Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola; Pavlov, Yuri; Pavlović, Zoran; Pennington, Charlotte R.; Pittelkow, Merle-Marie; Plomp, Willemijn; Plonski, Paul E.; Pronizius, Ekaterina; Pua, Andrew Adrian; Pypno, Katarzyna; Rausch, Manuel; Rebholz, Tobias R.; Richert, Elena; Röer, Jan Philipp; Ross, Robert M.; Schmidt, Kathleen; Skvortsova, Aleksandrina; Sperl, Matthias F. J.; Tan, Alvin W.M.; Thürmer, J. Lukas; Tołopiło, Aleksandra; Vanpaemel, Wolf; Vaughn, Leigh Ann; Verheyen, Steven; Wallrich, Lukas; Weber, Lucia; Wolska, Julia K.; Zaneva, Mirela; Zhang, Yikang

(MetaArXiv Preprints, 2024)

TY  - GEN
AU  - Röseler, Lukas
AU  - Kaiser, Leonard
AU  - Doetsch, Christopher
AU  - Klett, Noah
AU  - Seida, Christian
AU  - Schütz, Astrid
AU  - Aczel, Balazs
AU  - Adelina, Nadia
AU  - Agostini, Valeria
AU  - Alarie, Samuel
AU  - Albayrak-Aydemir, Nihan
AU  - Aldoh, Alaa
AU  - Al-Hoorie, Ali H.
AU  - Azevedo, Flavio
AU  - Baker, Bradley J.
AU  - Barth, Charlotte Lilian
AU  - Beitner, Julia
AU  - Brick, Cameron
AU  - Brohmer, Hilmar
AU  - Chandrashekar, Subramanya Prasad
AU  - Chung, Kai Li
AU  - Cockcroft, Jamie P.
AU  - Cummins, Jamie
AU  - Diveica, Veronica
AU  - Dumbalska, Tsvetomira
AU  - Efendic, Emir
AU  - Elsherif, Mahmoud M.
AU  - Evans, Thomas R.
AU  - Feldman, Gilad
AU  - Fillon, Adrien A.
AU  - Förster, Nico
AU  - Frese, Joris
AU  - Genschow, Oliver
AU  - Giannouli, Vaitsa
AU  - Gjoneska, Biljana
AU  - Gnambs, Timo
AU  - Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, Amélie
AU  - Graham, Christopher J.
AU  - Hartmann, Helena
AU  - Haviva, Clove
AU  - Herderich, Alina
AU  - Hilbert, Leon Paul
AU  - Holgado, Darías
AU  - Hussey, Ian
AU  - Ilchovska, Zlatomira G.
AU  - Kalandadze, Tamara
AU  - Karhulahti, Veli-Matti
AU  - Kasseckert, Leon
AU  - Klingelhöfer-Jens, Maren
AU  - Koppold, Alina
AU  - Korbmacher, Max
AU  - Kulke, Louisa
AU  - Kuper, Niclas
AU  - LaPlume, Annalise A.
AU  - Leech, Gavin
AU  - Lohkamp, Feline
AU  - Lou, Nigel Mantou
AU  - Lynott, Dermot
AU  - Maier, Maximilian
AU  - Maria, Montefinese
AU  - Meier, Maria
AU  - Moreau, David
AU  - Mrkva, Kellen
AU  - Nemcova, Monika
AU  - Oomen, Danna
AU  - Packheiser, Julian
AU  - Pandey, Shubham
AU  - Papenmeier, Frank
AU  - Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola
AU  - Pavlov, Yuri
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Pennington, Charlotte R.
AU  - Pittelkow, Merle-Marie
AU  - Plomp, Willemijn
AU  - Plonski, Paul E.
AU  - Pronizius, Ekaterina
AU  - Pua, Andrew Adrian
AU  - Pypno, Katarzyna
AU  - Rausch, Manuel
AU  - Rebholz, Tobias R.
AU  - Richert, Elena
AU  - Röer, Jan Philipp
AU  - Ross, Robert M.
AU  - Schmidt, Kathleen
AU  - Skvortsova, Aleksandrina
AU  - Sperl, Matthias F. J.
AU  - Tan, Alvin W.M.
AU  - Thürmer, J. Lukas
AU  - Tołopiło, Aleksandra
AU  - Vanpaemel, Wolf
AU  - Vaughn, Leigh Ann
AU  - Verheyen, Steven
AU  - Wallrich, Lukas
AU  - Weber, Lucia
AU  - Wolska, Julia K.
AU  - Zaneva, Mirela
AU  - Zhang, Yikang
PY  - 2024
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/6427
AB  - In psychological science, replicability—repeating a study with a new sample
achieving consistent results (Parsons et al., 2022)—is critical for affirming the validity
of scientific findings. Despite its importance, replication efforts are few and far
between in psychological science with many attempts failing to corroborate past
findings. This scarcity, compounded by the difficulty in accessing replication data,
jeopardizes the efficient allocation of research resources and impedes scientific
advancement. Addressing this crucial gap, we present the Replication Database
(https://metaanalyses.shinyapps.io/replicationdatabase/), a novel platform hosting
1,239 original findings paired with replication findings. The infrastructure of this
database allows researchers to submit, access, and engage with replication findings.
The database makes replications visible, easily findable via a graphical user interface,
and tracks replication rates across various factors, such as publication year or
journal. This will facilitate future efforts to evaluate the robustness of psychological
research.
PB  - MetaArXiv Preprints
T1  - The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science
DO  - 10.31222/osf.io/me2ub
ER  - 
@misc{
author = "Röseler, Lukas and Kaiser, Leonard and Doetsch, Christopher and Klett, Noah and Seida, Christian and Schütz, Astrid and Aczel, Balazs and Adelina, Nadia and Agostini, Valeria and Alarie, Samuel and Albayrak-Aydemir, Nihan and Aldoh, Alaa and Al-Hoorie, Ali H. and Azevedo, Flavio and Baker, Bradley J. and Barth, Charlotte Lilian and Beitner, Julia and Brick, Cameron and Brohmer, Hilmar and Chandrashekar, Subramanya Prasad and Chung, Kai Li and Cockcroft, Jamie P. and Cummins, Jamie and Diveica, Veronica and Dumbalska, Tsvetomira and Efendic, Emir and Elsherif, Mahmoud M. and Evans, Thomas R. and Feldman, Gilad and Fillon, Adrien A. and Förster, Nico and Frese, Joris and Genschow, Oliver and Giannouli, Vaitsa and Gjoneska, Biljana and Gnambs, Timo and Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, Amélie and Graham, Christopher J. and Hartmann, Helena and Haviva, Clove and Herderich, Alina and Hilbert, Leon Paul and Holgado, Darías and Hussey, Ian and Ilchovska, Zlatomira G. and Kalandadze, Tamara and Karhulahti, Veli-Matti and Kasseckert, Leon and Klingelhöfer-Jens, Maren and Koppold, Alina and Korbmacher, Max and Kulke, Louisa and Kuper, Niclas and LaPlume, Annalise A. and Leech, Gavin and Lohkamp, Feline and Lou, Nigel Mantou and Lynott, Dermot and Maier, Maximilian and Maria, Montefinese and Meier, Maria and Moreau, David and Mrkva, Kellen and Nemcova, Monika and Oomen, Danna and Packheiser, Julian and Pandey, Shubham and Papenmeier, Frank and Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola and Pavlov, Yuri and Pavlović, Zoran and Pennington, Charlotte R. and Pittelkow, Merle-Marie and Plomp, Willemijn and Plonski, Paul E. and Pronizius, Ekaterina and Pua, Andrew Adrian and Pypno, Katarzyna and Rausch, Manuel and Rebholz, Tobias R. and Richert, Elena and Röer, Jan Philipp and Ross, Robert M. and Schmidt, Kathleen and Skvortsova, Aleksandrina and Sperl, Matthias F. J. and Tan, Alvin W.M. and Thürmer, J. Lukas and Tołopiło, Aleksandra and Vanpaemel, Wolf and Vaughn, Leigh Ann and Verheyen, Steven and Wallrich, Lukas and Weber, Lucia and Wolska, Julia K. and Zaneva, Mirela and Zhang, Yikang",
year = "2024",
abstract = "In psychological science, replicability—repeating a study with a new sample
achieving consistent results (Parsons et al., 2022)—is critical for affirming the validity
of scientific findings. Despite its importance, replication efforts are few and far
between in psychological science with many attempts failing to corroborate past
findings. This scarcity, compounded by the difficulty in accessing replication data,
jeopardizes the efficient allocation of research resources and impedes scientific
advancement. Addressing this crucial gap, we present the Replication Database
(https://metaanalyses.shinyapps.io/replicationdatabase/), a novel platform hosting
1,239 original findings paired with replication findings. The infrastructure of this
database allows researchers to submit, access, and engage with replication findings.
The database makes replications visible, easily findable via a graphical user interface,
and tracks replication rates across various factors, such as publication year or
journal. This will facilitate future efforts to evaluate the robustness of psychological
research.",
publisher = "MetaArXiv Preprints",
title = "The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science",
doi = "10.31222/osf.io/me2ub"
}
Röseler, L., Kaiser, L., Doetsch, C., Klett, N., Seida, C., Schütz, A., Aczel, B., Adelina, N., Agostini, V., Alarie, S., Albayrak-Aydemir, N., Aldoh, A., Al-Hoorie, A. H., Azevedo, F., Baker, B. J., Barth, C. L., Beitner, J., Brick, C., Brohmer, H., Chandrashekar, S. P., Chung, K. L., Cockcroft, J. P., Cummins, J., Diveica, V., Dumbalska, T., Efendic, E., Elsherif, M. M., Evans, T. R., Feldman, G., Fillon, A. A., Förster, N., Frese, J., Genschow, O., Giannouli, V., Gjoneska, B., Gnambs, T., Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, A., Graham, C. J., Hartmann, H., Haviva, C., Herderich, A., Hilbert, L. P., Holgado, D., Hussey, I., Ilchovska, Z. G., Kalandadze, T., Karhulahti, V., Kasseckert, L., Klingelhöfer-Jens, M., Koppold, A., Korbmacher, M., Kulke, L., Kuper, N., LaPlume, A. A., Leech, G., Lohkamp, F., Lou, N. M., Lynott, D., Maier, M., Maria, M., Meier, M., Moreau, D., Mrkva, K., Nemcova, M., Oomen, D., Packheiser, J., Pandey, S., Papenmeier, F., Paruzel-Czachura, M., Pavlov, Y., Pavlović, Z., Pennington, C. R., Pittelkow, M., Plomp, W., Plonski, P. E., Pronizius, E., Pua, A. A., Pypno, K., Rausch, M., Rebholz, T. R., Richert, E., Röer, J. P., Ross, R. M., Schmidt, K., Skvortsova, A., Sperl, M. F. J., Tan, A. W.M., Thürmer, J. L., Tołopiło, A., Vanpaemel, W., Vaughn, L. A., Verheyen, S., Wallrich, L., Weber, L., Wolska, J. K., Zaneva, M.,& Zhang, Y.. (2024). The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science. 
MetaArXiv Preprints..
https://doi.org/10.31222/osf.io/me2ub
Röseler L, Kaiser L, Doetsch C, Klett N, Seida C, Schütz A, Aczel B, Adelina N, Agostini V, Alarie S, Albayrak-Aydemir N, Aldoh A, Al-Hoorie AH, Azevedo F, Baker BJ, Barth CL, Beitner J, Brick C, Brohmer H, Chandrashekar SP, Chung KL, Cockcroft JP, Cummins J, Diveica V, Dumbalska T, Efendic E, Elsherif MM, Evans TR, Feldman G, Fillon AA, Förster N, Frese J, Genschow O, Giannouli V, Gjoneska B, Gnambs T, Gourdon-Kanhukamwe A, Graham CJ, Hartmann H, Haviva C, Herderich A, Hilbert LP, Holgado D, Hussey I, Ilchovska ZG, Kalandadze T, Karhulahti V, Kasseckert L, Klingelhöfer-Jens M, Koppold A, Korbmacher M, Kulke L, Kuper N, LaPlume AA, Leech G, Lohkamp F, Lou NM, Lynott D, Maier M, Maria M, Meier M, Moreau D, Mrkva K, Nemcova M, Oomen D, Packheiser J, Pandey S, Papenmeier F, Paruzel-Czachura M, Pavlov Y, Pavlović Z, Pennington CR, Pittelkow M, Plomp W, Plonski PE, Pronizius E, Pua AA, Pypno K, Rausch M, Rebholz TR, Richert E, Röer JP, Ross RM, Schmidt K, Skvortsova A, Sperl MFJ, Tan AW, Thürmer JL, Tołopiło A, Vanpaemel W, Vaughn LA, Verheyen S, Wallrich L, Weber L, Wolska JK, Zaneva M, Zhang Y. The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science. 2024;.
doi:10.31222/osf.io/me2ub .
Röseler, Lukas, Kaiser, Leonard, Doetsch, Christopher, Klett, Noah, Seida, Christian, Schütz, Astrid, Aczel, Balazs, Adelina, Nadia, Agostini, Valeria, Alarie, Samuel, Albayrak-Aydemir, Nihan, Aldoh, Alaa, Al-Hoorie, Ali H., Azevedo, Flavio, Baker, Bradley J., Barth, Charlotte Lilian, Beitner, Julia, Brick, Cameron, Brohmer, Hilmar, Chandrashekar, Subramanya Prasad, Chung, Kai Li, Cockcroft, Jamie P., Cummins, Jamie, Diveica, Veronica, Dumbalska, Tsvetomira, Efendic, Emir, Elsherif, Mahmoud M., Evans, Thomas R., Feldman, Gilad, Fillon, Adrien A., Förster, Nico, Frese, Joris, Genschow, Oliver, Giannouli, Vaitsa, Gjoneska, Biljana, Gnambs, Timo, Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, Amélie, Graham, Christopher J., Hartmann, Helena, Haviva, Clove, Herderich, Alina, Hilbert, Leon Paul, Holgado, Darías, Hussey, Ian, Ilchovska, Zlatomira G., Kalandadze, Tamara, Karhulahti, Veli-Matti, Kasseckert, Leon, Klingelhöfer-Jens, Maren, Koppold, Alina, Korbmacher, Max, Kulke, Louisa, Kuper, Niclas, LaPlume, Annalise A., Leech, Gavin, Lohkamp, Feline, Lou, Nigel Mantou, Lynott, Dermot, Maier, Maximilian, Maria, Montefinese, Meier, Maria, Moreau, David, Mrkva, Kellen, Nemcova, Monika, Oomen, Danna, Packheiser, Julian, Pandey, Shubham, Papenmeier, Frank, Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola, Pavlov, Yuri, Pavlović, Zoran, Pennington, Charlotte R., Pittelkow, Merle-Marie, Plomp, Willemijn, Plonski, Paul E., Pronizius, Ekaterina, Pua, Andrew Adrian, Pypno, Katarzyna, Rausch, Manuel, Rebholz, Tobias R., Richert, Elena, Röer, Jan Philipp, Ross, Robert M., Schmidt, Kathleen, Skvortsova, Aleksandrina, Sperl, Matthias F. J., Tan, Alvin W.M., Thürmer, J. Lukas, Tołopiło, Aleksandra, Vanpaemel, Wolf, Vaughn, Leigh Ann, Verheyen, Steven, Wallrich, Lukas, Weber, Lucia, Wolska, Julia K., Zaneva, Mirela, Zhang, Yikang, "The Replication Database: Documenting the Replicability of Psychological Science" (2024),
https://doi.org/10.31222/osf.io/me2ub . .

On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership

Todosijević, Bojan; Pavlović, Zoran

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5998
AB  - Membership in the EU is sometimes presented as a reward for Serbia’s eventual
acknowledgement of Kosovo’s independence. Although membership in the EU
has been a strategic goal of Serbian foreign policy, the EU is often perceived as
working against Serbian national interests regarding Kosovo’s status. Relying
on the cognitive dissonance theory, we hypothesize that in addition to a direct
negative association between the support for Serbia’s territorial integrity and
the EU membership, there is also an interactive effect: the association should be
moderated by one’s opinion on when and whether Serbia will become a member of the EU. These hypotheses are examined using public opinion data based
on a large national sample of adult Serbian citizens. The results support the interaction hypothesis: the attitude that Kosovo should remain part of Serbia is a
stronger predictor of the (negative) evaluation of the EU among those respondents who do not believe that Serbia will become an EU member in the future.
T2  - Političke perspektive
T1  - On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership
EP  - 31
IS  - 2
SP  - 7
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.20901/pp.13.2.01
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Todosijević, Bojan and Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Membership in the EU is sometimes presented as a reward for Serbia’s eventual
acknowledgement of Kosovo’s independence. Although membership in the EU
has been a strategic goal of Serbian foreign policy, the EU is often perceived as
working against Serbian national interests regarding Kosovo’s status. Relying
on the cognitive dissonance theory, we hypothesize that in addition to a direct
negative association between the support for Serbia’s territorial integrity and
the EU membership, there is also an interactive effect: the association should be
moderated by one’s opinion on when and whether Serbia will become a member of the EU. These hypotheses are examined using public opinion data based
on a large national sample of adult Serbian citizens. The results support the interaction hypothesis: the attitude that Kosovo should remain part of Serbia is a
stronger predictor of the (negative) evaluation of the EU among those respondents who do not believe that Serbia will become an EU member in the future.",
journal = "Političke perspektive",
title = "On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership",
pages = "31-7",
number = "2",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.20901/pp.13.2.01"
}
Todosijević, B.,& Pavlović, Z.. (2023). On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership. in Političke perspektive, 13(2), 7-31.
https://doi.org/10.20901/pp.13.2.01
Todosijević B, Pavlović Z. On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership. in Političke perspektive. 2023;13(2):7-31.
doi:10.20901/pp.13.2.01 .
Todosijević, Bojan, Pavlović, Zoran, "On improbable carrots: Serbian citizens between Kosovo* and the elusive EU membership" in Političke perspektive, 13, no. 2 (2023):7-31,
https://doi.org/10.20901/pp.13.2.01 . .

Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context

Stanojević, Dragan; Todosijević, Bojan; Pavlović, Zoran

(Council of Europe and European Commission, 2023)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Stanojević, Dragan
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5997
AB  - When discussing politics and the youth, three conclusions are often taken for granted.
First, that young people are insufficiently interested in politics. Second, that they are
increasingly disengaged from conventional politics. And third, that they have created new
spaces, through new forms and channels of participation, where they can express their views
and interests. Although new forms of youth political participation have been extensively
studied, their association with ideological self-understanding and attitudes towards minorities
is only partially understood. However, increased activism, although normatively desirable, may
be a double-edged sword if it is found disproportionally among youth with a questionable
commitment to democracy and tolerance. The main question this article will try to answer is
“Who is active among young people in Europe?” The analysis is based on the European Social
Survey (ESS) data round IX (2018). Focusing on the participatory practices of young
Europeans, the chapter explores associations of ideological orientations and attitudes related to
minority groups and indicators of social context with different forms of political activism.
Respondents’ more positive attitudes about LGBT rights, as well as liberal attitudes towards
immigrants, are associated with greater participation in almost all forms of political
participation. Democratic political context matters as well. Young people in more
democratically developed countries relatively more often participate in campaigns, activities
of civic society organizations, are politically active online, and boycott products
PB  - Council of Europe and European Commission
T2  - Youth political participation
T1  - Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context
EP  - 144
SP  - 121
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5997
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Stanojević, Dragan and Todosijević, Bojan and Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2023",
abstract = "When discussing politics and the youth, three conclusions are often taken for granted.
First, that young people are insufficiently interested in politics. Second, that they are
increasingly disengaged from conventional politics. And third, that they have created new
spaces, through new forms and channels of participation, where they can express their views
and interests. Although new forms of youth political participation have been extensively
studied, their association with ideological self-understanding and attitudes towards minorities
is only partially understood. However, increased activism, although normatively desirable, may
be a double-edged sword if it is found disproportionally among youth with a questionable
commitment to democracy and tolerance. The main question this article will try to answer is
“Who is active among young people in Europe?” The analysis is based on the European Social
Survey (ESS) data round IX (2018). Focusing on the participatory practices of young
Europeans, the chapter explores associations of ideological orientations and attitudes related to
minority groups and indicators of social context with different forms of political activism.
Respondents’ more positive attitudes about LGBT rights, as well as liberal attitudes towards
immigrants, are associated with greater participation in almost all forms of political
participation. Democratic political context matters as well. Young people in more
democratically developed countries relatively more often participate in campaigns, activities
of civic society organizations, are politically active online, and boycott products",
publisher = "Council of Europe and European Commission",
journal = "Youth political participation",
booktitle = "Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context",
pages = "144-121",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5997"
}
Stanojević, D., Todosijević, B.,& Pavlović, Z.. (2023). Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context. in Youth political participation
Council of Europe and European Commission., 121-144.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5997
Stanojević D, Todosijević B, Pavlović Z. Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context. in Youth political participation. 2023;:121-144.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5997 .
Stanojević, Dragan, Todosijević, Bojan, Pavlović, Zoran, "Political participation of young Europeans: the role of liberal values and democratic context" in Youth political participation (2023):121-144,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_5997 .

The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement

Pavlović, Zoran; Vesić Pavlović, Tijana

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Vesić Pavlović, Tijana
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5506
AB  - Values refer to stable beliefs and principles held by individuals, which guide their
attitudes, behaviours, and judgments, and play a crucial role in shaping their
identities and interactions with others. Studying values in social psychology is
important as it provides insights into the motivational forces that drive
individuals’ behaviour and decision-making, shaping the dynamics of
interpersonal relationships and societal interactions. The aim of this paper is to
test the possibility of measuring basic values in the archive and text materials.
Based on the Schwartz’s theory of values and earlier work on the value lexicon in
English, the Serbian lexicon of values was developed and preliminarily validated
on a large-scale Internet-based survey. The lexical co-occurrence of words in the
natural language use on the Internet was analysed in order to assess the
convergent, discriminant and predictive validity of the lexicon. Lexical cooccurrence analysis showed that the words representing the same values cooccurred significantly more in comparison to the words denoting different values.
The pattern of correlations between the values measured in the archive material
on the Internet using the value lexicon showed high convergence with the
pattern of correlations between the values assessed by the self-reported
measures used in the European Social Survey in 2018. The relative prominence of
the specific values on the official websites of the exemplar societal institutions and organizations identified by the value lexicon was in line with the
expectations and preliminarily confirmed the criterion validity of the lexicon of
values. Possible applications of the lexicon of values, as well as some
methodological issues pertaining to its future use, are discussed in the final part
T2  - Primenjena psihologija
T1  - The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement
EP  - 434
IS  - 3
SP  - 403
VL  - 16
DO  - 10.19090/pp.v16i3.2465
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran and Vesić Pavlović, Tijana",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Values refer to stable beliefs and principles held by individuals, which guide their
attitudes, behaviours, and judgments, and play a crucial role in shaping their
identities and interactions with others. Studying values in social psychology is
important as it provides insights into the motivational forces that drive
individuals’ behaviour and decision-making, shaping the dynamics of
interpersonal relationships and societal interactions. The aim of this paper is to
test the possibility of measuring basic values in the archive and text materials.
Based on the Schwartz’s theory of values and earlier work on the value lexicon in
English, the Serbian lexicon of values was developed and preliminarily validated
on a large-scale Internet-based survey. The lexical co-occurrence of words in the
natural language use on the Internet was analysed in order to assess the
convergent, discriminant and predictive validity of the lexicon. Lexical cooccurrence analysis showed that the words representing the same values cooccurred significantly more in comparison to the words denoting different values.
The pattern of correlations between the values measured in the archive material
on the Internet using the value lexicon showed high convergence with the
pattern of correlations between the values assessed by the self-reported
measures used in the European Social Survey in 2018. The relative prominence of
the specific values on the official websites of the exemplar societal institutions and organizations identified by the value lexicon was in line with the
expectations and preliminarily confirmed the criterion validity of the lexicon of
values. Possible applications of the lexicon of values, as well as some
methodological issues pertaining to its future use, are discussed in the final part",
journal = "Primenjena psihologija",
title = "The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement",
pages = "434-403",
number = "3",
volume = "16",
doi = "10.19090/pp.v16i3.2465"
}
Pavlović, Z.,& Vesić Pavlović, T.. (2023). The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement. in Primenjena psihologija, 16(3), 403-434.
https://doi.org/10.19090/pp.v16i3.2465
Pavlović Z, Vesić Pavlović T. The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement. in Primenjena psihologija. 2023;16(3):403-434.
doi:10.19090/pp.v16i3.2465 .
Pavlović, Zoran, Vesić Pavlović, Tijana, "The development and preliminary validation of the Serbian value lexicon − An archival approach to value measurement" in Primenjena psihologija, 16, no. 3 (2023):403-434,
https://doi.org/10.19090/pp.v16i3.2465 . .

Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries

Azevedo, Flavio; Pavlović, Tomislav; Rêgo, Gabriel G.; Ay, F. Ceren; Gjoneska, Biljana; Etienne, Tom W.; Ross, Robert M.; Schönegger, Philipp; Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.; Cichocka, Aleksandra; Capraro, Valerio; Cian, Luca; Longoni, Chiara; Chan, Ho Fai; Van Bavel, Jay J.; Sjåstad, Hallgeir; Nezlek, John B.; Alfano, Mark; Gelfand, Michele J.; Birtel, Michèle D.; Cislak, Aleksandra; Lockwood, Patricia L.; Abts, Koen; Agadullina, Elena; Aruta, John Jamir Benzon; Besharati, Sahba Nomvula; Bor, Alexander; Choma, Becky L.; Crabtree, Charles David; Cunningham, William A.; De, Koustav; Ejaz, Waqas; Elbaek, Christian T.; Findor, Andrej; Flichtentrei, Daniel; Franc, Renata; Gruber, June; Gualda, Estrella; Horiuchi, Yusaku; Huynh, Toan Luu Duc; Ibanez, Agustin; Imran, Mostak Ahamed; Israelashvili, Jacob; Jasko, Katarzyna; Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw; Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena; Krouwel, André; Laakasuo, Michael; Lamm, Claus; Leygue, Caroline; Lin, Ming-Jen; Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir; Marie, Antoine; Mayiwar, Lewend; Mazepus, Honorata; McHugh, Cillian; Minda, John Paul; Mitkidis, Panagiotis; Olsson, Andreas; Otterbring, Tobias; Packer, Dominic J.; Perry, Anat; Petersen, Michael Bang; Puthillam, Arathy; Rothmund, Tobias; Santamaría-García, Hernando; Schmid, Petra C.; Stoyanov, Drozdstoy; Tewari, Shruti; Todosijević, Bojan; Tsakiris, Manos; Tung, Hans H.; Umbres, Radu G.; Vanags, Edmunds; Vlasceanu, Madalina; Vonasch, Andrew; Yucel, Meltem; Zhang, Yucheng; Abad, Mohcine; Adler, Eli; Akrawi, Narin; Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui; Amara, Hanane; Amodio, David M.; Antazo, Benedict G.; Apps, Matthew; Ba, Mouhamadou Hady; Barbosa, Sergio; Bastian, Brock; Berg, Anton; Bernal-Zárate, Maria P.; Bernstein, Michael; Białek, Michał; Bilancini, Ennio; Bogatyreva, Natalia; Boncinelli, Leonardo; Booth, Jonathan E.; Borau, Sylvie; Buchel, Ondrej; Cameron, C. Daryl; Carvalho, Chrissie F.; Celadin, Tatiana; Cerami, Chiara; Chalise, Hom Nath; Cheng, Xiaojun; Cockcroft, Kate; Conway, Jane; Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres; Crespi, Chiara; Crouzevialle, Marie; Cutler, Jo; Cypryańska, Marzena; Dabrowska, Justyna; Daniels, Michael A.; Davis, Victoria H.; Dayley, Pamala N.; Delouvée, S.; Denkovski, Ognjan; Dezecache, Guillaume; Dhaliwal, Nathan A.; Diato, Alelie B.; Di Paolo, Roberto; Drosinou, Marianna; Dulleck, Uwe; Ekmanis, Jānis; Ertan, Arhan S.; Farhana, Hapsa Hossain; Farkhari, Fahima; Farmer, Harry; Fenwick, Ali; Fidanovski, Kristijan; Flew, Terry; Fraser, Shona; Frempong, Raymond Boadi; Fugelsang, Jonathan A.; Gale, Jessica; Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña; Garladinne, Prasad; Ghajjou, Oussama; Gkinopoulos, Theofilos; Gray, Kurt; Griffin, Siobhán M.; Gronfeldt, Bjarki; Gümren, Mert; Gurung, Ranju Lama; Halperin, Eran; Harris, Elizabeth; Herzon, Volo; Hruška, Matej; Huang, Guanxiong; Hudecek, Matthias F. C.; Isler, Ozan; Jangard, Simon; Jorgensen, Frederik J.; Kachanoff, Frank; Kahn, John; Dangol, Apsara Katuwal; Keudel, Oleksandra; Koppel, Lina; Koverola, Mika; Kubin, Emily; Kunnari, Anton; Kutiyski, Yordan; Laguna, Oscar; Leota, Josh; Lermer, Eva; Levy, Jonathan; Levy, Neil; Li, Chunyun; Long, Elizabeth U.; Maglić, Marina; McCashin, Darragh; Metcalf, Alexander L.; Mikloušić, Igor; El Mimouni, Soulaimane; Miura, Asako; Molina-Paredes, Juliana; Monroy-Fonseca, César; Morales-Marente, Elena; Moreau, David; Muda, Rafał; Myer, Annalisa; Nash, Kyle; Nesh-Nash, Tarik; Nitschke, Jonas P.; Nurse, Matthew S.; Ohtsubo, Yohsuke; Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria; O’Madagain, Cathal; Onderco, Michal; Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad; Palomöki, Jussi; Pan, Yafeng; Papp, Zsófia; Pärnamets, Philip; Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola; Pavlović, Zoran; Payán-Gómez, César; Perander, Silva; Pitman, Michael Mark; Prasad, Rajib; Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna; Rathje, Steve; Raza, Ali; Rhee, Kasey; Robertson, Claire E.; Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván; Saikkonen, Teemu; Salvador-Ginez, Octavio; Santi, Gaia C.; Santiago-Tovar, Natalia; Savage, David; Scheffer, Julian A.; Schultner, David T.; Schutte, Enid M.; Scott, Andy; Sharma, Madhavi; Sharma, Pujan; Skali, Ahmed; Stadelmann, David; Stafford, Clara Alexandra; Stanojević, Dragan; Stefaniak, Anna; Sternisko, Anni; Stoica, Augustin; Stoyanova, Kristina K.; Strickland, Brent; Sundvall, Jukka; Thomas, Jeffrey P.; Tinghög, Gustav; Torgler, Benno; Traast, Iris J.; Tucciarelli, Raffaele; Tyrala, Michael; Ungson, Nick D.; Uysal, Mete S.; Van Lange, Paul A. M.; van Prooijen, Jan-Willem; van Rooy, Dirk; Västfjäll, Daniel; Verkoeijen, Peter; Vieira, Joana B.; von Sikorski, Christian; Walker, Alexander Cameron; Watermeyer, Jennifer; Wetter, Erik; Whillans, Ashley; White, Katherine; Habib, Rishad; Willardt, Robin; Wohl, Michael J. A.; Wójcik, Adrian Dominik; Wu, Kaidi; Yamada, Yuki; Yilmaz, Onurcan; Yogeeswaran, Kumar; Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa; Zwaan, Rolf A.; Boggio, Paulo S.; Sampaio, Waldir M.

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Azevedo, Flavio
AU  - Pavlović, Tomislav
AU  - Rêgo, Gabriel G.
AU  - Ay, F. Ceren
AU  - Gjoneska, Biljana
AU  - Etienne, Tom W.
AU  - Ross, Robert M.
AU  - Schönegger, Philipp
AU  - Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.
AU  - Cichocka, Aleksandra
AU  - Capraro, Valerio
AU  - Cian, Luca
AU  - Longoni, Chiara
AU  - Chan, Ho Fai
AU  - Van Bavel, Jay J.
AU  - Sjåstad, Hallgeir
AU  - Nezlek, John B.
AU  - Alfano, Mark
AU  - Gelfand, Michele J.
AU  - Birtel, Michèle D.
AU  - Cislak, Aleksandra
AU  - Lockwood, Patricia L.
AU  - Abts, Koen
AU  - Agadullina, Elena
AU  - Aruta, John Jamir Benzon
AU  - Besharati, Sahba Nomvula
AU  - Bor, Alexander
AU  - Choma, Becky L.
AU  - Crabtree, Charles David
AU  - Cunningham, William A.
AU  - De, Koustav
AU  - Ejaz, Waqas
AU  - Elbaek, Christian T.
AU  - Findor, Andrej
AU  - Flichtentrei, Daniel
AU  - Franc, Renata
AU  - Gruber, June
AU  - Gualda, Estrella
AU  - Horiuchi, Yusaku
AU  - Huynh, Toan Luu Duc
AU  - Ibanez, Agustin
AU  - Imran, Mostak Ahamed
AU  - Israelashvili, Jacob
AU  - Jasko, Katarzyna
AU  - Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw
AU  - Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena
AU  - Krouwel, André
AU  - Laakasuo, Michael
AU  - Lamm, Claus
AU  - Leygue, Caroline
AU  - Lin, Ming-Jen
AU  - Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir
AU  - Marie, Antoine
AU  - Mayiwar, Lewend
AU  - Mazepus, Honorata
AU  - McHugh, Cillian
AU  - Minda, John Paul
AU  - Mitkidis, Panagiotis
AU  - Olsson, Andreas
AU  - Otterbring, Tobias
AU  - Packer, Dominic J.
AU  - Perry, Anat
AU  - Petersen, Michael Bang
AU  - Puthillam, Arathy
AU  - Rothmund, Tobias
AU  - Santamaría-García, Hernando
AU  - Schmid, Petra C.
AU  - Stoyanov, Drozdstoy
AU  - Tewari, Shruti
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Tsakiris, Manos
AU  - Tung, Hans H.
AU  - Umbres, Radu G.
AU  - Vanags, Edmunds
AU  - Vlasceanu, Madalina
AU  - Vonasch, Andrew
AU  - Yucel, Meltem
AU  - Zhang, Yucheng
AU  - Abad, Mohcine
AU  - Adler, Eli
AU  - Akrawi, Narin
AU  - Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui
AU  - Amara, Hanane
AU  - Amodio, David M.
AU  - Antazo, Benedict G.
AU  - Apps, Matthew
AU  - Ba, Mouhamadou Hady
AU  - Barbosa, Sergio
AU  - Bastian, Brock
AU  - Berg, Anton
AU  - Bernal-Zárate, Maria P.
AU  - Bernstein, Michael
AU  - Białek, Michał
AU  - Bilancini, Ennio
AU  - Bogatyreva, Natalia
AU  - Boncinelli, Leonardo
AU  - Booth, Jonathan E.
AU  - Borau, Sylvie
AU  - Buchel, Ondrej
AU  - Cameron, C. Daryl
AU  - Carvalho, Chrissie F.
AU  - Celadin, Tatiana
AU  - Cerami, Chiara
AU  - Chalise, Hom Nath
AU  - Cheng, Xiaojun
AU  - Cockcroft, Kate
AU  - Conway, Jane
AU  - Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres
AU  - Crespi, Chiara
AU  - Crouzevialle, Marie
AU  - Cutler, Jo
AU  - Cypryańska, Marzena
AU  - Dabrowska, Justyna
AU  - Daniels, Michael A.
AU  - Davis, Victoria H.
AU  - Dayley, Pamala N.
AU  - Delouvée, S.
AU  - Denkovski, Ognjan
AU  - Dezecache, Guillaume
AU  - Dhaliwal, Nathan A.
AU  - Diato, Alelie B.
AU  - Di Paolo, Roberto
AU  - Drosinou, Marianna
AU  - Dulleck, Uwe
AU  - Ekmanis, Jānis
AU  - Ertan, Arhan S.
AU  - Farhana, Hapsa Hossain
AU  - Farkhari, Fahima
AU  - Farmer, Harry
AU  - Fenwick, Ali
AU  - Fidanovski, Kristijan
AU  - Flew, Terry
AU  - Fraser, Shona
AU  - Frempong, Raymond Boadi
AU  - Fugelsang, Jonathan A.
AU  - Gale, Jessica
AU  - Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña
AU  - Garladinne, Prasad
AU  - Ghajjou, Oussama
AU  - Gkinopoulos, Theofilos
AU  - Gray, Kurt
AU  - Griffin, Siobhán M.
AU  - Gronfeldt, Bjarki
AU  - Gümren, Mert
AU  - Gurung, Ranju Lama
AU  - Halperin, Eran
AU  - Harris, Elizabeth
AU  - Herzon, Volo
AU  - Hruška, Matej
AU  - Huang, Guanxiong
AU  - Hudecek, Matthias F. C.
AU  - Isler, Ozan
AU  - Jangard, Simon
AU  - Jorgensen, Frederik J.
AU  - Kachanoff, Frank
AU  - Kahn, John
AU  - Dangol, Apsara Katuwal
AU  - Keudel, Oleksandra
AU  - Koppel, Lina
AU  - Koverola, Mika
AU  - Kubin, Emily
AU  - Kunnari, Anton
AU  - Kutiyski, Yordan
AU  - Laguna, Oscar
AU  - Leota, Josh
AU  - Lermer, Eva
AU  - Levy, Jonathan
AU  - Levy, Neil
AU  - Li, Chunyun
AU  - Long, Elizabeth U.
AU  - Maglić, Marina
AU  - McCashin, Darragh
AU  - Metcalf, Alexander L.
AU  - Mikloušić, Igor
AU  - El Mimouni, Soulaimane
AU  - Miura, Asako
AU  - Molina-Paredes, Juliana
AU  - Monroy-Fonseca, César
AU  - Morales-Marente, Elena
AU  - Moreau, David
AU  - Muda, Rafał
AU  - Myer, Annalisa
AU  - Nash, Kyle
AU  - Nesh-Nash, Tarik
AU  - Nitschke, Jonas P.
AU  - Nurse, Matthew S.
AU  - Ohtsubo, Yohsuke
AU  - Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria
AU  - O’Madagain, Cathal
AU  - Onderco, Michal
AU  - Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad
AU  - Palomöki, Jussi
AU  - Pan, Yafeng
AU  - Papp, Zsófia
AU  - Pärnamets, Philip
AU  - Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Payán-Gómez, César
AU  - Perander, Silva
AU  - Pitman, Michael Mark
AU  - Prasad, Rajib
AU  - Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna
AU  - Rathje, Steve
AU  - Raza, Ali
AU  - Rhee, Kasey
AU  - Robertson, Claire E.
AU  - Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván
AU  - Saikkonen, Teemu
AU  - Salvador-Ginez, Octavio
AU  - Santi, Gaia C.
AU  - Santiago-Tovar, Natalia
AU  - Savage, David
AU  - Scheffer, Julian A.
AU  - Schultner, David T.
AU  - Schutte, Enid M.
AU  - Scott, Andy
AU  - Sharma, Madhavi
AU  - Sharma, Pujan
AU  - Skali, Ahmed
AU  - Stadelmann, David
AU  - Stafford, Clara Alexandra
AU  - Stanojević, Dragan
AU  - Stefaniak, Anna
AU  - Sternisko, Anni
AU  - Stoica, Augustin
AU  - Stoyanova, Kristina K.
AU  - Strickland, Brent
AU  - Sundvall, Jukka
AU  - Thomas, Jeffrey P.
AU  - Tinghög, Gustav
AU  - Torgler, Benno
AU  - Traast, Iris J.
AU  - Tucciarelli, Raffaele
AU  - Tyrala, Michael
AU  - Ungson, Nick D.
AU  - Uysal, Mete S.
AU  - Van Lange, Paul A. M.
AU  - van Prooijen, Jan-Willem
AU  - van Rooy, Dirk
AU  - Västfjäll, Daniel
AU  - Verkoeijen, Peter
AU  - Vieira, Joana B.
AU  - von Sikorski, Christian
AU  - Walker, Alexander Cameron
AU  - Watermeyer, Jennifer
AU  - Wetter, Erik
AU  - Whillans, Ashley
AU  - White, Katherine
AU  - Habib, Rishad
AU  - Willardt, Robin
AU  - Wohl, Michael J. A.
AU  - Wójcik, Adrian Dominik
AU  - Wu, Kaidi
AU  - Yamada, Yuki
AU  - Yilmaz, Onurcan
AU  - Yogeeswaran, Kumar
AU  - Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa
AU  - Zwaan, Rolf A.
AU  - Boggio, Paulo S.
AU  - Sampaio, Waldir M.
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4487
AB  - The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all domains of human life, including the economic and
social fabric of societies. One of the central strategies for managing public health throughout
the pandemic has been through persuasive messaging and collective behaviour change.
To help scholars better understand the social and moral psychology behind public health
behaviour, we present a dataset comprising of 51,404 individuals from 69 countries. This
dataset was collected for the International Collaboration on Social & Moral Psychology of
COVID-19 project (ICSMP COVID-19). This social science survey invited participants around
the world to complete a series of moral and psychological measures and public health
attitudes about COVID-19 during an early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic (between April
and June 2020). The survey included seven broad categories of questions: COVID-19 beliefs
and compliance behaviours; identity and social attitudes; ideology; health and well-being;
moral beliefs and motivation; personality traits; and demographic variables. We report both
raw and cleaned data, along with all survey materials, data visualisations, and psychometric
evaluations of key variables.
T2  - Scientific Data
T1  - Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries
SP  - 272
VL  - 10
DO  - 10.1038/s41597-023-02080-8
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Azevedo, Flavio and Pavlović, Tomislav and Rêgo, Gabriel G. and Ay, F. Ceren and Gjoneska, Biljana and Etienne, Tom W. and Ross, Robert M. and Schönegger, Philipp and Riaño-Moreno, Julián C. and Cichocka, Aleksandra and Capraro, Valerio and Cian, Luca and Longoni, Chiara and Chan, Ho Fai and Van Bavel, Jay J. and Sjåstad, Hallgeir and Nezlek, John B. and Alfano, Mark and Gelfand, Michele J. and Birtel, Michèle D. and Cislak, Aleksandra and Lockwood, Patricia L. and Abts, Koen and Agadullina, Elena and Aruta, John Jamir Benzon and Besharati, Sahba Nomvula and Bor, Alexander and Choma, Becky L. and Crabtree, Charles David and Cunningham, William A. and De, Koustav and Ejaz, Waqas and Elbaek, Christian T. and Findor, Andrej and Flichtentrei, Daniel and Franc, Renata and Gruber, June and Gualda, Estrella and Horiuchi, Yusaku and Huynh, Toan Luu Duc and Ibanez, Agustin and Imran, Mostak Ahamed and Israelashvili, Jacob and Jasko, Katarzyna and Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw and Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena and Krouwel, André and Laakasuo, Michael and Lamm, Claus and Leygue, Caroline and Lin, Ming-Jen and Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir and Marie, Antoine and Mayiwar, Lewend and Mazepus, Honorata and McHugh, Cillian and Minda, John Paul and Mitkidis, Panagiotis and Olsson, Andreas and Otterbring, Tobias and Packer, Dominic J. and Perry, Anat and Petersen, Michael Bang and Puthillam, Arathy and Rothmund, Tobias and Santamaría-García, Hernando and Schmid, Petra C. and Stoyanov, Drozdstoy and Tewari, Shruti and Todosijević, Bojan and Tsakiris, Manos and Tung, Hans H. and Umbres, Radu G. and Vanags, Edmunds and Vlasceanu, Madalina and Vonasch, Andrew and Yucel, Meltem and Zhang, Yucheng and Abad, Mohcine and Adler, Eli and Akrawi, Narin and Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui and Amara, Hanane and Amodio, David M. and Antazo, Benedict G. and Apps, Matthew and Ba, Mouhamadou Hady and Barbosa, Sergio and Bastian, Brock and Berg, Anton and Bernal-Zárate, Maria P. and Bernstein, Michael and Białek, Michał and Bilancini, Ennio and Bogatyreva, Natalia and Boncinelli, Leonardo and Booth, Jonathan E. and Borau, Sylvie and Buchel, Ondrej and Cameron, C. Daryl and Carvalho, Chrissie F. and Celadin, Tatiana and Cerami, Chiara and Chalise, Hom Nath and Cheng, Xiaojun and Cockcroft, Kate and Conway, Jane and Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres and Crespi, Chiara and Crouzevialle, Marie and Cutler, Jo and Cypryańska, Marzena and Dabrowska, Justyna and Daniels, Michael A. and Davis, Victoria H. and Dayley, Pamala N. and Delouvée, S. and Denkovski, Ognjan and Dezecache, Guillaume and Dhaliwal, Nathan A. and Diato, Alelie B. and Di Paolo, Roberto and Drosinou, Marianna and Dulleck, Uwe and Ekmanis, Jānis and Ertan, Arhan S. and Farhana, Hapsa Hossain and Farkhari, Fahima and Farmer, Harry and Fenwick, Ali and Fidanovski, Kristijan and Flew, Terry and Fraser, Shona and Frempong, Raymond Boadi and Fugelsang, Jonathan A. and Gale, Jessica and Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña and Garladinne, Prasad and Ghajjou, Oussama and Gkinopoulos, Theofilos and Gray, Kurt and Griffin, Siobhán M. and Gronfeldt, Bjarki and Gümren, Mert and Gurung, Ranju Lama and Halperin, Eran and Harris, Elizabeth and Herzon, Volo and Hruška, Matej and Huang, Guanxiong and Hudecek, Matthias F. C. and Isler, Ozan and Jangard, Simon and Jorgensen, Frederik J. and Kachanoff, Frank and Kahn, John and Dangol, Apsara Katuwal and Keudel, Oleksandra and Koppel, Lina and Koverola, Mika and Kubin, Emily and Kunnari, Anton and Kutiyski, Yordan and Laguna, Oscar and Leota, Josh and Lermer, Eva and Levy, Jonathan and Levy, Neil and Li, Chunyun and Long, Elizabeth U. and Maglić, Marina and McCashin, Darragh and Metcalf, Alexander L. and Mikloušić, Igor and El Mimouni, Soulaimane and Miura, Asako and Molina-Paredes, Juliana and Monroy-Fonseca, César and Morales-Marente, Elena and Moreau, David and Muda, Rafał and Myer, Annalisa and Nash, Kyle and Nesh-Nash, Tarik and Nitschke, Jonas P. and Nurse, Matthew S. and Ohtsubo, Yohsuke and Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria and O’Madagain, Cathal and Onderco, Michal and Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad and Palomöki, Jussi and Pan, Yafeng and Papp, Zsófia and Pärnamets, Philip and Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola and Pavlović, Zoran and Payán-Gómez, César and Perander, Silva and Pitman, Michael Mark and Prasad, Rajib and Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna and Rathje, Steve and Raza, Ali and Rhee, Kasey and Robertson, Claire E. and Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván and Saikkonen, Teemu and Salvador-Ginez, Octavio and Santi, Gaia C. and Santiago-Tovar, Natalia and Savage, David and Scheffer, Julian A. and Schultner, David T. and Schutte, Enid M. and Scott, Andy and Sharma, Madhavi and Sharma, Pujan and Skali, Ahmed and Stadelmann, David and Stafford, Clara Alexandra and Stanojević, Dragan and Stefaniak, Anna and Sternisko, Anni and Stoica, Augustin and Stoyanova, Kristina K. and Strickland, Brent and Sundvall, Jukka and Thomas, Jeffrey P. and Tinghög, Gustav and Torgler, Benno and Traast, Iris J. and Tucciarelli, Raffaele and Tyrala, Michael and Ungson, Nick D. and Uysal, Mete S. and Van Lange, Paul A. M. and van Prooijen, Jan-Willem and van Rooy, Dirk and Västfjäll, Daniel and Verkoeijen, Peter and Vieira, Joana B. and von Sikorski, Christian and Walker, Alexander Cameron and Watermeyer, Jennifer and Wetter, Erik and Whillans, Ashley and White, Katherine and Habib, Rishad and Willardt, Robin and Wohl, Michael J. A. and Wójcik, Adrian Dominik and Wu, Kaidi and Yamada, Yuki and Yilmaz, Onurcan and Yogeeswaran, Kumar and Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa and Zwaan, Rolf A. and Boggio, Paulo S. and Sampaio, Waldir M.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "The COVID-19 pandemic has affected all domains of human life, including the economic and
social fabric of societies. One of the central strategies for managing public health throughout
the pandemic has been through persuasive messaging and collective behaviour change.
To help scholars better understand the social and moral psychology behind public health
behaviour, we present a dataset comprising of 51,404 individuals from 69 countries. This
dataset was collected for the International Collaboration on Social & Moral Psychology of
COVID-19 project (ICSMP COVID-19). This social science survey invited participants around
the world to complete a series of moral and psychological measures and public health
attitudes about COVID-19 during an early phase of the COVID-19 pandemic (between April
and June 2020). The survey included seven broad categories of questions: COVID-19 beliefs
and compliance behaviours; identity and social attitudes; ideology; health and well-being;
moral beliefs and motivation; personality traits; and demographic variables. We report both
raw and cleaned data, along with all survey materials, data visualisations, and psychometric
evaluations of key variables.",
journal = "Scientific Data",
title = "Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries",
pages = "272",
volume = "10",
doi = "10.1038/s41597-023-02080-8"
}
Azevedo, F., Pavlović, T., Rêgo, G. G., Ay, F. C., Gjoneska, B., Etienne, T. W., Ross, R. M., Schönegger, P., Riaño-Moreno, J. C., Cichocka, A., Capraro, V., Cian, L., Longoni, C., Chan, H. F., Van Bavel, J. J., Sjåstad, H., Nezlek, J. B., Alfano, M., Gelfand, M. J., Birtel, M. D., Cislak, A., Lockwood, P. L., Abts, K., Agadullina, E., Aruta, J. J. B., Besharati, S. N., Bor, A., Choma, B. L., Crabtree, C. D., Cunningham, W. A., De, K., Ejaz, W., Elbaek, C. T., Findor, A., Flichtentrei, D., Franc, R., Gruber, J., Gualda, E., Horiuchi, Y., Huynh, T. L. D., Ibanez, A., Imran, M. A., Israelashvili, J., Jasko, K., Kantorowicz, J., Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, E., Krouwel, A., Laakasuo, M., Lamm, C., Leygue, C., Lin, M., Mansoor, M. S., Marie, A., Mayiwar, L., Mazepus, H., McHugh, C., Minda, J. P., Mitkidis, P., Olsson, A., Otterbring, T., Packer, D. J., Perry, A., Petersen, M. B., Puthillam, A., Rothmund, T., Santamaría-García, H., Schmid, P. C., Stoyanov, D., Tewari, S., Todosijević, B., Tsakiris, M., Tung, H. H., Umbres, R. G., Vanags, E., Vlasceanu, M., Vonasch, A., Yucel, M., Zhang, Y., Abad, M., Adler, E., Akrawi, N., Mdarhri, H. A., Amara, H., Amodio, D. M., Antazo, B. G., Apps, M., Ba, M. H., Barbosa, S., Bastian, B., Berg, A., Bernal-Zárate, M. P., Bernstein, M., Białek, M., Bilancini, E., Bogatyreva, N., Boncinelli, L., Booth, J. E., Borau, S., Buchel, O., Cameron, C. D., Carvalho, C. F., Celadin, T., Cerami, C., Chalise, H. N., Cheng, X., Cockcroft, K., Conway, J., Córdoba-Delgado, M. A., Crespi, C., Crouzevialle, M., Cutler, J., Cypryańska, M., Dabrowska, J., Daniels, M. A., Davis, V. H., Dayley, P. N., Delouvée, S., Denkovski, O., Dezecache, G., Dhaliwal, N. A., Diato, A. B., Di Paolo, R., Drosinou, M., Dulleck, U., Ekmanis, J., Ertan, A. S., Farhana, H. H., Farkhari, F., Farmer, H., Fenwick, A., Fidanovski, K., Flew, T., Fraser, S., Frempong, R. B., Fugelsang, J. A., Gale, J., Garcia-Navarro, E. B., Garladinne, P., Ghajjou, O., Gkinopoulos, T., Gray, K., Griffin, S. M., Gronfeldt, B., Gümren, M., Gurung, R. L., Halperin, E., Harris, E., Herzon, V., Hruška, M., Huang, G., Hudecek, M. F. C., Isler, O., Jangard, S., Jorgensen, F. J., Kachanoff, F., Kahn, J., Dangol, A. K., Keudel, O., Koppel, L., Koverola, M., Kubin, E., Kunnari, A., Kutiyski, Y., Laguna, O., Leota, J., Lermer, E., Levy, J., Levy, N., Li, C., Long, E. U., Maglić, M., McCashin, D., Metcalf, A. L., Mikloušić, I., El Mimouni, S., Miura, A., Molina-Paredes, J., Monroy-Fonseca, C., Morales-Marente, E., Moreau, D., Muda, R., Myer, A., Nash, K., Nesh-Nash, T., Nitschke, J. P., Nurse, M. S., Ohtsubo, Y., Oldemburgo de Mello, V., O’Madagain, C., Onderco, M., Palacios-Galvez, M. S., Palomöki, J., Pan, Y., Papp, Z., Pärnamets, P., Paruzel-Czachura, M., Pavlović, Z., Payán-Gómez, C., Perander, S., Pitman, M. M., Prasad, R., Pyrkosz-Pacyna, J., Rathje, S., Raza, A., Rhee, K., Robertson, C. E., Rodríguez-Pascual, I., Saikkonen, T., Salvador-Ginez, O., Santi, G. C., Santiago-Tovar, N., Savage, D., Scheffer, J. A., Schultner, D. T., Schutte, E. M., Scott, A., Sharma, M., Sharma, P., Skali, A., Stadelmann, D., Stafford, C. A., Stanojević, D., Stefaniak, A., Sternisko, A., Stoica, A., Stoyanova, K. K., Strickland, B., Sundvall, J., Thomas, J. P., Tinghög, G., Torgler, B., Traast, I. J., Tucciarelli, R., Tyrala, M., Ungson, N. D., Uysal, M. S., Van Lange, P. A. M., van Prooijen, J., van Rooy, D., Västfjäll, D., Verkoeijen, P., Vieira, J. B., von Sikorski, C., Walker, A. C., Watermeyer, J., Wetter, E., Whillans, A., White, K., Habib, R., Willardt, R., Wohl, M. J. A., Wójcik, A. D., Wu, K., Yamada, Y., Yilmaz, O., Yogeeswaran, K., Ziemer, C., Zwaan, R. A., Boggio, P. S.,& Sampaio, W. M.. (2023). Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries. in Scientific Data, 10, 272.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-023-02080-8
Azevedo F, Pavlović T, Rêgo GG, Ay FC, Gjoneska B, Etienne TW, Ross RM, Schönegger P, Riaño-Moreno JC, Cichocka A, Capraro V, Cian L, Longoni C, Chan HF, Van Bavel JJ, Sjåstad H, Nezlek JB, Alfano M, Gelfand MJ, Birtel MD, Cislak A, Lockwood PL, Abts K, Agadullina E, Aruta JJB, Besharati SN, Bor A, Choma BL, Crabtree CD, Cunningham WA, De K, Ejaz W, Elbaek CT, Findor A, Flichtentrei D, Franc R, Gruber J, Gualda E, Horiuchi Y, Huynh TLD, Ibanez A, Imran MA, Israelashvili J, Jasko K, Kantorowicz J, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko E, Krouwel A, Laakasuo M, Lamm C, Leygue C, Lin M, Mansoor MS, Marie A, Mayiwar L, Mazepus H, McHugh C, Minda JP, Mitkidis P, Olsson A, Otterbring T, Packer DJ, Perry A, Petersen MB, Puthillam A, Rothmund T, Santamaría-García H, Schmid PC, Stoyanov D, Tewari S, Todosijević B, Tsakiris M, Tung HH, Umbres RG, Vanags E, Vlasceanu M, Vonasch A, Yucel M, Zhang Y, Abad M, Adler E, Akrawi N, Mdarhri HA, Amara H, Amodio DM, Antazo BG, Apps M, Ba MH, Barbosa S, Bastian B, Berg A, Bernal-Zárate MP, Bernstein M, Białek M, Bilancini E, Bogatyreva N, Boncinelli L, Booth JE, Borau S, Buchel O, Cameron CD, Carvalho CF, Celadin T, Cerami C, Chalise HN, Cheng X, Cockcroft K, Conway J, Córdoba-Delgado MA, Crespi C, Crouzevialle M, Cutler J, Cypryańska M, Dabrowska J, Daniels MA, Davis VH, Dayley PN, Delouvée S, Denkovski O, Dezecache G, Dhaliwal NA, Diato AB, Di Paolo R, Drosinou M, Dulleck U, Ekmanis J, Ertan AS, Farhana HH, Farkhari F, Farmer H, Fenwick A, Fidanovski K, Flew T, Fraser S, Frempong RB, Fugelsang JA, Gale J, Garcia-Navarro EB, Garladinne P, Ghajjou O, Gkinopoulos T, Gray K, Griffin SM, Gronfeldt B, Gümren M, Gurung RL, Halperin E, Harris E, Herzon V, Hruška M, Huang G, Hudecek MFC, Isler O, Jangard S, Jorgensen FJ, Kachanoff F, Kahn J, Dangol AK, Keudel O, Koppel L, Koverola M, Kubin E, Kunnari A, Kutiyski Y, Laguna O, Leota J, Lermer E, Levy J, Levy N, Li C, Long EU, Maglić M, McCashin D, Metcalf AL, Mikloušić I, El Mimouni S, Miura A, Molina-Paredes J, Monroy-Fonseca C, Morales-Marente E, Moreau D, Muda R, Myer A, Nash K, Nesh-Nash T, Nitschke JP, Nurse MS, Ohtsubo Y, Oldemburgo de Mello V, O’Madagain C, Onderco M, Palacios-Galvez MS, Palomöki J, Pan Y, Papp Z, Pärnamets P, Paruzel-Czachura M, Pavlović Z, Payán-Gómez C, Perander S, Pitman MM, Prasad R, Pyrkosz-Pacyna J, Rathje S, Raza A, Rhee K, Robertson CE, Rodríguez-Pascual I, Saikkonen T, Salvador-Ginez O, Santi GC, Santiago-Tovar N, Savage D, Scheffer JA, Schultner DT, Schutte EM, Scott A, Sharma M, Sharma P, Skali A, Stadelmann D, Stafford CA, Stanojević D, Stefaniak A, Sternisko A, Stoica A, Stoyanova KK, Strickland B, Sundvall J, Thomas JP, Tinghög G, Torgler B, Traast IJ, Tucciarelli R, Tyrala M, Ungson ND, Uysal MS, Van Lange PAM, van Prooijen J, van Rooy D, Västfjäll D, Verkoeijen P, Vieira JB, von Sikorski C, Walker AC, Watermeyer J, Wetter E, Whillans A, White K, Habib R, Willardt R, Wohl MJA, Wójcik AD, Wu K, Yamada Y, Yilmaz O, Yogeeswaran K, Ziemer C, Zwaan RA, Boggio PS, Sampaio WM. Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries. in Scientific Data. 2023;10:272.
doi:10.1038/s41597-023-02080-8 .
Azevedo, Flavio, Pavlović, Tomislav, Rêgo, Gabriel G., Ay, F. Ceren, Gjoneska, Biljana, Etienne, Tom W., Ross, Robert M., Schönegger, Philipp, Riaño-Moreno, Julián C., Cichocka, Aleksandra, Capraro, Valerio, Cian, Luca, Longoni, Chiara, Chan, Ho Fai, Van Bavel, Jay J., Sjåstad, Hallgeir, Nezlek, John B., Alfano, Mark, Gelfand, Michele J., Birtel, Michèle D., Cislak, Aleksandra, Lockwood, Patricia L., Abts, Koen, Agadullina, Elena, Aruta, John Jamir Benzon, Besharati, Sahba Nomvula, Bor, Alexander, Choma, Becky L., Crabtree, Charles David, Cunningham, William A., De, Koustav, Ejaz, Waqas, Elbaek, Christian T., Findor, Andrej, Flichtentrei, Daniel, Franc, Renata, Gruber, June, Gualda, Estrella, Horiuchi, Yusaku, Huynh, Toan Luu Duc, Ibanez, Agustin, Imran, Mostak Ahamed, Israelashvili, Jacob, Jasko, Katarzyna, Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena, Krouwel, André, Laakasuo, Michael, Lamm, Claus, Leygue, Caroline, Lin, Ming-Jen, Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir, Marie, Antoine, Mayiwar, Lewend, Mazepus, Honorata, McHugh, Cillian, Minda, John Paul, Mitkidis, Panagiotis, Olsson, Andreas, Otterbring, Tobias, Packer, Dominic J., Perry, Anat, Petersen, Michael Bang, Puthillam, Arathy, Rothmund, Tobias, Santamaría-García, Hernando, Schmid, Petra C., Stoyanov, Drozdstoy, Tewari, Shruti, Todosijević, Bojan, Tsakiris, Manos, Tung, Hans H., Umbres, Radu G., Vanags, Edmunds, Vlasceanu, Madalina, Vonasch, Andrew, Yucel, Meltem, Zhang, Yucheng, Abad, Mohcine, Adler, Eli, Akrawi, Narin, Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui, Amara, Hanane, Amodio, David M., Antazo, Benedict G., Apps, Matthew, Ba, Mouhamadou Hady, Barbosa, Sergio, Bastian, Brock, Berg, Anton, Bernal-Zárate, Maria P., Bernstein, Michael, Białek, Michał, Bilancini, Ennio, Bogatyreva, Natalia, Boncinelli, Leonardo, Booth, Jonathan E., Borau, Sylvie, Buchel, Ondrej, Cameron, C. Daryl, Carvalho, Chrissie F., Celadin, Tatiana, Cerami, Chiara, Chalise, Hom Nath, Cheng, Xiaojun, Cockcroft, Kate, Conway, Jane, Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres, Crespi, Chiara, Crouzevialle, Marie, Cutler, Jo, Cypryańska, Marzena, Dabrowska, Justyna, Daniels, Michael A., Davis, Victoria H., Dayley, Pamala N., Delouvée, S., Denkovski, Ognjan, Dezecache, Guillaume, Dhaliwal, Nathan A., Diato, Alelie B., Di Paolo, Roberto, Drosinou, Marianna, Dulleck, Uwe, Ekmanis, Jānis, Ertan, Arhan S., Farhana, Hapsa Hossain, Farkhari, Fahima, Farmer, Harry, Fenwick, Ali, Fidanovski, Kristijan, Flew, Terry, Fraser, Shona, Frempong, Raymond Boadi, Fugelsang, Jonathan A., Gale, Jessica, Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña, Garladinne, Prasad, Ghajjou, Oussama, Gkinopoulos, Theofilos, Gray, Kurt, Griffin, Siobhán M., Gronfeldt, Bjarki, Gümren, Mert, Gurung, Ranju Lama, Halperin, Eran, Harris, Elizabeth, Herzon, Volo, Hruška, Matej, Huang, Guanxiong, Hudecek, Matthias F. C., Isler, Ozan, Jangard, Simon, Jorgensen, Frederik J., Kachanoff, Frank, Kahn, John, Dangol, Apsara Katuwal, Keudel, Oleksandra, Koppel, Lina, Koverola, Mika, Kubin, Emily, Kunnari, Anton, Kutiyski, Yordan, Laguna, Oscar, Leota, Josh, Lermer, Eva, Levy, Jonathan, Levy, Neil, Li, Chunyun, Long, Elizabeth U., Maglić, Marina, McCashin, Darragh, Metcalf, Alexander L., Mikloušić, Igor, El Mimouni, Soulaimane, Miura, Asako, Molina-Paredes, Juliana, Monroy-Fonseca, César, Morales-Marente, Elena, Moreau, David, Muda, Rafał, Myer, Annalisa, Nash, Kyle, Nesh-Nash, Tarik, Nitschke, Jonas P., Nurse, Matthew S., Ohtsubo, Yohsuke, Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria, O’Madagain, Cathal, Onderco, Michal, Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad, Palomöki, Jussi, Pan, Yafeng, Papp, Zsófia, Pärnamets, Philip, Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola, Pavlović, Zoran, Payán-Gómez, César, Perander, Silva, Pitman, Michael Mark, Prasad, Rajib, Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna, Rathje, Steve, Raza, Ali, Rhee, Kasey, Robertson, Claire E., Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván, Saikkonen, Teemu, Salvador-Ginez, Octavio, Santi, Gaia C., Santiago-Tovar, Natalia, Savage, David, Scheffer, Julian A., Schultner, David T., Schutte, Enid M., Scott, Andy, Sharma, Madhavi, Sharma, Pujan, Skali, Ahmed, Stadelmann, David, Stafford, Clara Alexandra, Stanojević, Dragan, Stefaniak, Anna, Sternisko, Anni, Stoica, Augustin, Stoyanova, Kristina K., Strickland, Brent, Sundvall, Jukka, Thomas, Jeffrey P., Tinghög, Gustav, Torgler, Benno, Traast, Iris J., Tucciarelli, Raffaele, Tyrala, Michael, Ungson, Nick D., Uysal, Mete S., Van Lange, Paul A. M., van Prooijen, Jan-Willem, van Rooy, Dirk, Västfjäll, Daniel, Verkoeijen, Peter, Vieira, Joana B., von Sikorski, Christian, Walker, Alexander Cameron, Watermeyer, Jennifer, Wetter, Erik, Whillans, Ashley, White, Katherine, Habib, Rishad, Willardt, Robin, Wohl, Michael J. A., Wójcik, Adrian Dominik, Wu, Kaidi, Yamada, Yuki, Yilmaz, Onurcan, Yogeeswaran, Kumar, Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa, Zwaan, Rolf A., Boggio, Paulo S., Sampaio, Waldir M., "Social and moral psychology of COVID-19 across 69 countries" in Scientific Data, 10 (2023):272,
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41597-023-02080-8 . .
77
17

Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures

Krys, Kuba; Yeung, June Chun; Haas, Brian W.; van Osch, Yvette; Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra; Kocimska-Zych, Agata; Torres, Claudio; Selim, Heyla A.; Zelenski, John M.; Bond, Michael Harris; Park, Joonha; Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi; Maricchiolo, Fridanna; Vauclair, Christin-Melanie; Poláčková Šolcová, Iva; Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu; Xing, Cai; Vignoles, Vivian L.; van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.; Teyssier, Julien; Sun, Chien-Ru; Serdarevich, Ursula; Schwarz, Beate; Sargautyte, Ruta; Røysamb, Espen; Romashov, Vladyslav; Rizwan, Muhammad; Pavlović, Zoran; Pavlopoulos, Vassilis; Okvitawanli, Ayu; Nadi, Azar; Nader, Martin; Mustaffa, Nur Fariza; Murdock, Elke; Mosca, Oriana; Mohorić, Tamara; Barrientos Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo; Malyonova, Arina; Liu, Xinhui; Lee, J. Hannah; Kwiatkowska, Anna; Kronberger, Nicole; Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová; Kascakova, Natalia; Işık, İdil; Igou, Eric R.; Igbokwe, David O.; Hanke-Boer, Diana; Gavreliuc, Alin; Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.; Fülöp, Márta; Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer; Esteves, Carla Sofia; Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra; Denoux, Patrick; Charkviani, Salome; Baltin, Arno; Arevalo, Douglas; Appoh, Lily; Akotia, Charity; Adamovic, Mladen; Uchida, Yukiko

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Krys, Kuba
AU  - Yeung, June Chun
AU  - Haas, Brian W.
AU  - van Osch, Yvette
AU  - Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra
AU  - Kocimska-Zych, Agata
AU  - Torres, Claudio
AU  - Selim, Heyla A.
AU  - Zelenski, John M.
AU  - Bond, Michael Harris
AU  - Park, Joonha
AU  - Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi
AU  - Maricchiolo, Fridanna
AU  - Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
AU  - Poláčková Šolcová, Iva
AU  - Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu
AU  - Xing, Cai
AU  - Vignoles, Vivian L.
AU  - van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.
AU  - Teyssier, Julien
AU  - Sun, Chien-Ru
AU  - Serdarevich, Ursula
AU  - Schwarz, Beate
AU  - Sargautyte, Ruta
AU  - Røysamb, Espen
AU  - Romashov, Vladyslav
AU  - Rizwan, Muhammad
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Pavlopoulos, Vassilis
AU  - Okvitawanli, Ayu
AU  - Nadi, Azar
AU  - Nader, Martin
AU  - Mustaffa, Nur Fariza
AU  - Murdock, Elke
AU  - Mosca, Oriana
AU  - Mohorić, Tamara
AU  - Barrientos Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo
AU  - Malyonova, Arina
AU  - Liu, Xinhui
AU  - Lee, J. Hannah
AU  - Kwiatkowska, Anna
AU  - Kronberger, Nicole
AU  - Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová
AU  - Kascakova, Natalia
AU  - Işık, İdil
AU  - Igou, Eric R.
AU  - Igbokwe, David O.
AU  - Hanke-Boer, Diana
AU  - Gavreliuc, Alin
AU  - Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.
AU  - Fülöp, Márta
AU  - Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
AU  - Esteves, Carla Sofia
AU  - Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra
AU  - Denoux, Patrick
AU  - Charkviani, Salome
AU  - Baltin, Arno
AU  - Arevalo, Douglas
AU  - Appoh, Lily
AU  - Akotia, Charity
AU  - Adamovic, Mladen
AU  - Uchida, Yukiko
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4303
AB  - People care about their own well-being, but also about the well-being of their families. It is
currently however unknown how much people tend to value their own and their family’s wellbeing. A recent study documented that people value family happiness over personal happiness
across four cultures. In this study, we sought to replicate this finding across a larger sample size
(N = 12,819) and a greater number of countries (N = 49), We found that the strength of the
idealization of family over personal happiness preference was small (average Cohen’s ds = .20
with country levels varying from -.02 to almost .48), but ubiquitous, i.e., direction presented in
98% of the studied countries, 73-75% with statistical significance and < 2% variance across
countries. We also found that the size of this effect did vary somewhat across cultural contexts.
In Latin American cultures highest on relational mobility, the idealization of family over
personal happiness was very small (average Cohen’s ds for Latin America = .15 and .18), while
in Confucian Asia cultures lowest on relational mobility, this effect was closer to medium (ds >
.40 and .30). Importantly, we did not find strong support for traditional theories in cross-cultural
psychology that associate collectivism with greater prioritization of the family versus the
individual; country level individualism-collectivism was not associated with variation in the
idealization of family versus individual happiness. Our findings indicate that no matter how
much various populists abuse the argument of “protecting family life” to disrupt emancipation,
family happiness seems to be a pan-culturally phenomenon. Family well-being is a key
ingredient of social fabric across the world, and should be acknowledged by psychology and
well-being researchers, and by progressive movements too.
T2  - Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology
T1  - Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures
EP  - 339
IS  - 3
SP  - 323
VL  - 54
DO  - 10.1177/00220221221134711
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Krys, Kuba and Yeung, June Chun and Haas, Brian W. and van Osch, Yvette and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Torres, Claudio and Selim, Heyla A. and Zelenski, John M. and Bond, Michael Harris and Park, Joonha and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Poláčková Šolcová, Iva and Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu and Xing, Cai and Vignoles, Vivian L. and van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. and Teyssier, Julien and Sun, Chien-Ru and Serdarevich, Ursula and Schwarz, Beate and Sargautyte, Ruta and Røysamb, Espen and Romashov, Vladyslav and Rizwan, Muhammad and Pavlović, Zoran and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Okvitawanli, Ayu and Nadi, Azar and Nader, Martin and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Murdock, Elke and Mosca, Oriana and Mohorić, Tamara and Barrientos Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo and Malyonova, Arina and Liu, Xinhui and Lee, J. Hannah and Kwiatkowska, Anna and Kronberger, Nicole and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kascakova, Natalia and Işık, İdil and Igou, Eric R. and Igbokwe, David O. and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Gavreliuc, Alin and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B. and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Denoux, Patrick and Charkviani, Salome and Baltin, Arno and Arevalo, Douglas and Appoh, Lily and Akotia, Charity and Adamovic, Mladen and Uchida, Yukiko",
year = "2023",
abstract = "People care about their own well-being, but also about the well-being of their families. It is
currently however unknown how much people tend to value their own and their family’s wellbeing. A recent study documented that people value family happiness over personal happiness
across four cultures. In this study, we sought to replicate this finding across a larger sample size
(N = 12,819) and a greater number of countries (N = 49), We found that the strength of the
idealization of family over personal happiness preference was small (average Cohen’s ds = .20
with country levels varying from -.02 to almost .48), but ubiquitous, i.e., direction presented in
98% of the studied countries, 73-75% with statistical significance and < 2% variance across
countries. We also found that the size of this effect did vary somewhat across cultural contexts.
In Latin American cultures highest on relational mobility, the idealization of family over
personal happiness was very small (average Cohen’s ds for Latin America = .15 and .18), while
in Confucian Asia cultures lowest on relational mobility, this effect was closer to medium (ds >
.40 and .30). Importantly, we did not find strong support for traditional theories in cross-cultural
psychology that associate collectivism with greater prioritization of the family versus the
individual; country level individualism-collectivism was not associated with variation in the
idealization of family versus individual happiness. Our findings indicate that no matter how
much various populists abuse the argument of “protecting family life” to disrupt emancipation,
family happiness seems to be a pan-culturally phenomenon. Family well-being is a key
ingredient of social fabric across the world, and should be acknowledged by psychology and
well-being researchers, and by progressive movements too.",
journal = "Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology",
title = "Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures",
pages = "339-323",
number = "3",
volume = "54",
doi = "10.1177/00220221221134711"
}
Krys, K., Yeung, J. C., Haas, B. W., van Osch, Y., Kosiarczyk, A., Kocimska-Zych, A., Torres, C., Selim, H. A., Zelenski, J. M., Bond, M. H., Park, J., Lun, V. M., Maricchiolo, F., Vauclair, C., Poláčková Šolcová, I., Diaz, D. R. S., Xing, C., Vignoles, V. L., van Tilburg, W. A. P., Teyssier, J., Sun, C., Serdarevich, U., Schwarz, B., Sargautyte, R., Røysamb, E., Romashov, V., Rizwan, M., Pavlović, Z., Pavlopoulos, V., Okvitawanli, A., Nadi, A., Nader, M., Mustaffa, N. F., Murdock, E., Mosca, O., Mohorić, T., Barrientos Marroquin, P. E., Malyonova, A., Liu, X., Lee, J. H., Kwiatkowska, A., Kronberger, N., Kračmárová, L. K., Kascakova, N., Işık, İ., Igou, E. R., Igbokwe, D. O., Hanke-Boer, D., Gavreliuc, A., Garðarsdóttir, R. B., Fülöp, M., Gamsakhurdia, V., Esteves, C. S., Domínguez-Espinosa, A., Denoux, P., Charkviani, S., Baltin, A., Arevalo, D., Appoh, L., Akotia, C., Adamovic, M.,& Uchida, Y.. (2023). Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures. in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 54(3), 323-339.
https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221221134711
Krys K, Yeung JC, Haas BW, van Osch Y, Kosiarczyk A, Kocimska-Zych A, Torres C, Selim HA, Zelenski JM, Bond MH, Park J, Lun VM, Maricchiolo F, Vauclair C, Poláčková Šolcová I, Diaz DRS, Xing C, Vignoles VL, van Tilburg WAP, Teyssier J, Sun C, Serdarevich U, Schwarz B, Sargautyte R, Røysamb E, Romashov V, Rizwan M, Pavlović Z, Pavlopoulos V, Okvitawanli A, Nadi A, Nader M, Mustaffa NF, Murdock E, Mosca O, Mohorić T, Barrientos Marroquin PE, Malyonova A, Liu X, Lee JH, Kwiatkowska A, Kronberger N, Kračmárová LK, Kascakova N, Işık İ, Igou ER, Igbokwe DO, Hanke-Boer D, Gavreliuc A, Garðarsdóttir RB, Fülöp M, Gamsakhurdia V, Esteves CS, Domínguez-Espinosa A, Denoux P, Charkviani S, Baltin A, Arevalo D, Appoh L, Akotia C, Adamovic M, Uchida Y. Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures. in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology. 2023;54(3):323-339.
doi:10.1177/00220221221134711 .
Krys, Kuba, Yeung, June Chun, Haas, Brian W., van Osch, Yvette, Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra, Kocimska-Zych, Agata, Torres, Claudio, Selim, Heyla A., Zelenski, John M., Bond, Michael Harris, Park, Joonha, Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Vauclair, Christin-Melanie, Poláčková Šolcová, Iva, Diaz, David Ricardo Sirlopu, Xing, Cai, Vignoles, Vivian L., van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P., Teyssier, Julien, Sun, Chien-Ru, Serdarevich, Ursula, Schwarz, Beate, Sargautyte, Ruta, Røysamb, Espen, Romashov, Vladyslav, Rizwan, Muhammad, Pavlović, Zoran, Pavlopoulos, Vassilis, Okvitawanli, Ayu, Nadi, Azar, Nader, Martin, Mustaffa, Nur Fariza, Murdock, Elke, Mosca, Oriana, Mohorić, Tamara, Barrientos Marroquin, Pablo Eduardo, Malyonova, Arina, Liu, Xinhui, Lee, J. Hannah, Kwiatkowska, Anna, Kronberger, Nicole, Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová, Kascakova, Natalia, Işık, İdil, Igou, Eric R., Igbokwe, David O., Hanke-Boer, Diana, Gavreliuc, Alin, Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B., Fülöp, Márta, Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer, Esteves, Carla Sofia, Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra, Denoux, Patrick, Charkviani, Salome, Baltin, Arno, Arevalo, Douglas, Appoh, Lily, Akotia, Charity, Adamovic, Mladen, Uchida, Yukiko, "Family First: Evidence of Consistency and Variation in the Value of Family versus Personal Happiness across 49 Different Cultures" in Journal of Cross-Cultural Psychology, 54, no. 3 (2023):323-339,
https://doi.org/10.1177/00220221221134711 . .
33
3

Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures

Krys, Kuba; Haas, Brian W.; Igou, Eric R.; Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra; Kocimska‑Bortnowska, Agata; Kwiatkowska, Anna; Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi; Maricchiolo, Fridanna; Park, Joonha; Poláčková Šolcová, Iva; Sirlopu, David; Uchida, Yukiko; Vauclair, Christin-Melanie; Vignoles, Vivian L.; Zelenski, John M.; Adamović, Mladen; Akotia, Charity; Albert, Isabelle; Appoh, Lily; Arevalo, Mira D. M.; Baltin, Arno; Denoux, Patrick; Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra; Esteves, Carla Sofia; Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer; Fülöp, Márta; Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.; Gavreliuc, Alin; Boer, Diana; Igbokwe, David O.; Işık, İdil; Kascakova, Natalia; Kráčmarová, Lucie Klůzová; Kosakowska‑Berezecka, Natasza; Kostoula, Olga; Kronberger, Nicole; Lee, J. Hannah; Liu, Xinhui; Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena; Malyonova, Arina; Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo; Mohorić, Tamara; Mosca, Oriana; Murdock, Elke; Mustaffa, Nur Fariza; Nader, Martin; Nadi, Azar; Okvitawanli, Ayu; van Osch, Yvette; Pavlopoulos, Vassilis; Pavlović, Zoran; Rizwan, Muhammad; Romashov, Vladyslav; Røysamb, Espen; Sargautyte, Ruta; Schwarz, Beate; Selim, Heyla A.; Serdarevich, Ursula; Stogianni, Maria; Sun, Chien-Ru; Teyssier, Julien; van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.; Torres, Claudio; Xing, Cai; Bond, Michael Harris

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Krys, Kuba
AU  - Haas, Brian W.
AU  - Igou, Eric R.
AU  - Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra
AU  - Kocimska‑Bortnowska, Agata
AU  - Kwiatkowska, Anna
AU  - Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi
AU  - Maricchiolo, Fridanna
AU  - Park, Joonha
AU  - Poláčková Šolcová, Iva
AU  - Sirlopu, David
AU  - Uchida, Yukiko
AU  - Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
AU  - Vignoles, Vivian L.
AU  - Zelenski, John M.
AU  - Adamović, Mladen
AU  - Akotia, Charity
AU  - Albert, Isabelle
AU  - Appoh, Lily
AU  - Arevalo, Mira D. M.
AU  - Baltin, Arno
AU  - Denoux, Patrick
AU  - Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra
AU  - Esteves, Carla Sofia
AU  - Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
AU  - Fülöp, Márta
AU  - Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.
AU  - Gavreliuc, Alin
AU  - Boer, Diana
AU  - Igbokwe, David O.
AU  - Işık, İdil
AU  - Kascakova, Natalia
AU  - Kráčmarová, Lucie Klůzová
AU  - Kosakowska‑Berezecka, Natasza
AU  - Kostoula, Olga
AU  - Kronberger, Nicole
AU  - Lee, J. Hannah
AU  - Liu, Xinhui
AU  - Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena
AU  - Malyonova, Arina
AU  - Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo
AU  - Mohorić, Tamara
AU  - Mosca, Oriana
AU  - Murdock, Elke
AU  - Mustaffa, Nur Fariza
AU  - Nader, Martin
AU  - Nadi, Azar
AU  - Okvitawanli, Ayu
AU  - van Osch, Yvette
AU  - Pavlopoulos, Vassilis
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Rizwan, Muhammad
AU  - Romashov, Vladyslav
AU  - Røysamb, Espen
AU  - Sargautyte, Ruta
AU  - Schwarz, Beate
AU  - Selim, Heyla A.
AU  - Serdarevich, Ursula
AU  - Stogianni, Maria
AU  - Sun, Chien-Ru
AU  - Teyssier, Julien
AU  - van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.
AU  - Torres, Claudio
AU  - Xing, Cai
AU  - Bond, Michael Harris
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4293
AB  - How can one conclude that well-being is higher in country A than country B, when wellbeing is being measured according to the way people in country A think about well-being?
We address this issue by proposing a new culturally sensitive method to comparing societal levels of well-being. We support our reasoning with data on life satisfaction and interdependent happiness focusing on individual and family, collected mostly from students,
across forty-nine countries. We demonstrate that the relative idealization of the two types
of well-being varies across cultural contexts and are associated with culturally different
models of selfhood. Furthermore, we show that rankings of societal well-being based on
life satisfaction tend to underestimate the contribution from interdependent happiness. We
introduce a new culturally sensitive method for calculating societal well-being, and examine its construct validity by testing for associations with the experience of emotions and
with individualism-collectivism. This new culturally sensitive approach represents a slight,
yet important improvement in measuring well-being.
T2  - Journal of Happiness Studies
T1  - Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures
EP  - 627
IS  - 2
SP  - 607
VL  - 24
DO  - 10.1007/s10902-022-00588-1
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Krys, Kuba and Haas, Brian W. and Igou, Eric R. and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kocimska‑Bortnowska, Agata and Kwiatkowska, Anna and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Park, Joonha and Poláčková Šolcová, Iva and Sirlopu, David and Uchida, Yukiko and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Vignoles, Vivian L. and Zelenski, John M. and Adamović, Mladen and Akotia, Charity and Albert, Isabelle and Appoh, Lily and Arevalo, Mira D. M. and Baltin, Arno and Denoux, Patrick and Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Fülöp, Márta and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B. and Gavreliuc, Alin and Boer, Diana and Igbokwe, David O. and Işık, İdil and Kascakova, Natalia and Kráčmarová, Lucie Klůzová and Kosakowska‑Berezecka, Natasza and Kostoula, Olga and Kronberger, Nicole and Lee, J. Hannah and Liu, Xinhui and Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena and Malyonova, Arina and Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo and Mohorić, Tamara and Mosca, Oriana and Murdock, Elke and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Nader, Martin and Nadi, Azar and Okvitawanli, Ayu and van Osch, Yvette and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Pavlović, Zoran and Rizwan, Muhammad and Romashov, Vladyslav and Røysamb, Espen and Sargautyte, Ruta and Schwarz, Beate and Selim, Heyla A. and Serdarevich, Ursula and Stogianni, Maria and Sun, Chien-Ru and Teyssier, Julien and van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. and Torres, Claudio and Xing, Cai and Bond, Michael Harris",
year = "2023",
abstract = "How can one conclude that well-being is higher in country A than country B, when wellbeing is being measured according to the way people in country A think about well-being?
We address this issue by proposing a new culturally sensitive method to comparing societal levels of well-being. We support our reasoning with data on life satisfaction and interdependent happiness focusing on individual and family, collected mostly from students,
across forty-nine countries. We demonstrate that the relative idealization of the two types
of well-being varies across cultural contexts and are associated with culturally different
models of selfhood. Furthermore, we show that rankings of societal well-being based on
life satisfaction tend to underestimate the contribution from interdependent happiness. We
introduce a new culturally sensitive method for calculating societal well-being, and examine its construct validity by testing for associations with the experience of emotions and
with individualism-collectivism. This new culturally sensitive approach represents a slight,
yet important improvement in measuring well-being.",
journal = "Journal of Happiness Studies",
title = "Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures",
pages = "627-607",
number = "2",
volume = "24",
doi = "10.1007/s10902-022-00588-1"
}
Krys, K., Haas, B. W., Igou, E. R., Kosiarczyk, A., Kocimska‑Bortnowska, A., Kwiatkowska, A., Lun, V. M., Maricchiolo, F., Park, J., Poláčková Šolcová, I., Sirlopu, D., Uchida, Y., Vauclair, C., Vignoles, V. L., Zelenski, J. M., Adamović, M., Akotia, C., Albert, I., Appoh, L., Arevalo, M. D. M., Baltin, A., Denoux, P., Dominguez-Espinosa, A., Esteves, C. S., Gamsakhurdia, V., Fülöp, M., Garðarsdóttir, R. B., Gavreliuc, A., Boer, D., Igbokwe, D. O., Işık, İ., Kascakova, N., Kráčmarová, L. K., Kosakowska‑Berezecka, N., Kostoula, O., Kronberger, N., Lee, J. H., Liu, X., Łużniak‑Piecha, M., Malyonova, A., Barrientos, P. E., Mohorić, T., Mosca, O., Murdock, E., Mustaffa, N. F., Nader, M., Nadi, A., Okvitawanli, A., van Osch, Y., Pavlopoulos, V., Pavlović, Z., Rizwan, M., Romashov, V., Røysamb, E., Sargautyte, R., Schwarz, B., Selim, H. A., Serdarevich, U., Stogianni, M., Sun, C., Teyssier, J., van Tilburg, W. A. P., Torres, C., Xing, C.,& Bond, M. H.. (2023). Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures. in Journal of Happiness Studies, 24(2), 607-627.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-022-00588-1
Krys K, Haas BW, Igou ER, Kosiarczyk A, Kocimska‑Bortnowska A, Kwiatkowska A, Lun VM, Maricchiolo F, Park J, Poláčková Šolcová I, Sirlopu D, Uchida Y, Vauclair C, Vignoles VL, Zelenski JM, Adamović M, Akotia C, Albert I, Appoh L, Arevalo MDM, Baltin A, Denoux P, Dominguez-Espinosa A, Esteves CS, Gamsakhurdia V, Fülöp M, Garðarsdóttir RB, Gavreliuc A, Boer D, Igbokwe DO, Işık İ, Kascakova N, Kráčmarová LK, Kosakowska‑Berezecka N, Kostoula O, Kronberger N, Lee JH, Liu X, Łużniak‑Piecha M, Malyonova A, Barrientos PE, Mohorić T, Mosca O, Murdock E, Mustaffa NF, Nader M, Nadi A, Okvitawanli A, van Osch Y, Pavlopoulos V, Pavlović Z, Rizwan M, Romashov V, Røysamb E, Sargautyte R, Schwarz B, Selim HA, Serdarevich U, Stogianni M, Sun C, Teyssier J, van Tilburg WAP, Torres C, Xing C, Bond MH. Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures. in Journal of Happiness Studies. 2023;24(2):607-627.
doi:10.1007/s10902-022-00588-1 .
Krys, Kuba, Haas, Brian W., Igou, Eric R., Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra, Kocimska‑Bortnowska, Agata, Kwiatkowska, Anna, Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Park, Joonha, Poláčková Šolcová, Iva, Sirlopu, David, Uchida, Yukiko, Vauclair, Christin-Melanie, Vignoles, Vivian L., Zelenski, John M., Adamović, Mladen, Akotia, Charity, Albert, Isabelle, Appoh, Lily, Arevalo, Mira D. M., Baltin, Arno, Denoux, Patrick, Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra, Esteves, Carla Sofia, Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer, Fülöp, Márta, Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B., Gavreliuc, Alin, Boer, Diana, Igbokwe, David O., Işık, İdil, Kascakova, Natalia, Kráčmarová, Lucie Klůzová, Kosakowska‑Berezecka, Natasza, Kostoula, Olga, Kronberger, Nicole, Lee, J. Hannah, Liu, Xinhui, Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena, Malyonova, Arina, Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo, Mohorić, Tamara, Mosca, Oriana, Murdock, Elke, Mustaffa, Nur Fariza, Nader, Martin, Nadi, Azar, Okvitawanli, Ayu, van Osch, Yvette, Pavlopoulos, Vassilis, Pavlović, Zoran, Rizwan, Muhammad, Romashov, Vladyslav, Røysamb, Espen, Sargautyte, Ruta, Schwarz, Beate, Selim, Heyla A., Serdarevich, Ursula, Stogianni, Maria, Sun, Chien-Ru, Teyssier, Julien, van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P., Torres, Claudio, Xing, Cai, Bond, Michael Harris, "Introduction to a Culturally Sensitive Measure of Well‑Being: Combining Life Satisfaction and Interdependent Happiness Across 49 Different Cultures" in Journal of Happiness Studies, 24, no. 2 (2023):607-627,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s10902-022-00588-1 . .
59
16

Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal

Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel; Uskul, Ayse K.; Rodríguez-Bailón, Rosa; Willis, Guillermo B.; Vignoles, Vivian L.; Krys, Kuba; Adamovic, Mladen; Akotia, Charity; Albert, Isabelle; Appoh, Lily; Baltin, Arno; Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo; Bond, Michael Harris; Denoux, Patrick; Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra; Esteves, Carla Sofia; Fülöp, Márta; Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer; Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.; Gavreliuc, Alin; Hanke-Boer, Diana; Haas, Brian W.; Igbokwe, David O.; Işık, İdil; Kascakova, Natalia; Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová; Kocimska-Zych, Agata; Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra; Kostoula, Olga; Kronberger, Nicole; Kwiatkowska, Anna; Lee, J. Hannah; Liu, Xinhui; Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena; Malyonova, Arina; Maricchiolo, Fridanna; Arevalo, Mira D. M.; Mohorić, Tamara; Mosca, Oriana; Murdock, Elke; Mustaffa, Nur Fariza; Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi; Nader, Martin; Nadi, Azar; Okvitawanli, Ayu; van Osch, Yvette; Park, Joonha; Pavlopoulos, Vassilis; Pavlović, Zoran; Poláčková Šolcová, Iva; Igou, Eric R.; Rizwan, Muhammad; Romashov, Vladyslav; Røysamb, Espen; Sargautyte, Ruta; Schwarz, Beate; Selim, Heyla A.; Serdarevich, Ursula; Sirlopú, David; Stogianni, Maria; Stoyanova, Stanislava; Sun, Chien-Ru; Teyssier, Julien; van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.; Torres, Claudio; Uchida, Yukiko; Vauclair, Christin-Melanie; Xing, Cai; Zelenski, John M.

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel
AU  - Uskul, Ayse K.
AU  - Rodríguez-Bailón, Rosa
AU  - Willis, Guillermo B.
AU  - Vignoles, Vivian L.
AU  - Krys, Kuba
AU  - Adamovic, Mladen
AU  - Akotia, Charity
AU  - Albert, Isabelle
AU  - Appoh, Lily
AU  - Baltin, Arno
AU  - Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo
AU  - Bond, Michael Harris
AU  - Denoux, Patrick
AU  - Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra
AU  - Esteves, Carla Sofia
AU  - Fülöp, Márta
AU  - Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
AU  - Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.
AU  - Gavreliuc, Alin
AU  - Hanke-Boer, Diana
AU  - Haas, Brian W.
AU  - Igbokwe, David O.
AU  - Işık, İdil
AU  - Kascakova, Natalia
AU  - Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová
AU  - Kocimska-Zych, Agata
AU  - Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra
AU  - Kostoula, Olga
AU  - Kronberger, Nicole
AU  - Kwiatkowska, Anna
AU  - Lee, J. Hannah
AU  - Liu, Xinhui
AU  - Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena
AU  - Malyonova, Arina
AU  - Maricchiolo, Fridanna
AU  - Arevalo, Mira D. M.
AU  - Mohorić, Tamara
AU  - Mosca, Oriana
AU  - Murdock, Elke
AU  - Mustaffa, Nur Fariza
AU  - Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi
AU  - Nader, Martin
AU  - Nadi, Azar
AU  - Okvitawanli, Ayu
AU  - van Osch, Yvette
AU  - Park, Joonha
AU  - Pavlopoulos, Vassilis
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Poláčková Šolcová, Iva
AU  - Igou, Eric R.
AU  - Rizwan, Muhammad
AU  - Romashov, Vladyslav
AU  - Røysamb, Espen
AU  - Sargautyte, Ruta
AU  - Schwarz, Beate
AU  - Selim, Heyla A.
AU  - Serdarevich, Ursula
AU  - Sirlopú, David
AU  - Stogianni, Maria
AU  - Stoyanova, Stanislava
AU  - Sun, Chien-Ru
AU  - Teyssier, Julien
AU  - van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.
AU  - Torres, Claudio
AU  - Uchida, Yukiko
AU  - Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
AU  - Xing, Cai
AU  - Zelenski, John M.
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4556
AB  - Past research has shown that economic inequality shapes individuals’ self-construals. However, it has been unclear which dimensions of self-construal are associated with and affected by economic
inequality. A correlational (Study 1: N = 264) and an experimental
study (Study 2: N = 532) provided converging evidence linking
perceived economic inequality with two forms of independent
(vs. interdependent) self-construal: Difference from Others and SelfReliance. In Study 3 (N = 12,634) societal differences in objective
economic inequality across 48 nations predicted feelings of
Difference from Others, but not Self-Reliance. Importantly, we
found no significant associations of economic inequality with the
other six dimensions of self-construal. Our findings help extend
previous results linking economic inequality to forms of “social
distance.”
T2  - Self and Identity
T1  - Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal
EP  - 739
IS  - 5
SP  - 713
VL  - 22
DO  - 10.1080/15298868.2023.2200032
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel and Uskul, Ayse K. and Rodríguez-Bailón, Rosa and Willis, Guillermo B. and Vignoles, Vivian L. and Krys, Kuba and Adamovic, Mladen and Akotia, Charity and Albert, Isabelle and Appoh, Lily and Baltin, Arno and Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo and Bond, Michael Harris and Denoux, Patrick and Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B. and Gavreliuc, Alin and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Haas, Brian W. and Igbokwe, David O. and Işık, İdil and Kascakova, Natalia and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kostoula, Olga and Kronberger, Nicole and Kwiatkowska, Anna and Lee, J. Hannah and Liu, Xinhui and Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena and Malyonova, Arina and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Arevalo, Mira D. M. and Mohorić, Tamara and Mosca, Oriana and Murdock, Elke and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Nader, Martin and Nadi, Azar and Okvitawanli, Ayu and van Osch, Yvette and Park, Joonha and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Pavlović, Zoran and Poláčková Šolcová, Iva and Igou, Eric R. and Rizwan, Muhammad and Romashov, Vladyslav and Røysamb, Espen and Sargautyte, Ruta and Schwarz, Beate and Selim, Heyla A. and Serdarevich, Ursula and Sirlopú, David and Stogianni, Maria and Stoyanova, Stanislava and Sun, Chien-Ru and Teyssier, Julien and van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. and Torres, Claudio and Uchida, Yukiko and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Xing, Cai and Zelenski, John M.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "Past research has shown that economic inequality shapes individuals’ self-construals. However, it has been unclear which dimensions of self-construal are associated with and affected by economic
inequality. A correlational (Study 1: N = 264) and an experimental
study (Study 2: N = 532) provided converging evidence linking
perceived economic inequality with two forms of independent
(vs. interdependent) self-construal: Difference from Others and SelfReliance. In Study 3 (N = 12,634) societal differences in objective
economic inequality across 48 nations predicted feelings of
Difference from Others, but not Self-Reliance. Importantly, we
found no significant associations of economic inequality with the
other six dimensions of self-construal. Our findings help extend
previous results linking economic inequality to forms of “social
distance.”",
journal = "Self and Identity",
title = "Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal",
pages = "739-713",
number = "5",
volume = "22",
doi = "10.1080/15298868.2023.2200032"
}
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Á., Uskul, A. K., Rodríguez-Bailón, R., Willis, G. B., Vignoles, V. L., Krys, K., Adamovic, M., Akotia, C., Albert, I., Appoh, L., Baltin, A., Barrientos, P. E., Bond, M. H., Denoux, P., Domínguez-Espinosa, A., Esteves, C. S., Fülöp, M., Gamsakhurdia, V., Garðarsdóttir, R. B., Gavreliuc, A., Hanke-Boer, D., Haas, B. W., Igbokwe, D. O., Işık, İ., Kascakova, N., Kračmárová, L. K., Kocimska-Zych, A., Kosiarczyk, A., Kostoula, O., Kronberger, N., Kwiatkowska, A., Lee, J. H., Liu, X., Łużniak‑Piecha, M., Malyonova, A., Maricchiolo, F., Arevalo, M. D. M., Mohorić, T., Mosca, O., Murdock, E., Mustaffa, N. F., Lun, V. M., Nader, M., Nadi, A., Okvitawanli, A., van Osch, Y., Park, J., Pavlopoulos, V., Pavlović, Z., Poláčková Šolcová, I., Igou, E. R., Rizwan, M., Romashov, V., Røysamb, E., Sargautyte, R., Schwarz, B., Selim, H. A., Serdarevich, U., Sirlopú, D., Stogianni, M., Stoyanova, S., Sun, C., Teyssier, J., van Tilburg, W. A. P., Torres, C., Uchida, Y., Vauclair, C., Xing, C.,& Zelenski, J. M.. (2023). Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal. in Self and Identity, 22(5), 713-739.
https://doi.org/10.1080/15298868.2023.2200032
Sánchez-Rodríguez Á, Uskul AK, Rodríguez-Bailón R, Willis GB, Vignoles VL, Krys K, Adamovic M, Akotia C, Albert I, Appoh L, Baltin A, Barrientos PE, Bond MH, Denoux P, Domínguez-Espinosa A, Esteves CS, Fülöp M, Gamsakhurdia V, Garðarsdóttir RB, Gavreliuc A, Hanke-Boer D, Haas BW, Igbokwe DO, Işık İ, Kascakova N, Kračmárová LK, Kocimska-Zych A, Kosiarczyk A, Kostoula O, Kronberger N, Kwiatkowska A, Lee JH, Liu X, Łużniak‑Piecha M, Malyonova A, Maricchiolo F, Arevalo MDM, Mohorić T, Mosca O, Murdock E, Mustaffa NF, Lun VM, Nader M, Nadi A, Okvitawanli A, van Osch Y, Park J, Pavlopoulos V, Pavlović Z, Poláčková Šolcová I, Igou ER, Rizwan M, Romashov V, Røysamb E, Sargautyte R, Schwarz B, Selim HA, Serdarevich U, Sirlopú D, Stogianni M, Stoyanova S, Sun C, Teyssier J, van Tilburg WAP, Torres C, Uchida Y, Vauclair C, Xing C, Zelenski JM. Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal. in Self and Identity. 2023;22(5):713-739.
doi:10.1080/15298868.2023.2200032 .
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel, Uskul, Ayse K., Rodríguez-Bailón, Rosa, Willis, Guillermo B., Vignoles, Vivian L., Krys, Kuba, Adamovic, Mladen, Akotia, Charity, Albert, Isabelle, Appoh, Lily, Baltin, Arno, Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo, Bond, Michael Harris, Denoux, Patrick, Domínguez-Espinosa, Alejandra, Esteves, Carla Sofia, Fülöp, Márta, Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer, Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B., Gavreliuc, Alin, Hanke-Boer, Diana, Haas, Brian W., Igbokwe, David O., Işık, İdil, Kascakova, Natalia, Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová, Kocimska-Zych, Agata, Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra, Kostoula, Olga, Kronberger, Nicole, Kwiatkowska, Anna, Lee, J. Hannah, Liu, Xinhui, Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena, Malyonova, Arina, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Arevalo, Mira D. M., Mohorić, Tamara, Mosca, Oriana, Murdock, Elke, Mustaffa, Nur Fariza, Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi, Nader, Martin, Nadi, Azar, Okvitawanli, Ayu, van Osch, Yvette, Park, Joonha, Pavlopoulos, Vassilis, Pavlović, Zoran, Poláčková Šolcová, Iva, Igou, Eric R., Rizwan, Muhammad, Romashov, Vladyslav, Røysamb, Espen, Sargautyte, Ruta, Schwarz, Beate, Selim, Heyla A., Serdarevich, Ursula, Sirlopú, David, Stogianni, Maria, Stoyanova, Stanislava, Sun, Chien-Ru, Teyssier, Julien, van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P., Torres, Claudio, Uchida, Yukiko, Vauclair, Christin-Melanie, Xing, Cai, Zelenski, John M., "Unpackaging the link between economic inequality and self-construal" in Self and Identity, 22, no. 5 (2023):713-739,
https://doi.org/10.1080/15298868.2023.2200032 . .
11

Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage

Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel; Vignoles, Vivian L.; Bond, Michael Harris; Adamovic, Mladen; Akotia, Charity; Albert, Isabelle; Appoh, Lily; Baltin, Arno; Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo; Denoux, Patrick; Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra; Esteves, Carla Sofia; Fülöp, Márta; Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer; Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.; Gavreliuc, Alin; Hanke-Boer, Diana; Haas, Brian W.; Igbokwe, David O.; Işık, İdil; Kascakova, Natalia; Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová; Kocimska-Zych, Agata; Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra; Kostoula, Olga; Kronberger, Nicole; Krys, Kuba; Kwiatkowska, Anna; Lee, J. Hannah; Liu, Xinhui; Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena; Malyonova, Arina; Maricchiolo, Fridanna; Arevalo, Mira D. M.; Mohorić, Tamara; Mosca, Oriana; Murdock, Elke; Mustaffa, Nur Fariza; Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi; Nader, Martin; Nadi, Azar; Okvitawanli, Ayu; van Osch, Yvette; Park, Joonha; Pavlopoulos, Vassilis; Pavlović, Zoran; Poláčková Šolcová, Iva; Igou, Eric R.; Rizwan, Muhammad; Romashov, Vladyslav; Røysamb, Espen; Sargautyte, Ruta; Schwarz, Beate; Selim, Heyla A.; Serdarevich, Ursula; Sirlopu, David; Stogianni, Maria; Stoyanova, Stanislava; Sun, Chien-Ru; Teyssier, Julien; van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.; Torres, Claudio; Uchida, Yukiko; Vauclair, Christin-Melanie; Xing, Cai; Zelenski, John M.

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel
AU  - Vignoles, Vivian L.
AU  - Bond, Michael Harris
AU  - Adamovic, Mladen
AU  - Akotia, Charity
AU  - Albert, Isabelle
AU  - Appoh, Lily
AU  - Baltin, Arno
AU  - Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo
AU  - Denoux, Patrick
AU  - Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra
AU  - Esteves, Carla Sofia
AU  - Fülöp, Márta
AU  - Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer
AU  - Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B.
AU  - Gavreliuc, Alin
AU  - Hanke-Boer, Diana
AU  - Haas, Brian W.
AU  - Igbokwe, David O.
AU  - Işık, İdil
AU  - Kascakova, Natalia
AU  - Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová
AU  - Kocimska-Zych, Agata
AU  - Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra
AU  - Kostoula, Olga
AU  - Kronberger, Nicole
AU  - Krys, Kuba
AU  - Kwiatkowska, Anna
AU  - Lee, J. Hannah
AU  - Liu, Xinhui
AU  - Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena
AU  - Malyonova, Arina
AU  - Maricchiolo, Fridanna
AU  - Arevalo, Mira D. M.
AU  - Mohorić, Tamara
AU  - Mosca, Oriana
AU  - Murdock, Elke
AU  - Mustaffa, Nur Fariza
AU  - Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi
AU  - Nader, Martin
AU  - Nadi, Azar
AU  - Okvitawanli, Ayu
AU  - van Osch, Yvette
AU  - Park, Joonha
AU  - Pavlopoulos, Vassilis
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Poláčková Šolcová, Iva
AU  - Igou, Eric R.
AU  - Rizwan, Muhammad
AU  - Romashov, Vladyslav
AU  - Røysamb, Espen
AU  - Sargautyte, Ruta
AU  - Schwarz, Beate
AU  - Selim, Heyla A.
AU  - Serdarevich, Ursula
AU  - Sirlopu, David
AU  - Stogianni, Maria
AU  - Stoyanova, Stanislava
AU  - Sun, Chien-Ru
AU  - Teyssier, Julien
AU  - van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P.
AU  - Torres, Claudio
AU  - Uchida, Yukiko
AU  - Vauclair, Christin-Melanie
AU  - Xing, Cai
AU  - Zelenski, John M.
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4557
AB  - We explore to what extent previously observed pan-cultural association between dimensions of self-construal and personal life
satisfaction (PLS) may be moderated by three national-contextual
variables: national wealth, economic inequality, and religious heritage. The results showed that Self-reliance (vs. dependence on
others) predicted PLS positively in poorer countries but negatively
in richer countries. Connectedness to others (vs. self-containment)
predicted PLS more strongly in Protestant-heritage countries. Selfexpression (vs. harmony) predicted PLS more weakly (and nonsignificantly) in Muslim-heritage countries. In contrast, previously
reported associations of self-direction (vs. reception-to-influence),
consistency (vs. variability), and decontextualized (vs. contextualized) self-understanding with personal life satisfaction were not
significantly moderated by these aspects of societal context.
These results show the importance of considering the impact of
national religious and economic context
T2  - Self and Identity
T1  - Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage
EP  - 712
IS  - 5
SP  - 689
VL  - 22
DO  - 10.1080/15298868.2023.2202413
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel and Vignoles, Vivian L. and Bond, Michael Harris and Adamovic, Mladen and Akotia, Charity and Albert, Isabelle and Appoh, Lily and Baltin, Arno and Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo and Denoux, Patrick and Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra and Esteves, Carla Sofia and Fülöp, Márta and Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer and Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B. and Gavreliuc, Alin and Hanke-Boer, Diana and Haas, Brian W. and Igbokwe, David O. and Işık, İdil and Kascakova, Natalia and Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová and Kocimska-Zych, Agata and Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra and Kostoula, Olga and Kronberger, Nicole and Krys, Kuba and Kwiatkowska, Anna and Lee, J. Hannah and Liu, Xinhui and Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena and Malyonova, Arina and Maricchiolo, Fridanna and Arevalo, Mira D. M. and Mohorić, Tamara and Mosca, Oriana and Murdock, Elke and Mustaffa, Nur Fariza and Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi and Nader, Martin and Nadi, Azar and Okvitawanli, Ayu and van Osch, Yvette and Park, Joonha and Pavlopoulos, Vassilis and Pavlović, Zoran and Poláčková Šolcová, Iva and Igou, Eric R. and Rizwan, Muhammad and Romashov, Vladyslav and Røysamb, Espen and Sargautyte, Ruta and Schwarz, Beate and Selim, Heyla A. and Serdarevich, Ursula and Sirlopu, David and Stogianni, Maria and Stoyanova, Stanislava and Sun, Chien-Ru and Teyssier, Julien and van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P. and Torres, Claudio and Uchida, Yukiko and Vauclair, Christin-Melanie and Xing, Cai and Zelenski, John M.",
year = "2023",
abstract = "We explore to what extent previously observed pan-cultural association between dimensions of self-construal and personal life
satisfaction (PLS) may be moderated by three national-contextual
variables: national wealth, economic inequality, and religious heritage. The results showed that Self-reliance (vs. dependence on
others) predicted PLS positively in poorer countries but negatively
in richer countries. Connectedness to others (vs. self-containment)
predicted PLS more strongly in Protestant-heritage countries. Selfexpression (vs. harmony) predicted PLS more weakly (and nonsignificantly) in Muslim-heritage countries. In contrast, previously
reported associations of self-direction (vs. reception-to-influence),
consistency (vs. variability), and decontextualized (vs. contextualized) self-understanding with personal life satisfaction were not
significantly moderated by these aspects of societal context.
These results show the importance of considering the impact of
national religious and economic context",
journal = "Self and Identity",
title = "Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage",
pages = "712-689",
number = "5",
volume = "22",
doi = "10.1080/15298868.2023.2202413"
}
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Á., Vignoles, V. L., Bond, M. H., Adamovic, M., Akotia, C., Albert, I., Appoh, L., Baltin, A., Barrientos, P. E., Denoux, P., Dominguez-Espinosa, A., Esteves, C. S., Fülöp, M., Gamsakhurdia, V., Garðarsdóttir, R. B., Gavreliuc, A., Hanke-Boer, D., Haas, B. W., Igbokwe, D. O., Işık, İ., Kascakova, N., Kračmárová, L. K., Kocimska-Zych, A., Kosiarczyk, A., Kostoula, O., Kronberger, N., Krys, K., Kwiatkowska, A., Lee, J. H., Liu, X., Łużniak‑Piecha, M., Malyonova, A., Maricchiolo, F., Arevalo, M. D. M., Mohorić, T., Mosca, O., Murdock, E., Mustaffa, N. F., Lun, V. M., Nader, M., Nadi, A., Okvitawanli, A., van Osch, Y., Park, J., Pavlopoulos, V., Pavlović, Z., Poláčková Šolcová, I., Igou, E. R., Rizwan, M., Romashov, V., Røysamb, E., Sargautyte, R., Schwarz, B., Selim, H. A., Serdarevich, U., Sirlopu, D., Stogianni, M., Stoyanova, S., Sun, C., Teyssier, J., van Tilburg, W. A. P., Torres, C., Uchida, Y., Vauclair, C., Xing, C.,& Zelenski, J. M.. (2023). Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage. in Self and Identity, 22(5), 689-712.
https://doi.org/10.1080/15298868.2023.2202413
Sánchez-Rodríguez Á, Vignoles VL, Bond MH, Adamovic M, Akotia C, Albert I, Appoh L, Baltin A, Barrientos PE, Denoux P, Dominguez-Espinosa A, Esteves CS, Fülöp M, Gamsakhurdia V, Garðarsdóttir RB, Gavreliuc A, Hanke-Boer D, Haas BW, Igbokwe DO, Işık İ, Kascakova N, Kračmárová LK, Kocimska-Zych A, Kosiarczyk A, Kostoula O, Kronberger N, Krys K, Kwiatkowska A, Lee JH, Liu X, Łużniak‑Piecha M, Malyonova A, Maricchiolo F, Arevalo MDM, Mohorić T, Mosca O, Murdock E, Mustaffa NF, Lun VM, Nader M, Nadi A, Okvitawanli A, van Osch Y, Park J, Pavlopoulos V, Pavlović Z, Poláčková Šolcová I, Igou ER, Rizwan M, Romashov V, Røysamb E, Sargautyte R, Schwarz B, Selim HA, Serdarevich U, Sirlopu D, Stogianni M, Stoyanova S, Sun C, Teyssier J, van Tilburg WAP, Torres C, Uchida Y, Vauclair C, Xing C, Zelenski JM. Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage. in Self and Identity. 2023;22(5):689-712.
doi:10.1080/15298868.2023.2202413 .
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Ángel, Vignoles, Vivian L., Bond, Michael Harris, Adamovic, Mladen, Akotia, Charity, Albert, Isabelle, Appoh, Lily, Baltin, Arno, Barrientos, Pablo Eduardo, Denoux, Patrick, Dominguez-Espinosa, Alejandra, Esteves, Carla Sofia, Fülöp, Márta, Gamsakhurdia, Vladimer, Garðarsdóttir, Ragna B., Gavreliuc, Alin, Hanke-Boer, Diana, Haas, Brian W., Igbokwe, David O., Işık, İdil, Kascakova, Natalia, Kračmárová, Lucie Klůzová, Kocimska-Zych, Agata, Kosiarczyk, Aleksandra, Kostoula, Olga, Kronberger, Nicole, Krys, Kuba, Kwiatkowska, Anna, Lee, J. Hannah, Liu, Xinhui, Łużniak‑Piecha, Magdalena, Malyonova, Arina, Maricchiolo, Fridanna, Arevalo, Mira D. M., Mohorić, Tamara, Mosca, Oriana, Murdock, Elke, Mustaffa, Nur Fariza, Lun, Vivian Miu-Chi, Nader, Martin, Nadi, Azar, Okvitawanli, Ayu, van Osch, Yvette, Park, Joonha, Pavlopoulos, Vassilis, Pavlović, Zoran, Poláčková Šolcová, Iva, Igou, Eric R., Rizwan, Muhammad, Romashov, Vladyslav, Røysamb, Espen, Sargautyte, Ruta, Schwarz, Beate, Selim, Heyla A., Serdarevich, Ursula, Sirlopu, David, Stogianni, Maria, Stoyanova, Stanislava, Sun, Chien-Ru, Teyssier, Julien, van Tilburg, Wijnand A. P., Torres, Claudio, Uchida, Yukiko, Vauclair, Christin-Melanie, Xing, Cai, Zelenski, John M., "Self-construals predict personal life satisfaction with different strengths across societal contexts differing in national wealth and religious heritage" in Self and Identity, 22, no. 5 (2023):689-712,
https://doi.org/10.1080/15298868.2023.2202413 . .
6
1

O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela

Pavlović, Zoran

(2023)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2023
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4585
T2  - Psihološka istraživanja
T1  - O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela
EP  - 194
IS  - 1
SP  - 191
VL  - 26
DO  - 10.5937/PSISTRA26-44059
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2023",
journal = "Psihološka istraživanja",
title = "O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela",
pages = "194-191",
number = "1",
volume = "26",
doi = "10.5937/PSISTRA26-44059"
}
Pavlović, Z.. (2023). O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela. in Psihološka istraživanja, 26(1), 191-194.
https://doi.org/10.5937/PSISTRA26-44059
Pavlović Z. O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela. in Psihološka istraživanja. 2023;26(1):191-194.
doi:10.5937/PSISTRA26-44059 .
Pavlović, Zoran, "O mnogim identitetima velikog istraživača identitetā – biografija Henrija Tajfela" in Psihološka istraživanja, 26, no. 1 (2023):191-194,
https://doi.org/10.5937/PSISTRA26-44059 . .

(On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective

Pavlović, Zoran; Ljubičić, Milana; Ignjatović, Đorđe

(Provincial Protector of Citizens – Ombudsman, 2022)

TY  - CONF
AU  - Ljubičić, Milana
AU  - Ignjatović, Đorđe
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3878
AB  - Paper analyzes the narratives of the nursing home residents with respect to their
life in the institution. In order to investigate how the elderly, see their life in nursing
home, we have dealt with topics that include their lived-through past, experienced
present and anticipated future. In our in-depth interviews with eight residents of a
private nursing home in the suburbs of the capital-they talk about the reasons for
moving to nursing home, practices of adapting to a new milieu, and expectations
both before and after arriving to the nursing facility. An additional topic- how to
design life in the institution came along. The findings indicate that moving into such
an institution is rarely an option that our interlocutors have chosen independently.
Despite the fact that everyday life is routinized, the nursing home life is praised. In
fact, the introspection and self-negotiation about the positive aspects of life at
nursing home are key elements of the strategy for designing a uniform present and
exactly the same future.
PB  - Provincial Protector of Citizens – Ombudsman
PB  - Institute of Criminological and Sociological Research in Belgrade
C3  - Yearbook Human Rights Protector. Provincial Protector of Citizens - Ombudsman
T1  - (On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective
EP  - 463
SP  - 445
VL  - 5
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3878
ER  - 
@conference{
editor = "Pavlović, Zoran",
author = "Ljubičić, Milana and Ignjatović, Đorđe",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Paper analyzes the narratives of the nursing home residents with respect to their
life in the institution. In order to investigate how the elderly, see their life in nursing
home, we have dealt with topics that include their lived-through past, experienced
present and anticipated future. In our in-depth interviews with eight residents of a
private nursing home in the suburbs of the capital-they talk about the reasons for
moving to nursing home, practices of adapting to a new milieu, and expectations
both before and after arriving to the nursing facility. An additional topic- how to
design life in the institution came along. The findings indicate that moving into such
an institution is rarely an option that our interlocutors have chosen independently.
Despite the fact that everyday life is routinized, the nursing home life is praised. In
fact, the introspection and self-negotiation about the positive aspects of life at
nursing home are key elements of the strategy for designing a uniform present and
exactly the same future.",
publisher = "Provincial Protector of Citizens – Ombudsman, Institute of Criminological and Sociological Research in Belgrade",
journal = "Yearbook Human Rights Protector. Provincial Protector of Citizens - Ombudsman",
title = "(On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective",
pages = "463-445",
volume = "5",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3878"
}
Pavlović, Z., Ljubičić, M.,& Ignjatović, Đ.. (2022). (On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective. in Yearbook Human Rights Protector. Provincial Protector of Citizens - Ombudsman
Provincial Protector of Citizens – Ombudsman., 5, 445-463.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3878
Pavlović Z, Ljubičić M, Ignjatović Đ. (On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective. in Yearbook Human Rights Protector. Provincial Protector of Citizens - Ombudsman. 2022;5:445-463.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3878 .
Pavlović, Zoran, Ljubičić, Milana, Ignjatović, Đorđe, "(On) life in an institutional care: the nursing home for the elderly - residents perspective" in Yearbook Human Rights Protector. Provincial Protector of Citizens - Ombudsman, 5 (2022):445-463,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3878 .

The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”

Pavlović, Zoran; Todosijević, Bojan

(Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, CBEES, Södertörn University, 2022)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3532
PB  - Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, CBEES, Södertörn University
T2  - The Many Faces
of the Far Right in the
Post-Communist Space
T1  - The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”
EP  - 155
SP  - 145
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3532
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran and Todosijević, Bojan",
year = "2022",
publisher = "Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, CBEES, Södertörn University",
journal = "The Many Faces
of the Far Right in the
Post-Communist Space",
booktitle = "The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”",
pages = "155-145",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3532"
}
Pavlović, Z.,& Todosijević, B.. (2022). The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”. in The Many Faces
of the Far Right in the
Post-Communist Space
Centre for Baltic and East European Studies, CBEES, Södertörn University., 145-155.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3532
Pavlović Z, Todosijević B. The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”. in The Many Faces
of the Far Right in the
Post-Communist Space. 2022;:145-155.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3532 .
Pavlović, Zoran, Todosijević, Bojan, "The Core Idea is “Our Own People First”" in The Many Faces
of the Far Right in the
Post-Communist Space (2022):145-155,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3532 .

Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents

Pavlović, Zoran; Stepanović Ilić, Ivana

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Stepanović Ilić, Ivana
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3530
AB  - The main goal of the study is to analyse a rarely investigated relationship
between leisure-time activities and Schwartz’s 10 basic values in adolescents. The
sample included 1,349 Serbian high-school students (44% boys; 62% vocational
schools). The leisure-time questionnaire consisted of groups of items related to
hobbies, sports, following different themes/shows in the media (TV, Internet,
magazines), listening to music, going out, attending cultural and sports events,
activities on the Internet and social networking sites usage. Values (Selfdirection, Stimulation, Hedonism, Achievement, Power, Security, Conformity,
Tradition, Benevolence and Universalism) were examined by the PVQ21
questionnaire. Factor analysis yielded seven factors of leisure activities (45.96%
explained variance), defined by the following contents: pop culture; music,
culture & arts; movies, TV shows and the internet; science & politics; IT; going out;
sports. Correlation analysis showed that the assessment of different activities
was significantly related to the distinctive sets of basic values, which was
additionally confirmed by multiple regression analysis including basic values as
predictors and demographic variables as controls. The main conclusion of the
research is that values are important motivators of activities during free time and
that different values are mostly expressed through different activities, but also
that different activities can be motivated by the same basic values.
AB  - Glavni cilj studije je analiza nedovoljno istraženog odnosa između aktivnosti
tokom slobodnog vremena i Švarcovih 10 bazičnih vrednosti kod adolescenata.
Uzorak je obuhvatio 1.349 srpskih srednjoškolaca (44% dečaka; 62% stručnih
škola). Upitnik o slobodnom vremenu sastojao se od grupa pitanja vezanih za
hobije, sport, praćenje različitih tema/emisija u medijima (TV, internet, časopisi),
slušanje muzike, izlaske, posećivanje kulturnih i sportskih događaja, aktivnosti na
internetu i korišćenje društvenih mreža. Vrednosti (samousmeravanje, stimulacija,
hedonizam, postignuće, moć, bezbednost, konformizam, tradicija,
benevolentnost i univerzalizam) ispitivane su upitnikom PVQ21. Faktorskom
analizom dobijeno je sedam faktora slobodnih aktivnosti (45,96% objašnjene
varijanse), definisanih sledećim sadržajima: pop kultura; muzika, kultura i
umetnost; filmovi, TV emisije i internet; nauka i politika; IT; izlasci; sport.
Korelaciona analiza je pokazala da je procena učestosti upražnjavanja različitih
aktivnosti značajno povezana sa karakterističnim skupovima bazičnih vrednosti,
što je dodatno potvrđeno multiplom regresionom analizom koja uključuje bazične
vrednosti kao prediktore i demografske varijable kao kontrolu. Osnovni zaključak
istraživanja je da su vrednosti važni motivatori aktivnosti tokom slobodnog
vremena i da se različite vrednosti uglavnom izražavaju kroz različite aktivnosti,
ali i da različite aktivnosti mogu biti motivisane istim bazičnim vrednostima.
T2  - Primenjena psihologija
T1  - Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents
EP  - 117
IS  - 1
SP  - 85
VL  - 15
DO  - 10.19090/pp.v15i1.2349
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran and Stepanović Ilić, Ivana",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The main goal of the study is to analyse a rarely investigated relationship
between leisure-time activities and Schwartz’s 10 basic values in adolescents. The
sample included 1,349 Serbian high-school students (44% boys; 62% vocational
schools). The leisure-time questionnaire consisted of groups of items related to
hobbies, sports, following different themes/shows in the media (TV, Internet,
magazines), listening to music, going out, attending cultural and sports events,
activities on the Internet and social networking sites usage. Values (Selfdirection, Stimulation, Hedonism, Achievement, Power, Security, Conformity,
Tradition, Benevolence and Universalism) were examined by the PVQ21
questionnaire. Factor analysis yielded seven factors of leisure activities (45.96%
explained variance), defined by the following contents: pop culture; music,
culture & arts; movies, TV shows and the internet; science & politics; IT; going out;
sports. Correlation analysis showed that the assessment of different activities
was significantly related to the distinctive sets of basic values, which was
additionally confirmed by multiple regression analysis including basic values as
predictors and demographic variables as controls. The main conclusion of the
research is that values are important motivators of activities during free time and
that different values are mostly expressed through different activities, but also
that different activities can be motivated by the same basic values., Glavni cilj studije je analiza nedovoljno istraženog odnosa između aktivnosti
tokom slobodnog vremena i Švarcovih 10 bazičnih vrednosti kod adolescenata.
Uzorak je obuhvatio 1.349 srpskih srednjoškolaca (44% dečaka; 62% stručnih
škola). Upitnik o slobodnom vremenu sastojao se od grupa pitanja vezanih za
hobije, sport, praćenje različitih tema/emisija u medijima (TV, internet, časopisi),
slušanje muzike, izlaske, posećivanje kulturnih i sportskih događaja, aktivnosti na
internetu i korišćenje društvenih mreža. Vrednosti (samousmeravanje, stimulacija,
hedonizam, postignuće, moć, bezbednost, konformizam, tradicija,
benevolentnost i univerzalizam) ispitivane su upitnikom PVQ21. Faktorskom
analizom dobijeno je sedam faktora slobodnih aktivnosti (45,96% objašnjene
varijanse), definisanih sledećim sadržajima: pop kultura; muzika, kultura i
umetnost; filmovi, TV emisije i internet; nauka i politika; IT; izlasci; sport.
Korelaciona analiza je pokazala da je procena učestosti upražnjavanja različitih
aktivnosti značajno povezana sa karakterističnim skupovima bazičnih vrednosti,
što je dodatno potvrđeno multiplom regresionom analizom koja uključuje bazične
vrednosti kao prediktore i demografske varijable kao kontrolu. Osnovni zaključak
istraživanja je da su vrednosti važni motivatori aktivnosti tokom slobodnog
vremena i da se različite vrednosti uglavnom izražavaju kroz različite aktivnosti,
ali i da različite aktivnosti mogu biti motivisane istim bazičnim vrednostima.",
journal = "Primenjena psihologija",
title = "Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents",
pages = "117-85",
number = "1",
volume = "15",
doi = "10.19090/pp.v15i1.2349"
}
Pavlović, Z.,& Stepanović Ilić, I.. (2022). Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents. in Primenjena psihologija, 15(1), 85-117.
https://doi.org/10.19090/pp.v15i1.2349
Pavlović Z, Stepanović Ilić I. Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents. in Primenjena psihologija. 2022;15(1):85-117.
doi:10.19090/pp.v15i1.2349 .
Pavlović, Zoran, Stepanović Ilić, Ivana, "Basic values as predictors of leisure-time activities among adolescents" in Primenjena psihologija, 15, no. 1 (2022):85-117,
https://doi.org/10.19090/pp.v15i1.2349 . .
3
1

National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic

Van Bavel, Jay J.; Cichocka, Aleksandra; Capraro, Valerio; Sjåstad, Hallgeir; Nezlek, John B.; Pavlović, Tomislav; Alfano, Mark; Gelfand, Michele J.; Azevedo, Flavio; Birtel, Michèle D.; Cislak, Aleksandra; Lockwood, Patricia L.; Ross, Robert Malcolm; Abts, Koen; Agadullina, Elena; Aruta, John Jamir Benzon; Besharati, Sahba Nomvula; Bor, Alexander; Choma, Becky L.; Crabtree, Charles David; Cunningham, William A.; De, Koustav; Ejaz, Waqas; Elbaek, Christian T.; Findor, Andrej; Flichtentrei, Daniel; Franc, Renata; Gjoneska, Biljana; Gruber, June; Gualda, Estrella; Horiuchi, Yusaku; Huynh, Toan Luu Duc; Ibanez, Augustin; Imran, Mostak Ahamed; Israelashvili, Jacob; Jasko, Katarzyna; Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw; Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena; Krouwel, André; Laakasuo, Michael; Lamm, Claus; Leygue, Caroline; Lin, Ming-Jen; Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir; Marie, Antoine; Mayiwar, Lewend; Mazepus, Honorata; McHugh, Cillian; Minda, John Paul; Mitkidis, Panagiotis; Olsson, Andreas; Otterbring, Tobias; Packer, Dominic J.; Perry, Anat; Petersen, Michael Bang; Puthillam, Arathy; Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.; Rothmund, Tobias; Santamaría-García, Hernando; Schmid, Petra C.; Stoyanov, Drozdstoy; Tewari, Shruti; Todosijević, Bojan; Tsakiris, Manos; Tung, Hans H.; Umbreș, Radu G.; Vanags, Edmunds; Vlasceanu, Madalina; Vonasch, Andrew; Yucel, Meltem; Zhang, Yucheng; Abad, Mohcine; Adler, Eli; Akrawi, Narin; Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui; Amara, Hanane; Amodio, David M.; Antazo, Benedict G.; Apps, Matthew; Ay, F. Ceren; Ba, Mouhamadou Hady; Barbosa, Sergio; Bastian, Brock; Berg, Anton; Bernal-Zárate, Maria P.; Bernstein, Michael; Białek, Michał; Bilancini, Ennio; Bogatyreva, Natalia; Boncinelli, Leonardo; Booth, Jonathan E.; Borau, Sylvie; Buchel, Ondrej; Cameron, C. Daryl; Carvalho, Chrissie F.; Celadin, Tatiana; Cerami, Chiara; Chalise, Hom Nath; Cheng, Xiaojun; Cian, Luca; Cockcroft, Kate; Conway, Jane; Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres; Crespi, Chiara; Crouzevialle, Marie; Cutler, Jo; Cypryańska, Marzena; Dabrowska, Justyna; Daniels, Michael A.; Davis, Victoria H.; Dayley, Pamala N.; Delouvee, Sylvain; Denkovski, Ognjan; Dezecache, Guillaume; Dhaliwal, Nathan A.; Diato, Alelie B.; Di Paolo, Roberto; Drosinou, Marianna; Dulleck, Uwe; Ekmanis, Jānis; Ertan, Arhan S.; Etienne, Tom W.; Farhana, Hapsa Hossain; Farkhari, Fahima; Farmer, Harry; Fenwick, Ali; Fidanovski, Kristijan; Flew, Terry; Fraser, Shona; Frempong, Raymond Boadi; Fugelsang, Jonathan A.; Gale, Jessica; Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña; Garladinne, Prasad; Ghajjou, Oussama; Gkinopoulos, Theofilos; Gray, Kurt; Griffin, Siobhán M.; Gronfeldt, Bjarki; Gümren, Mert; Gurung, Ranju Lama; Halperin, Eran; Harris, Elizabeth; Herzon, Volo; Hruška, Matej; Huang, Guanxiong; Hudecek, Matthias F. C.; Isler, Ozan; Jangard, Simon; Jørgensen, Frederik J.; Kachanoff, Frank; Kahn, John; Dangol, Apsara Katuwal; Keudel, Oleksandra; Koppel, Lina; Koverola, Mika; Kubin, Emily; Kunnari, Anton; Kutiyski, Yordan; Laguna, Oscar; Leota, Josh; Lermer, Eva; Levy, Jonathan; Levy, Neil; Li, Chunyun; Long, Elizabeth U.; Longoni, Chiara; Maglić, Marina; McCashin, Darragh; Metcalf, Alexander L.; Mikloušić, Igor; El Mimouni, Soulaimane; Miura, Asako; Molina-Paredes, Juliana; Monroy-Fonseca, César; Morales-Marente, Elena; Moreau, David; Muda, Rafał; Myer, Annalisa; Nash, Kyle; Nesh-Nash, Tarik; Nitschke, Jonas P.; Nurse, Matthew S.; Ohtsubo, Yohsuke; Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria; O’Madagain, Cathal; Onderco, Michal; Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad; Palomäki, Jussi; Pan, Yafeng; Papp, Zsófia; Pärnamets, Philip; Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola; Pavlović, Zoran; Payán-Gómez, César; Perander, Silva; Pitman, Michael Mark; Prasad, Rajib; Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna; Rathje, Steve; Raza, Ali; Rêgo, Gabriel G.; Rhee, Kasey; Robertson, Claire E.; Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván; Saikkonen, Teemu; Salvador-Ginez, Octavio; Sampaio, Waldir M.; Santi, Gaia C.; Santiago-Tovar, Natalia; Savage, David; Scheffer, Julian A.; Schönegger, Philipp; Schultner, David T.; Schutte, Enid M.; Scott, Andy; Sharma, Madhavi; Sharma, Pujan; Skali, Ahmed; Stadelmann, David; Stafford, Clara Alexandra; Stanojević, Dragan; Stefaniak, Anna; Sternisko, Anni; Stoica, Augustin; Stoyanova, Kristina K.; Strickland, Brent; Sundvall, Jukka; Thomas, Jeffrey P.; Tinghög, Gustav; Torgler, Benno; Traast, Iris J.; Tucciarelli, Raffaele; Tyrala, Michael; Ungson, Nick D.; Uysal, Mete S.; Van Lange, Paul A. M.; van Prooijen, Jan-Willem; van Rooy, Dirk; Västfjäll, Daniel; Verkoeijen, Peter; Vieira, Joana B.; von Sikorski, Christian; Walker, Alexander Cameron; Watermeyer, Jennifer; Wetter, Erik; Whillans, Ashley; Willardt, Robin; Wohl, Michael J. A.; Wójcik, Adrian Dominik; Wu, Kaidi; Yamada, Yuki; Yilmaz, Onurcan; Yogeeswaran, Kumar; Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa; Zwaan, Rolf A.; Boggio, Paulo S.

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Van Bavel, Jay J.
AU  - Cichocka, Aleksandra
AU  - Capraro, Valerio
AU  - Sjåstad, Hallgeir
AU  - Nezlek, John B.
AU  - Pavlović, Tomislav
AU  - Alfano, Mark
AU  - Gelfand, Michele J.
AU  - Azevedo, Flavio
AU  - Birtel, Michèle D.
AU  - Cislak, Aleksandra
AU  - Lockwood, Patricia L.
AU  - Ross, Robert Malcolm
AU  - Abts, Koen
AU  - Agadullina, Elena
AU  - Aruta, John Jamir Benzon
AU  - Besharati, Sahba Nomvula
AU  - Bor, Alexander
AU  - Choma, Becky L.
AU  - Crabtree, Charles David
AU  - Cunningham, William A.
AU  - De, Koustav
AU  - Ejaz, Waqas
AU  - Elbaek, Christian T.
AU  - Findor, Andrej
AU  - Flichtentrei, Daniel
AU  - Franc, Renata
AU  - Gjoneska, Biljana
AU  - Gruber, June
AU  - Gualda, Estrella
AU  - Horiuchi, Yusaku
AU  - Huynh, Toan Luu Duc
AU  - Ibanez, Augustin
AU  - Imran, Mostak Ahamed
AU  - Israelashvili, Jacob
AU  - Jasko, Katarzyna
AU  - Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw
AU  - Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena
AU  - Krouwel, André
AU  - Laakasuo, Michael
AU  - Lamm, Claus
AU  - Leygue, Caroline
AU  - Lin, Ming-Jen
AU  - Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir
AU  - Marie, Antoine
AU  - Mayiwar, Lewend
AU  - Mazepus, Honorata
AU  - McHugh, Cillian
AU  - Minda, John Paul
AU  - Mitkidis, Panagiotis
AU  - Olsson, Andreas
AU  - Otterbring, Tobias
AU  - Packer, Dominic J.
AU  - Perry, Anat
AU  - Petersen, Michael Bang
AU  - Puthillam, Arathy
AU  - Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.
AU  - Rothmund, Tobias
AU  - Santamaría-García, Hernando
AU  - Schmid, Petra C.
AU  - Stoyanov, Drozdstoy
AU  - Tewari, Shruti
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Tsakiris, Manos
AU  - Tung, Hans H.
AU  - Umbreș, Radu G.
AU  - Vanags, Edmunds
AU  - Vlasceanu, Madalina
AU  - Vonasch, Andrew
AU  - Yucel, Meltem
AU  - Zhang, Yucheng
AU  - Abad, Mohcine
AU  - Adler, Eli
AU  - Akrawi, Narin
AU  - Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui
AU  - Amara, Hanane
AU  - Amodio, David M.
AU  - Antazo, Benedict G.
AU  - Apps, Matthew
AU  - Ay, F. Ceren
AU  - Ba, Mouhamadou Hady
AU  - Barbosa, Sergio
AU  - Bastian, Brock
AU  - Berg, Anton
AU  - Bernal-Zárate, Maria P.
AU  - Bernstein, Michael
AU  - Białek, Michał
AU  - Bilancini, Ennio
AU  - Bogatyreva, Natalia
AU  - Boncinelli, Leonardo
AU  - Booth, Jonathan E.
AU  - Borau, Sylvie
AU  - Buchel, Ondrej
AU  - Cameron, C. Daryl
AU  - Carvalho, Chrissie F.
AU  - Celadin, Tatiana
AU  - Cerami, Chiara
AU  - Chalise, Hom Nath
AU  - Cheng, Xiaojun
AU  - Cian, Luca
AU  - Cockcroft, Kate
AU  - Conway, Jane
AU  - Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres
AU  - Crespi, Chiara
AU  - Crouzevialle, Marie
AU  - Cutler, Jo
AU  - Cypryańska, Marzena
AU  - Dabrowska, Justyna
AU  - Daniels, Michael A.
AU  - Davis, Victoria H.
AU  - Dayley, Pamala N.
AU  - Delouvee, Sylvain
AU  - Denkovski, Ognjan
AU  - Dezecache, Guillaume
AU  - Dhaliwal, Nathan A.
AU  - Diato, Alelie B.
AU  - Di Paolo, Roberto
AU  - Drosinou, Marianna
AU  - Dulleck, Uwe
AU  - Ekmanis, Jānis
AU  - Ertan, Arhan S.
AU  - Etienne, Tom W.
AU  - Farhana, Hapsa Hossain
AU  - Farkhari, Fahima
AU  - Farmer, Harry
AU  - Fenwick, Ali
AU  - Fidanovski, Kristijan
AU  - Flew, Terry
AU  - Fraser, Shona
AU  - Frempong, Raymond Boadi
AU  - Fugelsang, Jonathan A.
AU  - Gale, Jessica
AU  - Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña
AU  - Garladinne, Prasad
AU  - Ghajjou, Oussama
AU  - Gkinopoulos, Theofilos
AU  - Gray, Kurt
AU  - Griffin, Siobhán M.
AU  - Gronfeldt, Bjarki
AU  - Gümren, Mert
AU  - Gurung, Ranju Lama
AU  - Halperin, Eran
AU  - Harris, Elizabeth
AU  - Herzon, Volo
AU  - Hruška, Matej
AU  - Huang, Guanxiong
AU  - Hudecek, Matthias F. C.
AU  - Isler, Ozan
AU  - Jangard, Simon
AU  - Jørgensen, Frederik J.
AU  - Kachanoff, Frank
AU  - Kahn, John
AU  - Dangol, Apsara Katuwal
AU  - Keudel, Oleksandra
AU  - Koppel, Lina
AU  - Koverola, Mika
AU  - Kubin, Emily
AU  - Kunnari, Anton
AU  - Kutiyski, Yordan
AU  - Laguna, Oscar
AU  - Leota, Josh
AU  - Lermer, Eva
AU  - Levy, Jonathan
AU  - Levy, Neil
AU  - Li, Chunyun
AU  - Long, Elizabeth U.
AU  - Longoni, Chiara
AU  - Maglić, Marina
AU  - McCashin, Darragh
AU  - Metcalf, Alexander L.
AU  - Mikloušić, Igor
AU  - El Mimouni, Soulaimane
AU  - Miura, Asako
AU  - Molina-Paredes, Juliana
AU  - Monroy-Fonseca, César
AU  - Morales-Marente, Elena
AU  - Moreau, David
AU  - Muda, Rafał
AU  - Myer, Annalisa
AU  - Nash, Kyle
AU  - Nesh-Nash, Tarik
AU  - Nitschke, Jonas P.
AU  - Nurse, Matthew S.
AU  - Ohtsubo, Yohsuke
AU  - Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria
AU  - O’Madagain, Cathal
AU  - Onderco, Michal
AU  - Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad
AU  - Palomäki, Jussi
AU  - Pan, Yafeng
AU  - Papp, Zsófia
AU  - Pärnamets, Philip
AU  - Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Payán-Gómez, César
AU  - Perander, Silva
AU  - Pitman, Michael Mark
AU  - Prasad, Rajib
AU  - Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna
AU  - Rathje, Steve
AU  - Raza, Ali
AU  - Rêgo, Gabriel G.
AU  - Rhee, Kasey
AU  - Robertson, Claire E.
AU  - Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván
AU  - Saikkonen, Teemu
AU  - Salvador-Ginez, Octavio
AU  - Sampaio, Waldir M.
AU  - Santi, Gaia C.
AU  - Santiago-Tovar, Natalia
AU  - Savage, David
AU  - Scheffer, Julian A.
AU  - Schönegger, Philipp
AU  - Schultner, David T.
AU  - Schutte, Enid M.
AU  - Scott, Andy
AU  - Sharma, Madhavi
AU  - Sharma, Pujan
AU  - Skali, Ahmed
AU  - Stadelmann, David
AU  - Stafford, Clara Alexandra
AU  - Stanojević, Dragan
AU  - Stefaniak, Anna
AU  - Sternisko, Anni
AU  - Stoica, Augustin
AU  - Stoyanova, Kristina K.
AU  - Strickland, Brent
AU  - Sundvall, Jukka
AU  - Thomas, Jeffrey P.
AU  - Tinghög, Gustav
AU  - Torgler, Benno
AU  - Traast, Iris J.
AU  - Tucciarelli, Raffaele
AU  - Tyrala, Michael
AU  - Ungson, Nick D.
AU  - Uysal, Mete S.
AU  - Van Lange, Paul A. M.
AU  - van Prooijen, Jan-Willem
AU  - van Rooy, Dirk
AU  - Västfjäll, Daniel
AU  - Verkoeijen, Peter
AU  - Vieira, Joana B.
AU  - von Sikorski, Christian
AU  - Walker, Alexander Cameron
AU  - Watermeyer, Jennifer
AU  - Wetter, Erik
AU  - Whillans, Ashley
AU  - Willardt, Robin
AU  - Wohl, Michael J. A.
AU  - Wójcik, Adrian Dominik
AU  - Wu, Kaidi
AU  - Yamada, Yuki
AU  - Yilmaz, Onurcan
AU  - Yogeeswaran, Kumar
AU  - Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa
AU  - Zwaan, Rolf A.
AU  - Boggio, Paulo S.
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3529
AB  - Changing collective behaviour and supporting non-pharmaceutical interventions is an
important component in mitigating virus transmission during a pandemic. In a large international collaboration (Study 1, N = 49,968 across 67 countries), we investigated selfreported factors associated with public health behaviours (e.g., spatial distancing and stricter
hygiene) and endorsed public policy interventions (e.g., closing bars and restaurants) during
the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic (April-May 2020). Respondents who reported
identifying more strongly with their nation consistently reported greater engagement in
public health behaviours and support for public health policies. Results were similar for
representative and non-representative national samples. Study 2 (N = 42 countries) conceptually replicated the central finding using aggregate indices of national identity (obtained
using the World Values Survey) and a measure of actual behaviour change during the
pandemic (obtained from Google mobility reports). Higher levels of national identification
prior to the pandemic predicted lower mobility during the early stage of the pandemic
(r = −0.40). We discuss the potential implications of links between national identity, leadership, and public health for managing COVID-19 and future pandemics.
T2  - Nature Communications
T1  - National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic
SP  - 517
VL  - 13
DO  - 10.1038/s41467-021-27668-9
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Van Bavel, Jay J. and Cichocka, Aleksandra and Capraro, Valerio and Sjåstad, Hallgeir and Nezlek, John B. and Pavlović, Tomislav and Alfano, Mark and Gelfand, Michele J. and Azevedo, Flavio and Birtel, Michèle D. and Cislak, Aleksandra and Lockwood, Patricia L. and Ross, Robert Malcolm and Abts, Koen and Agadullina, Elena and Aruta, John Jamir Benzon and Besharati, Sahba Nomvula and Bor, Alexander and Choma, Becky L. and Crabtree, Charles David and Cunningham, William A. and De, Koustav and Ejaz, Waqas and Elbaek, Christian T. and Findor, Andrej and Flichtentrei, Daniel and Franc, Renata and Gjoneska, Biljana and Gruber, June and Gualda, Estrella and Horiuchi, Yusaku and Huynh, Toan Luu Duc and Ibanez, Augustin and Imran, Mostak Ahamed and Israelashvili, Jacob and Jasko, Katarzyna and Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw and Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena and Krouwel, André and Laakasuo, Michael and Lamm, Claus and Leygue, Caroline and Lin, Ming-Jen and Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir and Marie, Antoine and Mayiwar, Lewend and Mazepus, Honorata and McHugh, Cillian and Minda, John Paul and Mitkidis, Panagiotis and Olsson, Andreas and Otterbring, Tobias and Packer, Dominic J. and Perry, Anat and Petersen, Michael Bang and Puthillam, Arathy and Riaño-Moreno, Julián C. and Rothmund, Tobias and Santamaría-García, Hernando and Schmid, Petra C. and Stoyanov, Drozdstoy and Tewari, Shruti and Todosijević, Bojan and Tsakiris, Manos and Tung, Hans H. and Umbreș, Radu G. and Vanags, Edmunds and Vlasceanu, Madalina and Vonasch, Andrew and Yucel, Meltem and Zhang, Yucheng and Abad, Mohcine and Adler, Eli and Akrawi, Narin and Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui and Amara, Hanane and Amodio, David M. and Antazo, Benedict G. and Apps, Matthew and Ay, F. Ceren and Ba, Mouhamadou Hady and Barbosa, Sergio and Bastian, Brock and Berg, Anton and Bernal-Zárate, Maria P. and Bernstein, Michael and Białek, Michał and Bilancini, Ennio and Bogatyreva, Natalia and Boncinelli, Leonardo and Booth, Jonathan E. and Borau, Sylvie and Buchel, Ondrej and Cameron, C. Daryl and Carvalho, Chrissie F. and Celadin, Tatiana and Cerami, Chiara and Chalise, Hom Nath and Cheng, Xiaojun and Cian, Luca and Cockcroft, Kate and Conway, Jane and Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres and Crespi, Chiara and Crouzevialle, Marie and Cutler, Jo and Cypryańska, Marzena and Dabrowska, Justyna and Daniels, Michael A. and Davis, Victoria H. and Dayley, Pamala N. and Delouvee, Sylvain and Denkovski, Ognjan and Dezecache, Guillaume and Dhaliwal, Nathan A. and Diato, Alelie B. and Di Paolo, Roberto and Drosinou, Marianna and Dulleck, Uwe and Ekmanis, Jānis and Ertan, Arhan S. and Etienne, Tom W. and Farhana, Hapsa Hossain and Farkhari, Fahima and Farmer, Harry and Fenwick, Ali and Fidanovski, Kristijan and Flew, Terry and Fraser, Shona and Frempong, Raymond Boadi and Fugelsang, Jonathan A. and Gale, Jessica and Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña and Garladinne, Prasad and Ghajjou, Oussama and Gkinopoulos, Theofilos and Gray, Kurt and Griffin, Siobhán M. and Gronfeldt, Bjarki and Gümren, Mert and Gurung, Ranju Lama and Halperin, Eran and Harris, Elizabeth and Herzon, Volo and Hruška, Matej and Huang, Guanxiong and Hudecek, Matthias F. C. and Isler, Ozan and Jangard, Simon and Jørgensen, Frederik J. and Kachanoff, Frank and Kahn, John and Dangol, Apsara Katuwal and Keudel, Oleksandra and Koppel, Lina and Koverola, Mika and Kubin, Emily and Kunnari, Anton and Kutiyski, Yordan and Laguna, Oscar and Leota, Josh and Lermer, Eva and Levy, Jonathan and Levy, Neil and Li, Chunyun and Long, Elizabeth U. and Longoni, Chiara and Maglić, Marina and McCashin, Darragh and Metcalf, Alexander L. and Mikloušić, Igor and El Mimouni, Soulaimane and Miura, Asako and Molina-Paredes, Juliana and Monroy-Fonseca, César and Morales-Marente, Elena and Moreau, David and Muda, Rafał and Myer, Annalisa and Nash, Kyle and Nesh-Nash, Tarik and Nitschke, Jonas P. and Nurse, Matthew S. and Ohtsubo, Yohsuke and Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria and O’Madagain, Cathal and Onderco, Michal and Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad and Palomäki, Jussi and Pan, Yafeng and Papp, Zsófia and Pärnamets, Philip and Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola and Pavlović, Zoran and Payán-Gómez, César and Perander, Silva and Pitman, Michael Mark and Prasad, Rajib and Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna and Rathje, Steve and Raza, Ali and Rêgo, Gabriel G. and Rhee, Kasey and Robertson, Claire E. and Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván and Saikkonen, Teemu and Salvador-Ginez, Octavio and Sampaio, Waldir M. and Santi, Gaia C. and Santiago-Tovar, Natalia and Savage, David and Scheffer, Julian A. and Schönegger, Philipp and Schultner, David T. and Schutte, Enid M. and Scott, Andy and Sharma, Madhavi and Sharma, Pujan and Skali, Ahmed and Stadelmann, David and Stafford, Clara Alexandra and Stanojević, Dragan and Stefaniak, Anna and Sternisko, Anni and Stoica, Augustin and Stoyanova, Kristina K. and Strickland, Brent and Sundvall, Jukka and Thomas, Jeffrey P. and Tinghög, Gustav and Torgler, Benno and Traast, Iris J. and Tucciarelli, Raffaele and Tyrala, Michael and Ungson, Nick D. and Uysal, Mete S. and Van Lange, Paul A. M. and van Prooijen, Jan-Willem and van Rooy, Dirk and Västfjäll, Daniel and Verkoeijen, Peter and Vieira, Joana B. and von Sikorski, Christian and Walker, Alexander Cameron and Watermeyer, Jennifer and Wetter, Erik and Whillans, Ashley and Willardt, Robin and Wohl, Michael J. A. and Wójcik, Adrian Dominik and Wu, Kaidi and Yamada, Yuki and Yilmaz, Onurcan and Yogeeswaran, Kumar and Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa and Zwaan, Rolf A. and Boggio, Paulo S.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Changing collective behaviour and supporting non-pharmaceutical interventions is an
important component in mitigating virus transmission during a pandemic. In a large international collaboration (Study 1, N = 49,968 across 67 countries), we investigated selfreported factors associated with public health behaviours (e.g., spatial distancing and stricter
hygiene) and endorsed public policy interventions (e.g., closing bars and restaurants) during
the early stage of the COVID-19 pandemic (April-May 2020). Respondents who reported
identifying more strongly with their nation consistently reported greater engagement in
public health behaviours and support for public health policies. Results were similar for
representative and non-representative national samples. Study 2 (N = 42 countries) conceptually replicated the central finding using aggregate indices of national identity (obtained
using the World Values Survey) and a measure of actual behaviour change during the
pandemic (obtained from Google mobility reports). Higher levels of national identification
prior to the pandemic predicted lower mobility during the early stage of the pandemic
(r = −0.40). We discuss the potential implications of links between national identity, leadership, and public health for managing COVID-19 and future pandemics.",
journal = "Nature Communications",
title = "National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic",
pages = "517",
volume = "13",
doi = "10.1038/s41467-021-27668-9"
}
Van Bavel, J. J., Cichocka, A., Capraro, V., Sjåstad, H., Nezlek, J. B., Pavlović, T., Alfano, M., Gelfand, M. J., Azevedo, F., Birtel, M. D., Cislak, A., Lockwood, P. L., Ross, R. M., Abts, K., Agadullina, E., Aruta, J. J. B., Besharati, S. N., Bor, A., Choma, B. L., Crabtree, C. D., Cunningham, W. A., De, K., Ejaz, W., Elbaek, C. T., Findor, A., Flichtentrei, D., Franc, R., Gjoneska, B., Gruber, J., Gualda, E., Horiuchi, Y., Huynh, T. L. D., Ibanez, A., Imran, M. A., Israelashvili, J., Jasko, K., Kantorowicz, J., Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, E., Krouwel, A., Laakasuo, M., Lamm, C., Leygue, C., Lin, M., Mansoor, M. S., Marie, A., Mayiwar, L., Mazepus, H., McHugh, C., Minda, J. P., Mitkidis, P., Olsson, A., Otterbring, T., Packer, D. J., Perry, A., Petersen, M. B., Puthillam, A., Riaño-Moreno, J. C., Rothmund, T., Santamaría-García, H., Schmid, P. C., Stoyanov, D., Tewari, S., Todosijević, B., Tsakiris, M., Tung, H. H., Umbreș, R. G., Vanags, E., Vlasceanu, M., Vonasch, A., Yucel, M., Zhang, Y., Abad, M., Adler, E., Akrawi, N., Mdarhri, H. A., Amara, H., Amodio, D. M., Antazo, B. G., Apps, M., Ay, F. C., Ba, M. H., Barbosa, S., Bastian, B., Berg, A., Bernal-Zárate, M. P., Bernstein, M., Białek, M., Bilancini, E., Bogatyreva, N., Boncinelli, L., Booth, J. E., Borau, S., Buchel, O., Cameron, C. D., Carvalho, C. F., Celadin, T., Cerami, C., Chalise, H. N., Cheng, X., Cian, L., Cockcroft, K., Conway, J., Córdoba-Delgado, M. A., Crespi, C., Crouzevialle, M., Cutler, J., Cypryańska, M., Dabrowska, J., Daniels, M. A., Davis, V. H., Dayley, P. N., Delouvee, S., Denkovski, O., Dezecache, G., Dhaliwal, N. A., Diato, A. B., Di Paolo, R., Drosinou, M., Dulleck, U., Ekmanis, J., Ertan, A. S., Etienne, T. W., Farhana, H. H., Farkhari, F., Farmer, H., Fenwick, A., Fidanovski, K., Flew, T., Fraser, S., Frempong, R. B., Fugelsang, J. A., Gale, J., Garcia-Navarro, E. B., Garladinne, P., Ghajjou, O., Gkinopoulos, T., Gray, K., Griffin, S. M., Gronfeldt, B., Gümren, M., Gurung, R. L., Halperin, E., Harris, E., Herzon, V., Hruška, M., Huang, G., Hudecek, M. F. C., Isler, O., Jangard, S., Jørgensen, F. J., Kachanoff, F., Kahn, J., Dangol, A. K., Keudel, O., Koppel, L., Koverola, M., Kubin, E., Kunnari, A., Kutiyski, Y., Laguna, O., Leota, J., Lermer, E., Levy, J., Levy, N., Li, C., Long, E. U., Longoni, C., Maglić, M., McCashin, D., Metcalf, A. L., Mikloušić, I., El Mimouni, S., Miura, A., Molina-Paredes, J., Monroy-Fonseca, C., Morales-Marente, E., Moreau, D., Muda, R., Myer, A., Nash, K., Nesh-Nash, T., Nitschke, J. P., Nurse, M. S., Ohtsubo, Y., Oldemburgo de Mello, V., O’Madagain, C., Onderco, M., Palacios-Galvez, M. S., Palomäki, J., Pan, Y., Papp, Z., Pärnamets, P., Paruzel-Czachura, M., Pavlović, Z., Payán-Gómez, C., Perander, S., Pitman, M. M., Prasad, R., Pyrkosz-Pacyna, J., Rathje, S., Raza, A., Rêgo, G. G., Rhee, K., Robertson, C. E., Rodríguez-Pascual, I., Saikkonen, T., Salvador-Ginez, O., Sampaio, W. M., Santi, G. C., Santiago-Tovar, N., Savage, D., Scheffer, J. A., Schönegger, P., Schultner, D. T., Schutte, E. M., Scott, A., Sharma, M., Sharma, P., Skali, A., Stadelmann, D., Stafford, C. A., Stanojević, D., Stefaniak, A., Sternisko, A., Stoica, A., Stoyanova, K. K., Strickland, B., Sundvall, J., Thomas, J. P., Tinghög, G., Torgler, B., Traast, I. J., Tucciarelli, R., Tyrala, M., Ungson, N. D., Uysal, M. S., Van Lange, P. A. M., van Prooijen, J., van Rooy, D., Västfjäll, D., Verkoeijen, P., Vieira, J. B., von Sikorski, C., Walker, A. C., Watermeyer, J., Wetter, E., Whillans, A., Willardt, R., Wohl, M. J. A., Wójcik, A. D., Wu, K., Yamada, Y., Yilmaz, O., Yogeeswaran, K., Ziemer, C., Zwaan, R. A.,& Boggio, P. S.. (2022). National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic. in Nature Communications, 13, 517.
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27668-9
Van Bavel JJ, Cichocka A, Capraro V, Sjåstad H, Nezlek JB, Pavlović T, Alfano M, Gelfand MJ, Azevedo F, Birtel MD, Cislak A, Lockwood PL, Ross RM, Abts K, Agadullina E, Aruta JJB, Besharati SN, Bor A, Choma BL, Crabtree CD, Cunningham WA, De K, Ejaz W, Elbaek CT, Findor A, Flichtentrei D, Franc R, Gjoneska B, Gruber J, Gualda E, Horiuchi Y, Huynh TLD, Ibanez A, Imran MA, Israelashvili J, Jasko K, Kantorowicz J, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko E, Krouwel A, Laakasuo M, Lamm C, Leygue C, Lin M, Mansoor MS, Marie A, Mayiwar L, Mazepus H, McHugh C, Minda JP, Mitkidis P, Olsson A, Otterbring T, Packer DJ, Perry A, Petersen MB, Puthillam A, Riaño-Moreno JC, Rothmund T, Santamaría-García H, Schmid PC, Stoyanov D, Tewari S, Todosijević B, Tsakiris M, Tung HH, Umbreș RG, Vanags E, Vlasceanu M, Vonasch A, Yucel M, Zhang Y, Abad M, Adler E, Akrawi N, Mdarhri HA, Amara H, Amodio DM, Antazo BG, Apps M, Ay FC, Ba MH, Barbosa S, Bastian B, Berg A, Bernal-Zárate MP, Bernstein M, Białek M, Bilancini E, Bogatyreva N, Boncinelli L, Booth JE, Borau S, Buchel O, Cameron CD, Carvalho CF, Celadin T, Cerami C, Chalise HN, Cheng X, Cian L, Cockcroft K, Conway J, Córdoba-Delgado MA, Crespi C, Crouzevialle M, Cutler J, Cypryańska M, Dabrowska J, Daniels MA, Davis VH, Dayley PN, Delouvee S, Denkovski O, Dezecache G, Dhaliwal NA, Diato AB, Di Paolo R, Drosinou M, Dulleck U, Ekmanis J, Ertan AS, Etienne TW, Farhana HH, Farkhari F, Farmer H, Fenwick A, Fidanovski K, Flew T, Fraser S, Frempong RB, Fugelsang JA, Gale J, Garcia-Navarro EB, Garladinne P, Ghajjou O, Gkinopoulos T, Gray K, Griffin SM, Gronfeldt B, Gümren M, Gurung RL, Halperin E, Harris E, Herzon V, Hruška M, Huang G, Hudecek MFC, Isler O, Jangard S, Jørgensen FJ, Kachanoff F, Kahn J, Dangol AK, Keudel O, Koppel L, Koverola M, Kubin E, Kunnari A, Kutiyski Y, Laguna O, Leota J, Lermer E, Levy J, Levy N, Li C, Long EU, Longoni C, Maglić M, McCashin D, Metcalf AL, Mikloušić I, El Mimouni S, Miura A, Molina-Paredes J, Monroy-Fonseca C, Morales-Marente E, Moreau D, Muda R, Myer A, Nash K, Nesh-Nash T, Nitschke JP, Nurse MS, Ohtsubo Y, Oldemburgo de Mello V, O’Madagain C, Onderco M, Palacios-Galvez MS, Palomäki J, Pan Y, Papp Z, Pärnamets P, Paruzel-Czachura M, Pavlović Z, Payán-Gómez C, Perander S, Pitman MM, Prasad R, Pyrkosz-Pacyna J, Rathje S, Raza A, Rêgo GG, Rhee K, Robertson CE, Rodríguez-Pascual I, Saikkonen T, Salvador-Ginez O, Sampaio WM, Santi GC, Santiago-Tovar N, Savage D, Scheffer JA, Schönegger P, Schultner DT, Schutte EM, Scott A, Sharma M, Sharma P, Skali A, Stadelmann D, Stafford CA, Stanojević D, Stefaniak A, Sternisko A, Stoica A, Stoyanova KK, Strickland B, Sundvall J, Thomas JP, Tinghög G, Torgler B, Traast IJ, Tucciarelli R, Tyrala M, Ungson ND, Uysal MS, Van Lange PAM, van Prooijen J, van Rooy D, Västfjäll D, Verkoeijen P, Vieira JB, von Sikorski C, Walker AC, Watermeyer J, Wetter E, Whillans A, Willardt R, Wohl MJA, Wójcik AD, Wu K, Yamada Y, Yilmaz O, Yogeeswaran K, Ziemer C, Zwaan RA, Boggio PS. National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic. in Nature Communications. 2022;13:517.
doi:10.1038/s41467-021-27668-9 .
Van Bavel, Jay J., Cichocka, Aleksandra, Capraro, Valerio, Sjåstad, Hallgeir, Nezlek, John B., Pavlović, Tomislav, Alfano, Mark, Gelfand, Michele J., Azevedo, Flavio, Birtel, Michèle D., Cislak, Aleksandra, Lockwood, Patricia L., Ross, Robert Malcolm, Abts, Koen, Agadullina, Elena, Aruta, John Jamir Benzon, Besharati, Sahba Nomvula, Bor, Alexander, Choma, Becky L., Crabtree, Charles David, Cunningham, William A., De, Koustav, Ejaz, Waqas, Elbaek, Christian T., Findor, Andrej, Flichtentrei, Daniel, Franc, Renata, Gjoneska, Biljana, Gruber, June, Gualda, Estrella, Horiuchi, Yusaku, Huynh, Toan Luu Duc, Ibanez, Augustin, Imran, Mostak Ahamed, Israelashvili, Jacob, Jasko, Katarzyna, Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena, Krouwel, André, Laakasuo, Michael, Lamm, Claus, Leygue, Caroline, Lin, Ming-Jen, Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir, Marie, Antoine, Mayiwar, Lewend, Mazepus, Honorata, McHugh, Cillian, Minda, John Paul, Mitkidis, Panagiotis, Olsson, Andreas, Otterbring, Tobias, Packer, Dominic J., Perry, Anat, Petersen, Michael Bang, Puthillam, Arathy, Riaño-Moreno, Julián C., Rothmund, Tobias, Santamaría-García, Hernando, Schmid, Petra C., Stoyanov, Drozdstoy, Tewari, Shruti, Todosijević, Bojan, Tsakiris, Manos, Tung, Hans H., Umbreș, Radu G., Vanags, Edmunds, Vlasceanu, Madalina, Vonasch, Andrew, Yucel, Meltem, Zhang, Yucheng, Abad, Mohcine, Adler, Eli, Akrawi, Narin, Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui, Amara, Hanane, Amodio, David M., Antazo, Benedict G., Apps, Matthew, Ay, F. Ceren, Ba, Mouhamadou Hady, Barbosa, Sergio, Bastian, Brock, Berg, Anton, Bernal-Zárate, Maria P., Bernstein, Michael, Białek, Michał, Bilancini, Ennio, Bogatyreva, Natalia, Boncinelli, Leonardo, Booth, Jonathan E., Borau, Sylvie, Buchel, Ondrej, Cameron, C. Daryl, Carvalho, Chrissie F., Celadin, Tatiana, Cerami, Chiara, Chalise, Hom Nath, Cheng, Xiaojun, Cian, Luca, Cockcroft, Kate, Conway, Jane, Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo Andres, Crespi, Chiara, Crouzevialle, Marie, Cutler, Jo, Cypryańska, Marzena, Dabrowska, Justyna, Daniels, Michael A., Davis, Victoria H., Dayley, Pamala N., Delouvee, Sylvain, Denkovski, Ognjan, Dezecache, Guillaume, Dhaliwal, Nathan A., Diato, Alelie B., Di Paolo, Roberto, Drosinou, Marianna, Dulleck, Uwe, Ekmanis, Jānis, Ertan, Arhan S., Etienne, Tom W., Farhana, Hapsa Hossain, Farkhari, Fahima, Farmer, Harry, Fenwick, Ali, Fidanovski, Kristijan, Flew, Terry, Fraser, Shona, Frempong, Raymond Boadi, Fugelsang, Jonathan A., Gale, Jessica, Garcia-Navarro, E. Begoña, Garladinne, Prasad, Ghajjou, Oussama, Gkinopoulos, Theofilos, Gray, Kurt, Griffin, Siobhán M., Gronfeldt, Bjarki, Gümren, Mert, Gurung, Ranju Lama, Halperin, Eran, Harris, Elizabeth, Herzon, Volo, Hruška, Matej, Huang, Guanxiong, Hudecek, Matthias F. C., Isler, Ozan, Jangard, Simon, Jørgensen, Frederik J., Kachanoff, Frank, Kahn, John, Dangol, Apsara Katuwal, Keudel, Oleksandra, Koppel, Lina, Koverola, Mika, Kubin, Emily, Kunnari, Anton, Kutiyski, Yordan, Laguna, Oscar, Leota, Josh, Lermer, Eva, Levy, Jonathan, Levy, Neil, Li, Chunyun, Long, Elizabeth U., Longoni, Chiara, Maglić, Marina, McCashin, Darragh, Metcalf, Alexander L., Mikloušić, Igor, El Mimouni, Soulaimane, Miura, Asako, Molina-Paredes, Juliana, Monroy-Fonseca, César, Morales-Marente, Elena, Moreau, David, Muda, Rafał, Myer, Annalisa, Nash, Kyle, Nesh-Nash, Tarik, Nitschke, Jonas P., Nurse, Matthew S., Ohtsubo, Yohsuke, Oldemburgo de Mello, Victoria, O’Madagain, Cathal, Onderco, Michal, Palacios-Galvez, M. Soledad, Palomäki, Jussi, Pan, Yafeng, Papp, Zsófia, Pärnamets, Philip, Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola, Pavlović, Zoran, Payán-Gómez, César, Perander, Silva, Pitman, Michael Mark, Prasad, Rajib, Pyrkosz-Pacyna, Joanna, Rathje, Steve, Raza, Ali, Rêgo, Gabriel G., Rhee, Kasey, Robertson, Claire E., Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván, Saikkonen, Teemu, Salvador-Ginez, Octavio, Sampaio, Waldir M., Santi, Gaia C., Santiago-Tovar, Natalia, Savage, David, Scheffer, Julian A., Schönegger, Philipp, Schultner, David T., Schutte, Enid M., Scott, Andy, Sharma, Madhavi, Sharma, Pujan, Skali, Ahmed, Stadelmann, David, Stafford, Clara Alexandra, Stanojević, Dragan, Stefaniak, Anna, Sternisko, Anni, Stoica, Augustin, Stoyanova, Kristina K., Strickland, Brent, Sundvall, Jukka, Thomas, Jeffrey P., Tinghög, Gustav, Torgler, Benno, Traast, Iris J., Tucciarelli, Raffaele, Tyrala, Michael, Ungson, Nick D., Uysal, Mete S., Van Lange, Paul A. M., van Prooijen, Jan-Willem, van Rooy, Dirk, Västfjäll, Daniel, Verkoeijen, Peter, Vieira, Joana B., von Sikorski, Christian, Walker, Alexander Cameron, Watermeyer, Jennifer, Wetter, Erik, Whillans, Ashley, Willardt, Robin, Wohl, Michael J. A., Wójcik, Adrian Dominik, Wu, Kaidi, Yamada, Yuki, Yilmaz, Onurcan, Yogeeswaran, Kumar, Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa, Zwaan, Rolf A., Boggio, Paulo S., "National identity predicts public health support during a global pandemic" in Nature Communications, 13 (2022):517,
https://doi.org/10.1038/s41467-021-27668-9 . .
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197

Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina

Pantić, Dragomir; Pavlović, Zoran; Todosijević, Bojan

(Institut društvenih nauka, 2022)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Pantić, Dragomir
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3871
AB  - U bivšoj Socijalističkoj Federativnoj Republici Jugoslaviji (SFRJ), u okviru koje je Srbija
bila jedna od šest federativnih jedinica, tokom pedesetih godina XX veka stvarani su politički i drugi uslovi za nastanak istraživačkih institucija koje će se baviti empirijskim istraživanjima u domenu društvenih nauka. Raskid sa Staljinom (1948) i uvođenje samoupravnog
sistema (1952) doprineli su da se ublaži politička diktatura i da se unutar i dalje komunističkog monizma stvore niše za izvesno kritičko preispitivanje društvene stvarnosti. Tokom
pedesetih godina osnovano je desetak saveznih naučnih instituta, a među njima i Institut
društvenih nauka 1957. godine (u daljem tekstu: IDN) koji je u početku faktički bio postdiplomska škola za mlade kadrove iz svih šest republika. Predavači u toj visokoj školi bili su
najpoznatiji profesori sociologije, prava, političkih nauka, demografije i metodologije: J.
Goričar, M. Bartoš, Đ. Đorđević, R. Lukić, R. Supek, V. Pavićević i drugi. Među polaznicima
je bilo i onih koji su kasnije postali uticajni istraživači. Jedan od njih je i Firdus Džinić, koji
će 1963. godine osnovati unutar IDN samostalnu radnu jedinicu – Centar za istraživanje
javnog mnjenja (prvu takvu specijalizovanu instituciju na Balkanu i u Istočnoj Evropi). Drugi
je Niko Toš, koji će 1968. osnovati Centar za istraživanje javnog mnjenja i masovnih komunikacija u okviru Fakulteta za društvene nauke Univerziteta u Ljubljani.
PB  - Institut društvenih nauka
T2  - Institut društvenih nauka - od crkvene akademije do institucije od nacionalnog značaja
T1  - Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina
EP  - 122
SP  - 109
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3871
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Pantić, Dragomir and Pavlović, Zoran and Todosijević, Bojan",
year = "2022",
abstract = "U bivšoj Socijalističkoj Federativnoj Republici Jugoslaviji (SFRJ), u okviru koje je Srbija
bila jedna od šest federativnih jedinica, tokom pedesetih godina XX veka stvarani su politički i drugi uslovi za nastanak istraživačkih institucija koje će se baviti empirijskim istraživanjima u domenu društvenih nauka. Raskid sa Staljinom (1948) i uvođenje samoupravnog
sistema (1952) doprineli su da se ublaži politička diktatura i da se unutar i dalje komunističkog monizma stvore niše za izvesno kritičko preispitivanje društvene stvarnosti. Tokom
pedesetih godina osnovano je desetak saveznih naučnih instituta, a među njima i Institut
društvenih nauka 1957. godine (u daljem tekstu: IDN) koji je u početku faktički bio postdiplomska škola za mlade kadrove iz svih šest republika. Predavači u toj visokoj školi bili su
najpoznatiji profesori sociologije, prava, političkih nauka, demografije i metodologije: J.
Goričar, M. Bartoš, Đ. Đorđević, R. Lukić, R. Supek, V. Pavićević i drugi. Među polaznicima
je bilo i onih koji su kasnije postali uticajni istraživači. Jedan od njih je i Firdus Džinić, koji
će 1963. godine osnovati unutar IDN samostalnu radnu jedinicu – Centar za istraživanje
javnog mnjenja (prvu takvu specijalizovanu instituciju na Balkanu i u Istočnoj Evropi). Drugi
je Niko Toš, koji će 1968. osnovati Centar za istraživanje javnog mnjenja i masovnih komunikacija u okviru Fakulteta za društvene nauke Univerziteta u Ljubljani.",
publisher = "Institut društvenih nauka",
journal = "Institut društvenih nauka - od crkvene akademije do institucije od nacionalnog značaja",
booktitle = "Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina",
pages = "122-109",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3871"
}
Pantić, D., Pavlović, Z.,& Todosijević, B.. (2022). Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina. in Institut društvenih nauka - od crkvene akademije do institucije od nacionalnog značaja
Institut društvenih nauka., 109-122.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3871
Pantić D, Pavlović Z, Todosijević B. Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina. in Institut društvenih nauka - od crkvene akademije do institucije od nacionalnog značaja. 2022;:109-122.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3871 .
Pantić, Dragomir, Pavlović, Zoran, Todosijević, Bojan, "Kratka istorija Centra za politikološka istraživanja i javno mnjenje: prvih šezdeset godina" in Institut društvenih nauka - od crkvene akademije do institucije od nacionalnog značaja (2022):109-122,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3871 .

Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status

Todosijević, Bojan; Pavlović, Zoran; Komar, Olivera

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Komar, Olivera
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5160
AB  - In most contemporary conceptions of populist ideology, anti-elite orientation is considered to
be one of its central components. Consequently, instruments designed to measure populism
include items intended to capture anti-elitism. Such operationalizations may, however, neglect
the interaction with the political status of the relevant actors – that is, parties/leaders. A negative
and critical attitude towards the party or parties in government could reflect a populist antielite orientation but might also simply represent a negative attitude towards a specific party
(which may be affected by pre-existing party identification or a negative government
performance evaluation). Hence, such an indicator of populist ideology would then be
contaminated by unintended content. This paper uses the Comparative Study of Electoral
Systems dataset (with the addition of Serbia) to analyze the average anti-elite scores of parties
in different countries. The overall results suggest that the anti-elite scale also captures the
attitude towards parties in government. The paper discusses the methodological ramifications
of this finding.
T2  - Quality & Quantity
T1  - Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status
EP  - 1629
SP  - 1611
VL  - 56
DO  - 10.1007/s11135-021-01197-5
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Todosijević, Bojan and Pavlović, Zoran and Komar, Olivera",
year = "2022",
abstract = "In most contemporary conceptions of populist ideology, anti-elite orientation is considered to
be one of its central components. Consequently, instruments designed to measure populism
include items intended to capture anti-elitism. Such operationalizations may, however, neglect
the interaction with the political status of the relevant actors – that is, parties/leaders. A negative
and critical attitude towards the party or parties in government could reflect a populist antielite orientation but might also simply represent a negative attitude towards a specific party
(which may be affected by pre-existing party identification or a negative government
performance evaluation). Hence, such an indicator of populist ideology would then be
contaminated by unintended content. This paper uses the Comparative Study of Electoral
Systems dataset (with the addition of Serbia) to analyze the average anti-elite scores of parties
in different countries. The overall results suggest that the anti-elite scale also captures the
attitude towards parties in government. The paper discusses the methodological ramifications
of this finding.",
journal = "Quality & Quantity",
title = "Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status",
pages = "1629-1611",
volume = "56",
doi = "10.1007/s11135-021-01197-5"
}
Todosijević, B., Pavlović, Z.,& Komar, O.. (2022). Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status. in Quality & Quantity, 56, 1611-1629.
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11135-021-01197-5
Todosijević B, Pavlović Z, Komar O. Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status. in Quality & Quantity. 2022;56:1611-1629.
doi:10.1007/s11135-021-01197-5 .
Todosijević, Bojan, Pavlović, Zoran, Komar, Olivera, "Measuring populist ideology: anti-elite orientation and government status" in Quality & Quantity, 56 (2022):1611-1629,
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11135-021-01197-5 . .
2

Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning

Pavlović, Tomislav; Azevedo, Flavio; De, Koustav; Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.; Maglić, Marina; Gkinopoulos, Theofilos; Donnelly-Kehoe, Patricio Andreas; Payán-Gómez, César; Huang, Guanxiong; Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw; Birtel, Michèle D.; Schönegger, Philipp; Capraro, Valerio; Santamaría-García, Hernando; Yucel, Meltem; Ibanez, Agustin; Rathje, Steve; Wetter, Erik; Stanojević, Dragan; van Prooijen, Jan-Willem; Hesse, Eugenia; Elbaek, Christian T.; Franc, Renata; Pavlović, Zoran; Mitkidis, Panagiotis; Cichocka, Aleksandra; Gelfand, Michele J.; Alfano, Mark; Ross, Robert M.; Sjåstad, Hallgeir; Nezlek, John B.; Cislak, Aleksandra; Lockwood, Patricia L.; Abts, Koen; Agadullina, Elena; Amodio, David M.; Apps, Matthew A J; Aruta, John Jamir Benzon; Besharati, Sahba Nomvula; Bor, Alexander; Choma, Becky L.; Cunningham, William A.; Ejaz, Waqas; Farmer, Harry; Findor, Andrej; Gjoneska, Biljana; Gualda, Estrella; Huynh, Toan L D; Imran, Mostak Ahamed; Israelashvili, Jacob; Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena; Krouwel, André; Kutiyski, Yordan; Laakasuo, Michael; Lamm, Claus; Levy, Jonathan; Leygue, Caroline; Lin, Ming-Jen; Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir; Marie, Antoine; Mayiwar, Lewend; Mazepus, Honorata; McHugh, Cillian; Olsson, Andreas; Otterbring, Tobias; Packer, Dominic J.; Palomäki, Jussi; Perry, Anat; Petersen, Michael Bang; Puthillam, Arathy; Rothmund, Tobias; Schmid, Petra C.; Stadelmann, David; Stoica, Augustin; Stoyanov, Drozdstoy; Stoyanova, Kristina K.; Tewari, Shruti; Todosijević, Bojan; Torgler, Benno; Tsakiris, Manos; Tung, Hans H.; Umbreș, Radu Gabriel; Vanags, Edmunds; Vlasceanu, Madalina; Vonasch, Andrew J; Zhang, Yucheng; Abad, Mohcine; Adler, Eli; Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui; Antazo, Benedict G.; Ay, F. Ceren; Ba, Mouhamadou El Hady; Barbosa, Sergio; Bastian, Brock; Berg, Anton; Białek, Michał; Bilancini, Ennio; Bogatyreva, Natalia; Boncinelli, Leonardo; Booth, Jonathan E.; Borau, Sylvie; Buchel, Ondrej; de Carvalho, Chrissie Ferreira; Celadin, Tatiana; Cerami, Chiara; Chalise, Hom Nath; Cheng, Xiaojun; Cian, Luca; Cockcroft, Kate; Conway, Jane; Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo A; Crespi, Chiara; Crouzevialle, Marie; Cutler, Jo; Cypryańska, Marzena; Dabrowska, Justyna; Davis, Victoria H.; Minda, John Paul; Dayley, Pamala N.; Delouvée, Sylvain; Denkovski, Ognjan; Dezecache, Guillaume; Dhaliwal, Nathan A.; Diato, Alelie B.; Di Paolo, Roberto; Dulleck, Uwe; Ekmanis, Jānis; Etienne, Tom W.; Farhana, Hapsa Hossain; Farkhari, Fahima; Fidanovski, Kristijan; Flew, Terry; Fraser, Shona; Frempong, Raymond Boadi; Fugelsang, Jonathan A.; Gale, Jessica; García-Navarro, E Begoña; Garladinne, Prasad; Gray, Kurt; Griffin, Siobhán M.; Gronfeldt, Bjarki; Gruber, June; Halperin, Eran; Herzon, Volo; Hruška, Matej; Hudecek, Matthias F. C.; Isler, Ozan; Jangard, Simon; Jørgensen, Frederik J.; Keudel, Oleksandra; Koppel, Lina; Koverola, Mika; Kunnari, Anton; Leota, Josh; Lermer, Eva; Li, Chunyun; Longoni, Chiara; McCashin, Darragh; Mikloušić, Igor; Molina-Paredes, Juliana; Monroy-Fonseca, César; Morales-Marente, Elena; Moreau, David; Muda, Rafał; Myer, Annalisa; Nash, Kyle; Nitschke, Jonas P.; Nurse, Matthew S.; de Mello, Victoria Oldemburgo; Palacios-Galvez, Maria Soledad; Pan, Yafeng; Papp, Zsófia; Pärnamets, Philip; Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola; Perander, Silva; Pitman, Michael Mark; Raza, Ali; Rêgo, Gabriel Gaudencio; Robertson, Claire E.; Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván; Saikkonen, Teemu; Salvador-Ginez, Octavio; Sampaio, Waldir M.; Santi, Gaia Chiara; Schultner, David T.; Schutte, Enid M.; Scott, Andy; Skali, Ahmed; Stefaniak, Anna; Sternisko, Anni; Strickland, Brent; Thomas, Jeffrey P.; Tinghög, Gustav; Traast, Iris J.; Tucciarelli, Raffaele; Tyrala, Michael; Ungson, Nick D.; Uysal, Mete Sefa; van Rooy, Dirk; Västfjäll, Daniel; Vieira, Joana B.; von Sikorski, Christian; Walker, Alexander C; Watermeyer, Jennifer; Willardt, Robin; Wohl, Michael J. A.; Wójcik, Adrian Dominik; Wu, Kaidi; Yamada, Yuki; Yilmaz, Onurcan; Yogeeswaran, Kumar; Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa; Zwaan, Rolf A.; Boggio, Paulo S.; Whillans, Ashley; Van Lange, Paul A. M.; Prasad, Rajib; Onderco, Michal; O’Madagain, Cathal; Nesh-Nash, Tarik; Laguna, Oscar Moreda; Kubin, Emily; Gümren, Mert; Fenwick, Ali; Ertan, Arhan S.; Bernstein, Michael J; Amara, Hanane; Van Bavel, Jay J.

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Tomislav
AU  - Azevedo, Flavio
AU  - De, Koustav
AU  - Riaño-Moreno, Julián C.
AU  - Maglić, Marina
AU  - Gkinopoulos, Theofilos
AU  - Donnelly-Kehoe, Patricio Andreas
AU  - Payán-Gómez, César
AU  - Huang, Guanxiong
AU  - Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw
AU  - Birtel, Michèle D.
AU  - Schönegger, Philipp
AU  - Capraro, Valerio
AU  - Santamaría-García, Hernando
AU  - Yucel, Meltem
AU  - Ibanez, Agustin
AU  - Rathje, Steve
AU  - Wetter, Erik
AU  - Stanojević, Dragan
AU  - van Prooijen, Jan-Willem
AU  - Hesse, Eugenia
AU  - Elbaek, Christian T.
AU  - Franc, Renata
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Mitkidis, Panagiotis
AU  - Cichocka, Aleksandra
AU  - Gelfand, Michele J.
AU  - Alfano, Mark
AU  - Ross, Robert M.
AU  - Sjåstad, Hallgeir
AU  - Nezlek, John B.
AU  - Cislak, Aleksandra
AU  - Lockwood, Patricia L.
AU  - Abts, Koen
AU  - Agadullina, Elena
AU  - Amodio, David M.
AU  - Apps, Matthew A J
AU  - Aruta, John Jamir Benzon
AU  - Besharati, Sahba Nomvula
AU  - Bor, Alexander
AU  - Choma, Becky L.
AU  - Cunningham, William A.
AU  - Ejaz, Waqas
AU  - Farmer, Harry
AU  - Findor, Andrej
AU  - Gjoneska, Biljana
AU  - Gualda, Estrella
AU  - Huynh, Toan L D
AU  - Imran, Mostak Ahamed
AU  - Israelashvili, Jacob
AU  - Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena
AU  - Krouwel, André
AU  - Kutiyski, Yordan
AU  - Laakasuo, Michael
AU  - Lamm, Claus
AU  - Levy, Jonathan
AU  - Leygue, Caroline
AU  - Lin, Ming-Jen
AU  - Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir
AU  - Marie, Antoine
AU  - Mayiwar, Lewend
AU  - Mazepus, Honorata
AU  - McHugh, Cillian
AU  - Olsson, Andreas
AU  - Otterbring, Tobias
AU  - Packer, Dominic J.
AU  - Palomäki, Jussi
AU  - Perry, Anat
AU  - Petersen, Michael Bang
AU  - Puthillam, Arathy
AU  - Rothmund, Tobias
AU  - Schmid, Petra C.
AU  - Stadelmann, David
AU  - Stoica, Augustin
AU  - Stoyanov, Drozdstoy
AU  - Stoyanova, Kristina K.
AU  - Tewari, Shruti
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Torgler, Benno
AU  - Tsakiris, Manos
AU  - Tung, Hans H.
AU  - Umbreș, Radu Gabriel
AU  - Vanags, Edmunds
AU  - Vlasceanu, Madalina
AU  - Vonasch, Andrew J
AU  - Zhang, Yucheng
AU  - Abad, Mohcine
AU  - Adler, Eli
AU  - Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui
AU  - Antazo, Benedict G.
AU  - Ay, F. Ceren
AU  - Ba, Mouhamadou El Hady
AU  - Barbosa, Sergio
AU  - Bastian, Brock
AU  - Berg, Anton
AU  - Białek, Michał
AU  - Bilancini, Ennio
AU  - Bogatyreva, Natalia
AU  - Boncinelli, Leonardo
AU  - Booth, Jonathan E.
AU  - Borau, Sylvie
AU  - Buchel, Ondrej
AU  - de Carvalho, Chrissie Ferreira
AU  - Celadin, Tatiana
AU  - Cerami, Chiara
AU  - Chalise, Hom Nath
AU  - Cheng, Xiaojun
AU  - Cian, Luca
AU  - Cockcroft, Kate
AU  - Conway, Jane
AU  - Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo A
AU  - Crespi, Chiara
AU  - Crouzevialle, Marie
AU  - Cutler, Jo
AU  - Cypryańska, Marzena
AU  - Dabrowska, Justyna
AU  - Davis, Victoria H.
AU  - Minda, John Paul
AU  - Dayley, Pamala N.
AU  - Delouvée, Sylvain
AU  - Denkovski, Ognjan
AU  - Dezecache, Guillaume
AU  - Dhaliwal, Nathan A.
AU  - Diato, Alelie B.
AU  - Di Paolo, Roberto
AU  - Dulleck, Uwe
AU  - Ekmanis, Jānis
AU  - Etienne, Tom W.
AU  - Farhana, Hapsa Hossain
AU  - Farkhari, Fahima
AU  - Fidanovski, Kristijan
AU  - Flew, Terry
AU  - Fraser, Shona
AU  - Frempong, Raymond Boadi
AU  - Fugelsang, Jonathan A.
AU  - Gale, Jessica
AU  - García-Navarro, E Begoña
AU  - Garladinne, Prasad
AU  - Gray, Kurt
AU  - Griffin, Siobhán M.
AU  - Gronfeldt, Bjarki
AU  - Gruber, June
AU  - Halperin, Eran
AU  - Herzon, Volo
AU  - Hruška, Matej
AU  - Hudecek, Matthias F. C.
AU  - Isler, Ozan
AU  - Jangard, Simon
AU  - Jørgensen, Frederik J.
AU  - Keudel, Oleksandra
AU  - Koppel, Lina
AU  - Koverola, Mika
AU  - Kunnari, Anton
AU  - Leota, Josh
AU  - Lermer, Eva
AU  - Li, Chunyun
AU  - Longoni, Chiara
AU  - McCashin, Darragh
AU  - Mikloušić, Igor
AU  - Molina-Paredes, Juliana
AU  - Monroy-Fonseca, César
AU  - Morales-Marente, Elena
AU  - Moreau, David
AU  - Muda, Rafał
AU  - Myer, Annalisa
AU  - Nash, Kyle
AU  - Nitschke, Jonas P.
AU  - Nurse, Matthew S.
AU  - de Mello, Victoria Oldemburgo
AU  - Palacios-Galvez, Maria Soledad
AU  - Pan, Yafeng
AU  - Papp, Zsófia
AU  - Pärnamets, Philip
AU  - Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola
AU  - Perander, Silva
AU  - Pitman, Michael Mark
AU  - Raza, Ali
AU  - Rêgo, Gabriel Gaudencio
AU  - Robertson, Claire E.
AU  - Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván
AU  - Saikkonen, Teemu
AU  - Salvador-Ginez, Octavio
AU  - Sampaio, Waldir M.
AU  - Santi, Gaia Chiara
AU  - Schultner, David T.
AU  - Schutte, Enid M.
AU  - Scott, Andy
AU  - Skali, Ahmed
AU  - Stefaniak, Anna
AU  - Sternisko, Anni
AU  - Strickland, Brent
AU  - Thomas, Jeffrey P.
AU  - Tinghög, Gustav
AU  - Traast, Iris J.
AU  - Tucciarelli, Raffaele
AU  - Tyrala, Michael
AU  - Ungson, Nick D.
AU  - Uysal, Mete Sefa
AU  - van Rooy, Dirk
AU  - Västfjäll, Daniel
AU  - Vieira, Joana B.
AU  - von Sikorski, Christian
AU  - Walker, Alexander C
AU  - Watermeyer, Jennifer
AU  - Willardt, Robin
AU  - Wohl, Michael J. A.
AU  - Wójcik, Adrian Dominik
AU  - Wu, Kaidi
AU  - Yamada, Yuki
AU  - Yilmaz, Onurcan
AU  - Yogeeswaran, Kumar
AU  - Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa
AU  - Zwaan, Rolf A.
AU  - Boggio, Paulo S.
AU  - Whillans, Ashley
AU  - Van Lange, Paul A. M.
AU  - Prasad, Rajib
AU  - Onderco, Michal
AU  - O’Madagain, Cathal
AU  - Nesh-Nash, Tarik
AU  - Laguna, Oscar Moreda
AU  - Kubin, Emily
AU  - Gümren, Mert
AU  - Fenwick, Ali
AU  - Ertan, Arhan S.
AU  - Bernstein, Michael J
AU  - Amara, Hanane
AU  - Van Bavel, Jay J.
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/5159
AB  - At the beginning of 2020, COVID-19 became a global problem. Despite all the efforts to emphasize the relevance of preventive measures, not everyone adhered to them. Thus, learning more about the characteristics determining attitudinal and behavioral responses
to the pandemic is crucial to improving future interventions. In this study, we applied machine learning on the multinational data
collected by the International Collaboration on the Social and Moral Psychology of COVID-19 (N = 51,404) to test the predictive efficacy
of constructs from social, moral, cognitive, and personality psychology, as well as socio-demographic factors, in the attitudinal and behavioral responses to the pandemic. The results point to several valuable insights. Internalized moral identity provided the most consistent predictive contribution—individuals perceiving moral traits as central to their self-concept reported higher adherence to preventive measures. Similar results were found for morality as cooperation, symbolized moral identity, self-control, open-mindedness,
and collective narcissism, while the inverse relationship was evident for the endorsement of conspiracy theories. However, we also
found a non-neglible variability in the explained variance and predictive contributions with respect to macro-level factors such as
the pandemic stage or cultural region. Overall, the results underscore the importance of morality-related and contextual factors in
understanding adherence to public health recommendations during the pandemic
T2  - PNAS Nexus
T1  - Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning
EP  - 15
IS  - 3
SP  - 1
VL  - 1
DO  - 10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac093
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Tomislav and Azevedo, Flavio and De, Koustav and Riaño-Moreno, Julián C. and Maglić, Marina and Gkinopoulos, Theofilos and Donnelly-Kehoe, Patricio Andreas and Payán-Gómez, César and Huang, Guanxiong and Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw and Birtel, Michèle D. and Schönegger, Philipp and Capraro, Valerio and Santamaría-García, Hernando and Yucel, Meltem and Ibanez, Agustin and Rathje, Steve and Wetter, Erik and Stanojević, Dragan and van Prooijen, Jan-Willem and Hesse, Eugenia and Elbaek, Christian T. and Franc, Renata and Pavlović, Zoran and Mitkidis, Panagiotis and Cichocka, Aleksandra and Gelfand, Michele J. and Alfano, Mark and Ross, Robert M. and Sjåstad, Hallgeir and Nezlek, John B. and Cislak, Aleksandra and Lockwood, Patricia L. and Abts, Koen and Agadullina, Elena and Amodio, David M. and Apps, Matthew A J and Aruta, John Jamir Benzon and Besharati, Sahba Nomvula and Bor, Alexander and Choma, Becky L. and Cunningham, William A. and Ejaz, Waqas and Farmer, Harry and Findor, Andrej and Gjoneska, Biljana and Gualda, Estrella and Huynh, Toan L D and Imran, Mostak Ahamed and Israelashvili, Jacob and Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena and Krouwel, André and Kutiyski, Yordan and Laakasuo, Michael and Lamm, Claus and Levy, Jonathan and Leygue, Caroline and Lin, Ming-Jen and Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir and Marie, Antoine and Mayiwar, Lewend and Mazepus, Honorata and McHugh, Cillian and Olsson, Andreas and Otterbring, Tobias and Packer, Dominic J. and Palomäki, Jussi and Perry, Anat and Petersen, Michael Bang and Puthillam, Arathy and Rothmund, Tobias and Schmid, Petra C. and Stadelmann, David and Stoica, Augustin and Stoyanov, Drozdstoy and Stoyanova, Kristina K. and Tewari, Shruti and Todosijević, Bojan and Torgler, Benno and Tsakiris, Manos and Tung, Hans H. and Umbreș, Radu Gabriel and Vanags, Edmunds and Vlasceanu, Madalina and Vonasch, Andrew J and Zhang, Yucheng and Abad, Mohcine and Adler, Eli and Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui and Antazo, Benedict G. and Ay, F. Ceren and Ba, Mouhamadou El Hady and Barbosa, Sergio and Bastian, Brock and Berg, Anton and Białek, Michał and Bilancini, Ennio and Bogatyreva, Natalia and Boncinelli, Leonardo and Booth, Jonathan E. and Borau, Sylvie and Buchel, Ondrej and de Carvalho, Chrissie Ferreira and Celadin, Tatiana and Cerami, Chiara and Chalise, Hom Nath and Cheng, Xiaojun and Cian, Luca and Cockcroft, Kate and Conway, Jane and Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo A and Crespi, Chiara and Crouzevialle, Marie and Cutler, Jo and Cypryańska, Marzena and Dabrowska, Justyna and Davis, Victoria H. and Minda, John Paul and Dayley, Pamala N. and Delouvée, Sylvain and Denkovski, Ognjan and Dezecache, Guillaume and Dhaliwal, Nathan A. and Diato, Alelie B. and Di Paolo, Roberto and Dulleck, Uwe and Ekmanis, Jānis and Etienne, Tom W. and Farhana, Hapsa Hossain and Farkhari, Fahima and Fidanovski, Kristijan and Flew, Terry and Fraser, Shona and Frempong, Raymond Boadi and Fugelsang, Jonathan A. and Gale, Jessica and García-Navarro, E Begoña and Garladinne, Prasad and Gray, Kurt and Griffin, Siobhán M. and Gronfeldt, Bjarki and Gruber, June and Halperin, Eran and Herzon, Volo and Hruška, Matej and Hudecek, Matthias F. C. and Isler, Ozan and Jangard, Simon and Jørgensen, Frederik J. and Keudel, Oleksandra and Koppel, Lina and Koverola, Mika and Kunnari, Anton and Leota, Josh and Lermer, Eva and Li, Chunyun and Longoni, Chiara and McCashin, Darragh and Mikloušić, Igor and Molina-Paredes, Juliana and Monroy-Fonseca, César and Morales-Marente, Elena and Moreau, David and Muda, Rafał and Myer, Annalisa and Nash, Kyle and Nitschke, Jonas P. and Nurse, Matthew S. and de Mello, Victoria Oldemburgo and Palacios-Galvez, Maria Soledad and Pan, Yafeng and Papp, Zsófia and Pärnamets, Philip and Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola and Perander, Silva and Pitman, Michael Mark and Raza, Ali and Rêgo, Gabriel Gaudencio and Robertson, Claire E. and Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván and Saikkonen, Teemu and Salvador-Ginez, Octavio and Sampaio, Waldir M. and Santi, Gaia Chiara and Schultner, David T. and Schutte, Enid M. and Scott, Andy and Skali, Ahmed and Stefaniak, Anna and Sternisko, Anni and Strickland, Brent and Thomas, Jeffrey P. and Tinghög, Gustav and Traast, Iris J. and Tucciarelli, Raffaele and Tyrala, Michael and Ungson, Nick D. and Uysal, Mete Sefa and van Rooy, Dirk and Västfjäll, Daniel and Vieira, Joana B. and von Sikorski, Christian and Walker, Alexander C and Watermeyer, Jennifer and Willardt, Robin and Wohl, Michael J. A. and Wójcik, Adrian Dominik and Wu, Kaidi and Yamada, Yuki and Yilmaz, Onurcan and Yogeeswaran, Kumar and Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa and Zwaan, Rolf A. and Boggio, Paulo S. and Whillans, Ashley and Van Lange, Paul A. M. and Prasad, Rajib and Onderco, Michal and O’Madagain, Cathal and Nesh-Nash, Tarik and Laguna, Oscar Moreda and Kubin, Emily and Gümren, Mert and Fenwick, Ali and Ertan, Arhan S. and Bernstein, Michael J and Amara, Hanane and Van Bavel, Jay J.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "At the beginning of 2020, COVID-19 became a global problem. Despite all the efforts to emphasize the relevance of preventive measures, not everyone adhered to them. Thus, learning more about the characteristics determining attitudinal and behavioral responses
to the pandemic is crucial to improving future interventions. In this study, we applied machine learning on the multinational data
collected by the International Collaboration on the Social and Moral Psychology of COVID-19 (N = 51,404) to test the predictive efficacy
of constructs from social, moral, cognitive, and personality psychology, as well as socio-demographic factors, in the attitudinal and behavioral responses to the pandemic. The results point to several valuable insights. Internalized moral identity provided the most consistent predictive contribution—individuals perceiving moral traits as central to their self-concept reported higher adherence to preventive measures. Similar results were found for morality as cooperation, symbolized moral identity, self-control, open-mindedness,
and collective narcissism, while the inverse relationship was evident for the endorsement of conspiracy theories. However, we also
found a non-neglible variability in the explained variance and predictive contributions with respect to macro-level factors such as
the pandemic stage or cultural region. Overall, the results underscore the importance of morality-related and contextual factors in
understanding adherence to public health recommendations during the pandemic",
journal = "PNAS Nexus",
title = "Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning",
pages = "15-1",
number = "3",
volume = "1",
doi = "10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac093"
}
Pavlović, T., Azevedo, F., De, K., Riaño-Moreno, J. C., Maglić, M., Gkinopoulos, T., Donnelly-Kehoe, P. A., Payán-Gómez, C., Huang, G., Kantorowicz, J., Birtel, M. D., Schönegger, P., Capraro, V., Santamaría-García, H., Yucel, M., Ibanez, A., Rathje, S., Wetter, E., Stanojević, D., van Prooijen, J., Hesse, E., Elbaek, C. T., Franc, R., Pavlović, Z., Mitkidis, P., Cichocka, A., Gelfand, M. J., Alfano, M., Ross, R. M., Sjåstad, H., Nezlek, J. B., Cislak, A., Lockwood, P. L., Abts, K., Agadullina, E., Amodio, D. M., Apps, M. A. J., Aruta, J. J. B., Besharati, S. N., Bor, A., Choma, B. L., Cunningham, W. A., Ejaz, W., Farmer, H., Findor, A., Gjoneska, B., Gualda, E., Huynh, T. L. D., Imran, M. A., Israelashvili, J., Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, E., Krouwel, A., Kutiyski, Y., Laakasuo, M., Lamm, C., Levy, J., Leygue, C., Lin, M., Mansoor, M. S., Marie, A., Mayiwar, L., Mazepus, H., McHugh, C., Olsson, A., Otterbring, T., Packer, D. J., Palomäki, J., Perry, A., Petersen, M. B., Puthillam, A., Rothmund, T., Schmid, P. C., Stadelmann, D., Stoica, A., Stoyanov, D., Stoyanova, K. K., Tewari, S., Todosijević, B., Torgler, B., Tsakiris, M., Tung, H. H., Umbreș, R. G., Vanags, E., Vlasceanu, M., Vonasch, A. J., Zhang, Y., Abad, M., Adler, E., Mdarhri, H. A., Antazo, B. G., Ay, F. C., Ba, M. E. H., Barbosa, S., Bastian, B., Berg, A., Białek, M., Bilancini, E., Bogatyreva, N., Boncinelli, L., Booth, J. E., Borau, S., Buchel, O., de Carvalho, C. F., Celadin, T., Cerami, C., Chalise, H. N., Cheng, X., Cian, L., Cockcroft, K., Conway, J., Córdoba-Delgado, M. A., Crespi, C., Crouzevialle, M., Cutler, J., Cypryańska, M., Dabrowska, J., Davis, V. H., Minda, J. P., Dayley, P. N., Delouvée, S., Denkovski, O., Dezecache, G., Dhaliwal, N. A., Diato, A. B., Di Paolo, R., Dulleck, U., Ekmanis, J., Etienne, T. W., Farhana, H. H., Farkhari, F., Fidanovski, K., Flew, T., Fraser, S., Frempong, R. B., Fugelsang, J. A., Gale, J., García-Navarro, E. B., Garladinne, P., Gray, K., Griffin, S. M., Gronfeldt, B., Gruber, J., Halperin, E., Herzon, V., Hruška, M., Hudecek, M. F. C., Isler, O., Jangard, S., Jørgensen, F. J., Keudel, O., Koppel, L., Koverola, M., Kunnari, A., Leota, J., Lermer, E., Li, C., Longoni, C., McCashin, D., Mikloušić, I., Molina-Paredes, J., Monroy-Fonseca, C., Morales-Marente, E., Moreau, D., Muda, R., Myer, A., Nash, K., Nitschke, J. P., Nurse, M. S., de Mello, V. O., Palacios-Galvez, M. S., Pan, Y., Papp, Z., Pärnamets, P., Paruzel-Czachura, M., Perander, S., Pitman, M. M., Raza, A., Rêgo, G. G., Robertson, C. E., Rodríguez-Pascual, I., Saikkonen, T., Salvador-Ginez, O., Sampaio, W. M., Santi, G. C., Schultner, D. T., Schutte, E. M., Scott, A., Skali, A., Stefaniak, A., Sternisko, A., Strickland, B., Thomas, J. P., Tinghög, G., Traast, I. J., Tucciarelli, R., Tyrala, M., Ungson, N. D., Uysal, M. S., van Rooy, D., Västfjäll, D., Vieira, J. B., von Sikorski, C., Walker, A. C., Watermeyer, J., Willardt, R., Wohl, M. J. A., Wójcik, A. D., Wu, K., Yamada, Y., Yilmaz, O., Yogeeswaran, K., Ziemer, C., Zwaan, R. A., Boggio, P. S., Whillans, A., Van Lange, P. A. M., Prasad, R., Onderco, M., O’Madagain, C., Nesh-Nash, T., Laguna, O. M., Kubin, E., Gümren, M., Fenwick, A., Ertan, A. S., Bernstein, M. J., Amara, H.,& Van Bavel, J. J.. (2022). Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning. in PNAS Nexus, 1(3), 1-15.
https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac093
Pavlović T, Azevedo F, De K, Riaño-Moreno JC, Maglić M, Gkinopoulos T, Donnelly-Kehoe PA, Payán-Gómez C, Huang G, Kantorowicz J, Birtel MD, Schönegger P, Capraro V, Santamaría-García H, Yucel M, Ibanez A, Rathje S, Wetter E, Stanojević D, van Prooijen J, Hesse E, Elbaek CT, Franc R, Pavlović Z, Mitkidis P, Cichocka A, Gelfand MJ, Alfano M, Ross RM, Sjåstad H, Nezlek JB, Cislak A, Lockwood PL, Abts K, Agadullina E, Amodio DM, Apps MAJ, Aruta JJB, Besharati SN, Bor A, Choma BL, Cunningham WA, Ejaz W, Farmer H, Findor A, Gjoneska B, Gualda E, Huynh TLD, Imran MA, Israelashvili J, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko E, Krouwel A, Kutiyski Y, Laakasuo M, Lamm C, Levy J, Leygue C, Lin M, Mansoor MS, Marie A, Mayiwar L, Mazepus H, McHugh C, Olsson A, Otterbring T, Packer DJ, Palomäki J, Perry A, Petersen MB, Puthillam A, Rothmund T, Schmid PC, Stadelmann D, Stoica A, Stoyanov D, Stoyanova KK, Tewari S, Todosijević B, Torgler B, Tsakiris M, Tung HH, Umbreș RG, Vanags E, Vlasceanu M, Vonasch AJ, Zhang Y, Abad M, Adler E, Mdarhri HA, Antazo BG, Ay FC, Ba MEH, Barbosa S, Bastian B, Berg A, Białek M, Bilancini E, Bogatyreva N, Boncinelli L, Booth JE, Borau S, Buchel O, de Carvalho CF, Celadin T, Cerami C, Chalise HN, Cheng X, Cian L, Cockcroft K, Conway J, Córdoba-Delgado MA, Crespi C, Crouzevialle M, Cutler J, Cypryańska M, Dabrowska J, Davis VH, Minda JP, Dayley PN, Delouvée S, Denkovski O, Dezecache G, Dhaliwal NA, Diato AB, Di Paolo R, Dulleck U, Ekmanis J, Etienne TW, Farhana HH, Farkhari F, Fidanovski K, Flew T, Fraser S, Frempong RB, Fugelsang JA, Gale J, García-Navarro EB, Garladinne P, Gray K, Griffin SM, Gronfeldt B, Gruber J, Halperin E, Herzon V, Hruška M, Hudecek MFC, Isler O, Jangard S, Jørgensen FJ, Keudel O, Koppel L, Koverola M, Kunnari A, Leota J, Lermer E, Li C, Longoni C, McCashin D, Mikloušić I, Molina-Paredes J, Monroy-Fonseca C, Morales-Marente E, Moreau D, Muda R, Myer A, Nash K, Nitschke JP, Nurse MS, de Mello VO, Palacios-Galvez MS, Pan Y, Papp Z, Pärnamets P, Paruzel-Czachura M, Perander S, Pitman MM, Raza A, Rêgo GG, Robertson CE, Rodríguez-Pascual I, Saikkonen T, Salvador-Ginez O, Sampaio WM, Santi GC, Schultner DT, Schutte EM, Scott A, Skali A, Stefaniak A, Sternisko A, Strickland B, Thomas JP, Tinghög G, Traast IJ, Tucciarelli R, Tyrala M, Ungson ND, Uysal MS, van Rooy D, Västfjäll D, Vieira JB, von Sikorski C, Walker AC, Watermeyer J, Willardt R, Wohl MJA, Wójcik AD, Wu K, Yamada Y, Yilmaz O, Yogeeswaran K, Ziemer C, Zwaan RA, Boggio PS, Whillans A, Van Lange PAM, Prasad R, Onderco M, O’Madagain C, Nesh-Nash T, Laguna OM, Kubin E, Gümren M, Fenwick A, Ertan AS, Bernstein MJ, Amara H, Van Bavel JJ. Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning. in PNAS Nexus. 2022;1(3):1-15.
doi:10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac093 .
Pavlović, Tomislav, Azevedo, Flavio, De, Koustav, Riaño-Moreno, Julián C., Maglić, Marina, Gkinopoulos, Theofilos, Donnelly-Kehoe, Patricio Andreas, Payán-Gómez, César, Huang, Guanxiong, Kantorowicz, Jaroslaw, Birtel, Michèle D., Schönegger, Philipp, Capraro, Valerio, Santamaría-García, Hernando, Yucel, Meltem, Ibanez, Agustin, Rathje, Steve, Wetter, Erik, Stanojević, Dragan, van Prooijen, Jan-Willem, Hesse, Eugenia, Elbaek, Christian T., Franc, Renata, Pavlović, Zoran, Mitkidis, Panagiotis, Cichocka, Aleksandra, Gelfand, Michele J., Alfano, Mark, Ross, Robert M., Sjåstad, Hallgeir, Nezlek, John B., Cislak, Aleksandra, Lockwood, Patricia L., Abts, Koen, Agadullina, Elena, Amodio, David M., Apps, Matthew A J, Aruta, John Jamir Benzon, Besharati, Sahba Nomvula, Bor, Alexander, Choma, Becky L., Cunningham, William A., Ejaz, Waqas, Farmer, Harry, Findor, Andrej, Gjoneska, Biljana, Gualda, Estrella, Huynh, Toan L D, Imran, Mostak Ahamed, Israelashvili, Jacob, Kantorowicz-Reznichenko, Elena, Krouwel, André, Kutiyski, Yordan, Laakasuo, Michael, Lamm, Claus, Levy, Jonathan, Leygue, Caroline, Lin, Ming-Jen, Mansoor, Mohammad Sabbir, Marie, Antoine, Mayiwar, Lewend, Mazepus, Honorata, McHugh, Cillian, Olsson, Andreas, Otterbring, Tobias, Packer, Dominic J., Palomäki, Jussi, Perry, Anat, Petersen, Michael Bang, Puthillam, Arathy, Rothmund, Tobias, Schmid, Petra C., Stadelmann, David, Stoica, Augustin, Stoyanov, Drozdstoy, Stoyanova, Kristina K., Tewari, Shruti, Todosijević, Bojan, Torgler, Benno, Tsakiris, Manos, Tung, Hans H., Umbreș, Radu Gabriel, Vanags, Edmunds, Vlasceanu, Madalina, Vonasch, Andrew J, Zhang, Yucheng, Abad, Mohcine, Adler, Eli, Mdarhri, Hamza Alaoui, Antazo, Benedict G., Ay, F. Ceren, Ba, Mouhamadou El Hady, Barbosa, Sergio, Bastian, Brock, Berg, Anton, Białek, Michał, Bilancini, Ennio, Bogatyreva, Natalia, Boncinelli, Leonardo, Booth, Jonathan E., Borau, Sylvie, Buchel, Ondrej, de Carvalho, Chrissie Ferreira, Celadin, Tatiana, Cerami, Chiara, Chalise, Hom Nath, Cheng, Xiaojun, Cian, Luca, Cockcroft, Kate, Conway, Jane, Córdoba-Delgado, Mateo A, Crespi, Chiara, Crouzevialle, Marie, Cutler, Jo, Cypryańska, Marzena, Dabrowska, Justyna, Davis, Victoria H., Minda, John Paul, Dayley, Pamala N., Delouvée, Sylvain, Denkovski, Ognjan, Dezecache, Guillaume, Dhaliwal, Nathan A., Diato, Alelie B., Di Paolo, Roberto, Dulleck, Uwe, Ekmanis, Jānis, Etienne, Tom W., Farhana, Hapsa Hossain, Farkhari, Fahima, Fidanovski, Kristijan, Flew, Terry, Fraser, Shona, Frempong, Raymond Boadi, Fugelsang, Jonathan A., Gale, Jessica, García-Navarro, E Begoña, Garladinne, Prasad, Gray, Kurt, Griffin, Siobhán M., Gronfeldt, Bjarki, Gruber, June, Halperin, Eran, Herzon, Volo, Hruška, Matej, Hudecek, Matthias F. C., Isler, Ozan, Jangard, Simon, Jørgensen, Frederik J., Keudel, Oleksandra, Koppel, Lina, Koverola, Mika, Kunnari, Anton, Leota, Josh, Lermer, Eva, Li, Chunyun, Longoni, Chiara, McCashin, Darragh, Mikloušić, Igor, Molina-Paredes, Juliana, Monroy-Fonseca, César, Morales-Marente, Elena, Moreau, David, Muda, Rafał, Myer, Annalisa, Nash, Kyle, Nitschke, Jonas P., Nurse, Matthew S., de Mello, Victoria Oldemburgo, Palacios-Galvez, Maria Soledad, Pan, Yafeng, Papp, Zsófia, Pärnamets, Philip, Paruzel-Czachura, Mariola, Perander, Silva, Pitman, Michael Mark, Raza, Ali, Rêgo, Gabriel Gaudencio, Robertson, Claire E., Rodríguez-Pascual, Iván, Saikkonen, Teemu, Salvador-Ginez, Octavio, Sampaio, Waldir M., Santi, Gaia Chiara, Schultner, David T., Schutte, Enid M., Scott, Andy, Skali, Ahmed, Stefaniak, Anna, Sternisko, Anni, Strickland, Brent, Thomas, Jeffrey P., Tinghög, Gustav, Traast, Iris J., Tucciarelli, Raffaele, Tyrala, Michael, Ungson, Nick D., Uysal, Mete Sefa, van Rooy, Dirk, Västfjäll, Daniel, Vieira, Joana B., von Sikorski, Christian, Walker, Alexander C, Watermeyer, Jennifer, Willardt, Robin, Wohl, Michael J. A., Wójcik, Adrian Dominik, Wu, Kaidi, Yamada, Yuki, Yilmaz, Onurcan, Yogeeswaran, Kumar, Ziemer, Carolin-Theresa, Zwaan, Rolf A., Boggio, Paulo S., Whillans, Ashley, Van Lange, Paul A. M., Prasad, Rajib, Onderco, Michal, O’Madagain, Cathal, Nesh-Nash, Tarik, Laguna, Oscar Moreda, Kubin, Emily, Gümren, Mert, Fenwick, Ali, Ertan, Arhan S., Bernstein, Michael J, Amara, Hanane, Van Bavel, Jay J., "Predicting attitudinal and behavioral responses to COVID-19 pandemic using machine learning" in PNAS Nexus, 1, no. 3 (2022):1-15,
https://doi.org/10.1093/pnasnexus/pgac093 . .
38
23

The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects

Röseler, Lukas; Weber, Lucia; Helgerth, Katharina; Stich, Elena; Günther, Miriam; Tegethoff, Paulina; Wagner, Felix; Antunovic, M.; Barrera-Lemarchand, Federico; Halali, Eliran; Ioannidis, Konstantinos; Genschow, Oliver; Milstein, Nir; Molden, Daniel; Papenmeier, Frank; Pavlović, Zoran; Rinn, Robin; Schreiter, Marie Luise; Zimdahl, Malte F.; Bahník, Štěpán; Bermeitinger, Christina; Blower, Fi B N; Bögler, Hannah Luisa; Burgmer, Pascal; Cheek, Nathan; Dorsch, L.; Fels, S.; Frech, M-L.; Freira, Lucia; Harris, A. J. L.; Häusser, Jan; Hedgebeth, M. V.; Henkel, M.; Horvath, Dorothee; Intelmann, P.; Klamar, Alexander; Knappe, Ella; Köppel, Lisa-Marie A.; Krueger, S. M.; Lagator, Sandra; Lopez-Boo, F.; Navajas, Joaquin; Norem, Julie; Novak, J.; Onuki, Yutaro; Page, Elise; Rebholz, Tobias R.; Sartorio, M.; Schindler, Sebastian; Shanks, David; Siems, M.-C.; Stäglich, P.; Starkulla, M.; Stitz, M.; Straube, Thomas; Thies, Katharina; Thum, Elias; Ueda, Kazuhiro; Undorf, Monika; Urlichich, Diana; Vadillo, Miguel; Wolf, H.; Zhou, Anke; Schütz, Astrid

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Röseler, Lukas
AU  - Weber, Lucia
AU  - Helgerth, Katharina
AU  - Stich, Elena
AU  - Günther, Miriam
AU  - Tegethoff, Paulina
AU  - Wagner, Felix
AU  - Antunovic, M.
AU  - Barrera-Lemarchand, Federico
AU  - Halali, Eliran
AU  - Ioannidis, Konstantinos
AU  - Genschow, Oliver
AU  - Milstein, Nir
AU  - Molden, Daniel
AU  - Papenmeier, Frank
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Rinn, Robin
AU  - Schreiter, Marie Luise
AU  - Zimdahl, Malte F.
AU  - Bahník, Štěpán
AU  - Bermeitinger, Christina
AU  - Blower, Fi B N
AU  - Bögler, Hannah Luisa
AU  - Burgmer, Pascal
AU  - Cheek, Nathan
AU  - Dorsch, L.
AU  - Fels, S.
AU  - Frech, M-L.
AU  - Freira, Lucia
AU  - Harris, A. J. L.
AU  - Häusser, Jan
AU  - Hedgebeth, M. V.
AU  - Henkel, M.
AU  - Horvath, Dorothee
AU  - Intelmann, P.
AU  - Klamar, Alexander
AU  - Knappe, Ella
AU  - Köppel, Lisa-Marie A.
AU  - Krueger, S. M.
AU  - Lagator, Sandra
AU  - Lopez-Boo, F.
AU  - Navajas, Joaquin
AU  - Norem, Julie
AU  - Novak, J.
AU  - Onuki, Yutaro
AU  - Page, Elise
AU  - Rebholz, Tobias R.
AU  - Sartorio, M.
AU  - Schindler, Sebastian
AU  - Shanks, David
AU  - Siems, M.-C.
AU  - Stäglich, P.
AU  - Starkulla, M.
AU  - Stitz, M.
AU  - Straube, Thomas
AU  - Thies, Katharina
AU  - Thum, Elias
AU  - Ueda, Kazuhiro
AU  - Undorf, Monika
AU  - Urlichich, Diana
AU  - Vadillo, Miguel
AU  - Wolf, H.
AU  - Zhou, Anke
AU  - Schütz, Astrid
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3866
AB  - People’s estimates are biased toward previously considered numbers (anchoring). We have aggregated all available data from anchoring studies that included at least two anchors into one large dataset. Data were standardized to comprise one estimate per row, coded according to a wide range of variables, and are available for download and analyses online (https://metaanalyses.shinyapps.io/OpAQ/). Because the dataset includes both original and meta-data it allows for fine-grained analyses (e.g., correlations of estimates for different tasks) but also for meta-analyses (e.g., effect sizes for anchoring effects).
T2  - Journal of Open Psychology Data
T1  - The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects
IS  - 1
SP  - 16
VL  - 10
DO  - 10.5334/jopd.67
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Röseler, Lukas and Weber, Lucia and Helgerth, Katharina and Stich, Elena and Günther, Miriam and Tegethoff, Paulina and Wagner, Felix and Antunovic, M. and Barrera-Lemarchand, Federico and Halali, Eliran and Ioannidis, Konstantinos and Genschow, Oliver and Milstein, Nir and Molden, Daniel and Papenmeier, Frank and Pavlović, Zoran and Rinn, Robin and Schreiter, Marie Luise and Zimdahl, Malte F. and Bahník, Štěpán and Bermeitinger, Christina and Blower, Fi B N and Bögler, Hannah Luisa and Burgmer, Pascal and Cheek, Nathan and Dorsch, L. and Fels, S. and Frech, M-L. and Freira, Lucia and Harris, A. J. L. and Häusser, Jan and Hedgebeth, M. V. and Henkel, M. and Horvath, Dorothee and Intelmann, P. and Klamar, Alexander and Knappe, Ella and Köppel, Lisa-Marie A. and Krueger, S. M. and Lagator, Sandra and Lopez-Boo, F. and Navajas, Joaquin and Norem, Julie and Novak, J. and Onuki, Yutaro and Page, Elise and Rebholz, Tobias R. and Sartorio, M. and Schindler, Sebastian and Shanks, David and Siems, M.-C. and Stäglich, P. and Starkulla, M. and Stitz, M. and Straube, Thomas and Thies, Katharina and Thum, Elias and Ueda, Kazuhiro and Undorf, Monika and Urlichich, Diana and Vadillo, Miguel and Wolf, H. and Zhou, Anke and Schütz, Astrid",
year = "2022",
abstract = "People’s estimates are biased toward previously considered numbers (anchoring). We have aggregated all available data from anchoring studies that included at least two anchors into one large dataset. Data were standardized to comprise one estimate per row, coded according to a wide range of variables, and are available for download and analyses online (https://metaanalyses.shinyapps.io/OpAQ/). Because the dataset includes both original and meta-data it allows for fine-grained analyses (e.g., correlations of estimates for different tasks) but also for meta-analyses (e.g., effect sizes for anchoring effects).",
journal = "Journal of Open Psychology Data",
title = "The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects",
number = "1",
pages = "16",
volume = "10",
doi = "10.5334/jopd.67"
}
Röseler, L., Weber, L., Helgerth, K., Stich, E., Günther, M., Tegethoff, P., Wagner, F., Antunovic, M., Barrera-Lemarchand, F., Halali, E., Ioannidis, K., Genschow, O., Milstein, N., Molden, D., Papenmeier, F., Pavlović, Z., Rinn, R., Schreiter, M. L., Zimdahl, M. F., Bahník, Š., Bermeitinger, C., Blower, F. B. N., Bögler, H. L., Burgmer, P., Cheek, N., Dorsch, L., Fels, S., Frech, M-L., Freira, L., Harris, A. J. L., Häusser, J., Hedgebeth, M. V., Henkel, M., Horvath, D., Intelmann, P., Klamar, A., Knappe, E., Köppel, L. A., Krueger, S. M., Lagator, S., Lopez-Boo, F., Navajas, J., Norem, J., Novak, J., Onuki, Y., Page, E., Rebholz, T. R., Sartorio, M., Schindler, S., Shanks, D., Siems, M.-C., Stäglich, P., Starkulla, M., Stitz, M., Straube, T., Thies, K., Thum, E., Ueda, K., Undorf, M., Urlichich, D., Vadillo, M., Wolf, H., Zhou, A.,& Schütz, A.. (2022). The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects. in Journal of Open Psychology Data, 10(1), 16.
https://doi.org/10.5334/jopd.67
Röseler L, Weber L, Helgerth K, Stich E, Günther M, Tegethoff P, Wagner F, Antunovic M, Barrera-Lemarchand F, Halali E, Ioannidis K, Genschow O, Milstein N, Molden D, Papenmeier F, Pavlović Z, Rinn R, Schreiter ML, Zimdahl MF, Bahník Š, Bermeitinger C, Blower FBN, Bögler HL, Burgmer P, Cheek N, Dorsch L, Fels S, Frech M, Freira L, Harris AJL, Häusser J, Hedgebeth MV, Henkel M, Horvath D, Intelmann P, Klamar A, Knappe E, Köppel LA, Krueger SM, Lagator S, Lopez-Boo F, Navajas J, Norem J, Novak J, Onuki Y, Page E, Rebholz TR, Sartorio M, Schindler S, Shanks D, Siems M, Stäglich P, Starkulla M, Stitz M, Straube T, Thies K, Thum E, Ueda K, Undorf M, Urlichich D, Vadillo M, Wolf H, Zhou A, Schütz A. The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects. in Journal of Open Psychology Data. 2022;10(1):16.
doi:10.5334/jopd.67 .
Röseler, Lukas, Weber, Lucia, Helgerth, Katharina, Stich, Elena, Günther, Miriam, Tegethoff, Paulina, Wagner, Felix, Antunovic, M., Barrera-Lemarchand, Federico, Halali, Eliran, Ioannidis, Konstantinos, Genschow, Oliver, Milstein, Nir, Molden, Daniel, Papenmeier, Frank, Pavlović, Zoran, Rinn, Robin, Schreiter, Marie Luise, Zimdahl, Malte F., Bahník, Štěpán, Bermeitinger, Christina, Blower, Fi B N, Bögler, Hannah Luisa, Burgmer, Pascal, Cheek, Nathan, Dorsch, L., Fels, S., Frech, M-L., Freira, Lucia, Harris, A. J. L., Häusser, Jan, Hedgebeth, M. V., Henkel, M., Horvath, Dorothee, Intelmann, P., Klamar, Alexander, Knappe, Ella, Köppel, Lisa-Marie A., Krueger, S. M., Lagator, Sandra, Lopez-Boo, F., Navajas, Joaquin, Norem, Julie, Novak, J., Onuki, Yutaro, Page, Elise, Rebholz, Tobias R., Sartorio, M., Schindler, Sebastian, Shanks, David, Siems, M.-C., Stäglich, P., Starkulla, M., Stitz, M., Straube, Thomas, Thies, Katharina, Thum, Elias, Ueda, Kazuhiro, Undorf, Monika, Urlichich, Diana, Vadillo, Miguel, Wolf, H., Zhou, Anke, Schütz, Astrid, "The Open Anchoring Quest Dataset: Anchored Estimates from 96 Studies on Anchoring Effects" in Journal of Open Psychology Data, 10, no. 1 (2022):16,
https://doi.org/10.5334/jopd.67 . .
9

Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism

Kerry, Nicholas; Al-Shawaf, Laith; Barbato, Maria; Batres, Carlota; Blake, Khandis R.; Cha, Youngjae; Chauvin, Gregory V.; Clifton, Jeremy D.W.; Fernandez, Ana Maria; Galbarczyk, Andrzej; Ghossainy, Maliki E.; Jang, Dayk; Jasienska, Grazyna; Karasawa, Minoru; Laustsen, Lasse; Loria, Riley; Luberti, Francesca; Moran, James; Pavlović, Zoran; Petersen, Michael Bang; Smith, Adam R.; Žeželj, Iris; Murray, Damian R.

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Kerry, Nicholas
AU  - Al-Shawaf, Laith
AU  - Barbato, Maria
AU  - Batres, Carlota
AU  - Blake, Khandis R.
AU  - Cha, Youngjae
AU  - Chauvin, Gregory V.
AU  - Clifton, Jeremy D.W.
AU  - Fernandez, Ana Maria
AU  - Galbarczyk, Andrzej
AU  - Ghossainy, Maliki E.
AU  - Jang, Dayk
AU  - Jasienska, Grazyna
AU  - Karasawa, Minoru
AU  - Laustsen, Lasse
AU  - Loria, Riley
AU  - Luberti, Francesca
AU  - Moran, James
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Petersen, Michael Bang
AU  - Smith, Adam R.
AU  - Žeželj, Iris
AU  - Murray, Damian R.
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3870
AB  - Differences in attitudes on social issues such as abortion, immigration, and sex are hugely divisive, and understanding their origins is among the most important tasks facing human behavioural sciences. Despite the clear psychological importance of parenthood and the motivation to provide care for children, researchers have only recently begun investigating their influence on social and political attitudes. Because socially conservative values ostensibly prioritize safety, stability, and family values, we hypothesized that being more invested in parental care might make socially conservative policies more appealing. Studies 1 (pre-registered; n=376) and 2 (n=1,924) find novel evidence of conditional experimental effects of a parenthood prime, such that people who engaged strongly with a childcare manipulation showed an increase in social conservatism. Study 3 (n=2,610, novel data from 10 countries) and 4 (n=426,444, World Values Survey data) find evidence that both parenthood and parental care motivation are associated with increased social conservatism around the globe. Further, most of the positive association globally between age and social conservatism is accounted for by parenthood. These findings support the hypothesis that parenthood and parental care motivation increase social conservatism.
T2  - Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences
T1  - Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism
IS  - 1982
SP  - 20220978
VL  - 289
DO  - 10.1098/rspb.2022.0978
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Kerry, Nicholas and Al-Shawaf, Laith and Barbato, Maria and Batres, Carlota and Blake, Khandis R. and Cha, Youngjae and Chauvin, Gregory V. and Clifton, Jeremy D.W. and Fernandez, Ana Maria and Galbarczyk, Andrzej and Ghossainy, Maliki E. and Jang, Dayk and Jasienska, Grazyna and Karasawa, Minoru and Laustsen, Lasse and Loria, Riley and Luberti, Francesca and Moran, James and Pavlović, Zoran and Petersen, Michael Bang and Smith, Adam R. and Žeželj, Iris and Murray, Damian R.",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Differences in attitudes on social issues such as abortion, immigration, and sex are hugely divisive, and understanding their origins is among the most important tasks facing human behavioural sciences. Despite the clear psychological importance of parenthood and the motivation to provide care for children, researchers have only recently begun investigating their influence on social and political attitudes. Because socially conservative values ostensibly prioritize safety, stability, and family values, we hypothesized that being more invested in parental care might make socially conservative policies more appealing. Studies 1 (pre-registered; n=376) and 2 (n=1,924) find novel evidence of conditional experimental effects of a parenthood prime, such that people who engaged strongly with a childcare manipulation showed an increase in social conservatism. Study 3 (n=2,610, novel data from 10 countries) and 4 (n=426,444, World Values Survey data) find evidence that both parenthood and parental care motivation are associated with increased social conservatism around the globe. Further, most of the positive association globally between age and social conservatism is accounted for by parenthood. These findings support the hypothesis that parenthood and parental care motivation increase social conservatism.",
journal = "Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences",
title = "Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism",
number = "1982",
pages = "20220978",
volume = "289",
doi = "10.1098/rspb.2022.0978"
}
Kerry, N., Al-Shawaf, L., Barbato, M., Batres, C., Blake, K. R., Cha, Y., Chauvin, G. V., Clifton, J. D.W., Fernandez, A. M., Galbarczyk, A., Ghossainy, M. E., Jang, D., Jasienska, G., Karasawa, M., Laustsen, L., Loria, R., Luberti, F., Moran, J., Pavlović, Z., Petersen, M. B., Smith, A. R., Žeželj, I.,& Murray, D. R.. (2022). Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism. in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 289(1982), 20220978.
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.0978
Kerry N, Al-Shawaf L, Barbato M, Batres C, Blake KR, Cha Y, Chauvin GV, Clifton JD, Fernandez AM, Galbarczyk A, Ghossainy ME, Jang D, Jasienska G, Karasawa M, Laustsen L, Loria R, Luberti F, Moran J, Pavlović Z, Petersen MB, Smith AR, Žeželj I, Murray DR. Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism. in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences. 2022;289(1982):20220978.
doi:10.1098/rspb.2022.0978 .
Kerry, Nicholas, Al-Shawaf, Laith, Barbato, Maria, Batres, Carlota, Blake, Khandis R., Cha, Youngjae, Chauvin, Gregory V., Clifton, Jeremy D.W., Fernandez, Ana Maria, Galbarczyk, Andrzej, Ghossainy, Maliki E., Jang, Dayk, Jasienska, Grazyna, Karasawa, Minoru, Laustsen, Lasse, Loria, Riley, Luberti, Francesca, Moran, James, Pavlović, Zoran, Petersen, Michael Bang, Smith, Adam R., Žeželj, Iris, Murray, Damian R., "Experimental and cross-cultural evidence that parenthood and parental care motives increase social conservatism" in Proceedings of the Royal Society B: Biological Sciences, 289, no. 1982 (2022):20220978,
https://doi.org/10.1098/rspb.2022.0978 . .
357
5
5

„Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19

Pavlović, Zoran

(Удружење за друштвену историју, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4307
AB  - Предмет рада је представа о другом у политичком дискурсу врхова политичких странака Србије на друштвеним мрежама.
Све објаве на друштвеној мрежи Твитер на званичним профилима две
водеће политичке странке, Српске напредне странке и Странке слободе
и правде, у периоду јун 2021 – април 2022, њих укупно 4,731, анализиране
су методом анализе садржаја. Анализа је показала да се о оном другом у
објавама релативно често говори; када се говори, то је готово искључиво
у негативном контексту, док се у већини негативних објава могу идентификовати морализаторске евалуације. У завршном делу дискутован је
значај добијених налаза из угла теоретисања о афективној и моралној
поларизацији.
AB  - The phenomenon of political polarization has been increasingly studied recently. Two
types of polarization are typically distinguished in the pertinent literature – the issue (or
ideological) and affective polarization. Affective polarization, the relationship towards the
political out-group in emotional terms, has attracted much attention in recent years and scholars argue that animus towards the out-group has become a more important determinant of
political life than attachment to one’s own political in-group. Political hatred of the political
‘other’ is usually accompanied by negative moral characterization of political opponents,
often described as moral polarization. Negative moral judgments of political opponents are
not only very corrosive for any democratic society, but make the political life more the matter
of the victory over the morally corrupted ‘others’ than a struggle over competing ideas and
principles. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and unprecedented ease of communication via
social networking sites further fuelled these polarization processes. The aim of this paper
is to analyze the image of the ‘other’ in the political discourse of the main political parties
in Serbia on social networking sites. All posts on Twitter, one of the most popular social
networking sites, from the official accounts of the two leading political parties, the Serbian
Progressive Party (SNS) and the Party of Freedom and Justice (SSP), in the time period
from June 2021 to April 2022 were collected. A total of 4,731 Twitter posts were analyzed
using the combination of quantitative and qualitative content analysis. The posts were coded
according to three criteria: (1) whether the political ‘other’ has been referenced in the post;
(2) if so, whether it has been mentioned in a negative, neutral or positive context; (3) and, if
mentioned negatively, how often the moral evaluation of the ‘other’ has been present. The
analysis has shown that the ‘other’ is relatively often mentioned in the selected posts; when
mentioned, it is almost exclusively in a negative context, while moralizing evaluations can
be identified in the majority of negative posts. Moral polarization seems to be widespread,
at least in the discourse on social networking sites of SNS and SSP. In the concluding part,
the relevance of the obtained findings is discussed from the point of view of theorizing about
affective and moral polarization and the prospects of democratization of the Serbian society
PB  - Удружење за друштвену историју
T2  - Годишњак за друштвену историју
T1  - „Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19
EP  - 164
IS  - 3
SP  - 139
VL  - XXIX
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4307
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2022",
abstract = "Предмет рада је представа о другом у политичком дискурсу врхова политичких странака Србије на друштвеним мрежама.
Све објаве на друштвеној мрежи Твитер на званичним профилима две
водеће политичке странке, Српске напредне странке и Странке слободе
и правде, у периоду јун 2021 – април 2022, њих укупно 4,731, анализиране
су методом анализе садржаја. Анализа је показала да се о оном другом у
објавама релативно често говори; када се говори, то је готово искључиво
у негативном контексту, док се у већини негативних објава могу идентификовати морализаторске евалуације. У завршном делу дискутован је
значај добијених налаза из угла теоретисања о афективној и моралној
поларизацији., The phenomenon of political polarization has been increasingly studied recently. Two
types of polarization are typically distinguished in the pertinent literature – the issue (or
ideological) and affective polarization. Affective polarization, the relationship towards the
political out-group in emotional terms, has attracted much attention in recent years and scholars argue that animus towards the out-group has become a more important determinant of
political life than attachment to one’s own political in-group. Political hatred of the political
‘other’ is usually accompanied by negative moral characterization of political opponents,
often described as moral polarization. Negative moral judgments of political opponents are
not only very corrosive for any democratic society, but make the political life more the matter
of the victory over the morally corrupted ‘others’ than a struggle over competing ideas and
principles. The ongoing COVID-19 pandemic and unprecedented ease of communication via
social networking sites further fuelled these polarization processes. The aim of this paper
is to analyze the image of the ‘other’ in the political discourse of the main political parties
in Serbia on social networking sites. All posts on Twitter, one of the most popular social
networking sites, from the official accounts of the two leading political parties, the Serbian
Progressive Party (SNS) and the Party of Freedom and Justice (SSP), in the time period
from June 2021 to April 2022 were collected. A total of 4,731 Twitter posts were analyzed
using the combination of quantitative and qualitative content analysis. The posts were coded
according to three criteria: (1) whether the political ‘other’ has been referenced in the post;
(2) if so, whether it has been mentioned in a negative, neutral or positive context; (3) and, if
mentioned negatively, how often the moral evaluation of the ‘other’ has been present. The
analysis has shown that the ‘other’ is relatively often mentioned in the selected posts; when
mentioned, it is almost exclusively in a negative context, while moralizing evaluations can
be identified in the majority of negative posts. Moral polarization seems to be widespread,
at least in the discourse on social networking sites of SNS and SSP. In the concluding part,
the relevance of the obtained findings is discussed from the point of view of theorizing about
affective and moral polarization and the prospects of democratization of the Serbian society",
publisher = "Удружење за друштвену историју",
journal = "Годишњак за друштвену историју",
title = "„Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19",
pages = "164-139",
number = "3",
volume = "XXIX",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4307"
}
Pavlović, Z.. (2022). „Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19. in Годишњак за друштвену историју
Удружење за друштвену историју., XXIX(3), 139-164.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4307
Pavlović Z. „Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19. in Годишњак за друштвену историју. 2022;XXIX(3):139-164.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4307 .
Pavlović, Zoran, "„Драга патолошка лажовчино ...” – представа о политичком „другом” у Србији током пандемија Ковида 19" in Годишњак за друштвену историју, XXIX, no. 3 (2022):139-164,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_4307 .

Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude

Pavlović, Zoran

(Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za psihologiju, Beograd, 2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4220
PB  - Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za psihologiju, Beograd
T2  - Psihološka istraživanja
T1  - Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude
EP  - 228
IS  - 2
SP  - 225
VL  - 25
DO  - 10.5937/PSISTRA25-41671
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2022",
publisher = "Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za psihologiju, Beograd",
journal = "Psihološka istraživanja",
title = "Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude",
pages = "228-225",
number = "2",
volume = "25",
doi = "10.5937/PSISTRA25-41671"
}
Pavlović, Z.. (2022). Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude. in Psihološka istraživanja
Univerzitet u Beogradu - Filozofski fakultet - Institut za psihologiju, Beograd., 25(2), 225-228.
https://doi.org/10.5937/PSISTRA25-41671
Pavlović Z. Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude. in Psihološka istraživanja. 2022;25(2):225-228.
doi:10.5937/PSISTRA25-41671 .
Pavlović, Zoran, "Zašto nam je toliko teško da se složimo ili o jahačima slonova i devedesetoprocentnim šimpanzama - Džonatan Hajt: Psihologija morala - O pravičnom umu ili mogu li politika i religija podeliti dobre ljude" in Psihološka istraživanja, 25, no. 2 (2022):225-228,
https://doi.org/10.5937/PSISTRA25-41671 . .

Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia

Pavlović, Zoran

(2022)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2022
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/4090
AB  - The aim of this paper is to analyse the lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative value preferences
in Serbia. The data used in the analysis was collected in
the World Values Survey (WVS), conducted in Serbia in
1996 (N = 1,280), 2006 (N = 1,220), and 2017 (N = 1,046),
respectively. As a proxy measure of the respondents’ lifecycle stage, the recoded age variable (young/middle-aged/
elderly) was used. Based on the age period during which
a person spent their formative years (15–24 years of age),
a sixfold typology of political generation membership was
constructed. The year in which the survey was conducted was used as a measure of period effects. The results
indicate that emancipative values were more likely to be
embraced by younger respondents (r = .22**) and in survey
waves after 2000 (r = .17**), and less by the members of
the socialist generation (p < .01) than by those generations
who spent their formative years after 2000, omnibus
F(5, 3440) = 58.19**. The results reveal a complex relationship between lifecycle, generational, and period effects on
emancipative values and call into question the exclusive
importance that is usually attributed to generational
differences in theory. The conclusion outlines possible
implications for the theory of human empowerment and
practical implications for the possibility of value change
in Serbian society.
T2  - Stanovništvo
T1  - Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia
EP  - 48
IS  - 2
SP  - 29
VL  - 60
DO  - 10.2298/STNV2202029P
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2022",
abstract = "The aim of this paper is to analyse the lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative value preferences
in Serbia. The data used in the analysis was collected in
the World Values Survey (WVS), conducted in Serbia in
1996 (N = 1,280), 2006 (N = 1,220), and 2017 (N = 1,046),
respectively. As a proxy measure of the respondents’ lifecycle stage, the recoded age variable (young/middle-aged/
elderly) was used. Based on the age period during which
a person spent their formative years (15–24 years of age),
a sixfold typology of political generation membership was
constructed. The year in which the survey was conducted was used as a measure of period effects. The results
indicate that emancipative values were more likely to be
embraced by younger respondents (r = .22**) and in survey
waves after 2000 (r = .17**), and less by the members of
the socialist generation (p < .01) than by those generations
who spent their formative years after 2000, omnibus
F(5, 3440) = 58.19**. The results reveal a complex relationship between lifecycle, generational, and period effects on
emancipative values and call into question the exclusive
importance that is usually attributed to generational
differences in theory. The conclusion outlines possible
implications for the theory of human empowerment and
practical implications for the possibility of value change
in Serbian society.",
journal = "Stanovništvo",
title = "Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia",
pages = "48-29",
number = "2",
volume = "60",
doi = "10.2298/STNV2202029P"
}
Pavlović, Z.. (2022). Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia. in Stanovništvo, 60(2), 29-48.
https://doi.org/10.2298/STNV2202029P
Pavlović Z. Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia. in Stanovništvo. 2022;60(2):29-48.
doi:10.2298/STNV2202029P .
Pavlović, Zoran, "Lifecycle, generational, and period effects on emancipative values in Serbia" in Stanovništvo, 60, no. 2 (2022):29-48,
https://doi.org/10.2298/STNV2202029P . .

Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova

Pavlović, Zoran

(Institut društvenih nauka, 2021)

TY  - CHAP
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3456
AB  - U ovom radu testira se pretpostavka da je specifično poimanje javnomnjenjskog ispitivanja, vidljivo na nivou datih komentara o studiji, povezano sa razlikama u stavovima i relevantnim orijentacijama ispitanika ispoljenim u odgovorima. Empirijsku osnovu rada čini anketno istraživanje Predstave o EU i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije 2018. godine (N= 5.240) sprovedeno putem interneta. Predmet istraživanja odnosio se na širok spektar tema, s glavnim fokusom na odnosima Srbije sa Rusijom i Evropskom unijom. Komentari na anketu koje su ispitanici imali mogućnost da daju analizirani su kombinacijom kvalitativne i kvantitativne analize sadržaja. Analiza je pokazala da manjina ispitanika ostavlja komentar (17%), kao i da, među onima koji komentar daju, preovlađuju komentari negativnog tipa. Njih čine uopštene primedbe, metodološko-sadržinski prigovori na upitnik i procedure ispitivanja (nejasna pitanja, predug upitnik i sl.), ali i negativne reakcije koje ukazuju na specifične konceptualizacije anketnog istraživanja: istraživanje se shvata kao prosistemska, u korist vladajuće elite, delatnost; kao ideološki obojena praksa; kao instrument zloupotrebe građana. Pokazuje se da negativne komentare češće daju ispitanici koji imaju izraženije (proruske ili prozapadne) stavove. Dobijeni nalazi ukazuju na to da percepcija javnomnjenjskog istraživanja može biti sistematski izvor varijabiliteta u odgovorima, ali i važan pokazatelj odnosa građana prema bitnim aspektima države i društva. Diskutovane su i metodološke implikacije dobijenih nalaza u pogledu realizacije anketnih istraživanja putem interneta.
AB  - The paper tests the assumption that the respondents’ specific conceptualization of a survey, evident in the comments on the survey itself, is related to the differences in their attitudes and relevant orientations expressed in the survey. The empirical basis of the paper is the EU and Russia images in Serbian public in 2018 survey (N = 5,240), conducted online. The survey covered a wide range of topics, with the focus on Serbia’s relations with Russia and the European Union. Comments on the survey that the respondents could give were analyzed by a combination of qualitative and quantitative content analysis. The analysis has shown that a minority of respondents gave a comment (17%), as well as that negative comments were dominant. They include general objections, objections to the methodological procedures and questionnaire content (ambiguous questions, long questionnaire etc.), but also negative reactions that indicate specific conceptualizations of the survey: the survey is perceived as a pro-systemic activity, i.e. in favor of the ruling elite, as an ideologically driven practice, as an instrument of citizens’ misuse. Negative comments are more likely to be given by the respondents who have more intense (pro-Russian or pro-Western) attitudes. The findings indicate that the perception of the survey can be a systematic source of variability in the respondents’ responses, but also an important indicator of the citizens’ attitudes towards significant aspects of the state and society. The methodological implications of the obtained findings pertaining to conducting surveys online are also discussed.
PB  - Institut društvenih nauka
T2  - Predstave o Evropskoj uniji i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije
T1  - Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova
EP  - 111
SP  - 90
UR  - https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3456
ER  - 
@inbook{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran",
year = "2021",
abstract = "U ovom radu testira se pretpostavka da je specifično poimanje javnomnjenjskog ispitivanja, vidljivo na nivou datih komentara o studiji, povezano sa razlikama u stavovima i relevantnim orijentacijama ispitanika ispoljenim u odgovorima. Empirijsku osnovu rada čini anketno istraživanje Predstave o EU i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije 2018. godine (N= 5.240) sprovedeno putem interneta. Predmet istraživanja odnosio se na širok spektar tema, s glavnim fokusom na odnosima Srbije sa Rusijom i Evropskom unijom. Komentari na anketu koje su ispitanici imali mogućnost da daju analizirani su kombinacijom kvalitativne i kvantitativne analize sadržaja. Analiza je pokazala da manjina ispitanika ostavlja komentar (17%), kao i da, među onima koji komentar daju, preovlađuju komentari negativnog tipa. Njih čine uopštene primedbe, metodološko-sadržinski prigovori na upitnik i procedure ispitivanja (nejasna pitanja, predug upitnik i sl.), ali i negativne reakcije koje ukazuju na specifične konceptualizacije anketnog istraživanja: istraživanje se shvata kao prosistemska, u korist vladajuće elite, delatnost; kao ideološki obojena praksa; kao instrument zloupotrebe građana. Pokazuje se da negativne komentare češće daju ispitanici koji imaju izraženije (proruske ili prozapadne) stavove. Dobijeni nalazi ukazuju na to da percepcija javnomnjenjskog istraživanja može biti sistematski izvor varijabiliteta u odgovorima, ali i važan pokazatelj odnosa građana prema bitnim aspektima države i društva. Diskutovane su i metodološke implikacije dobijenih nalaza u pogledu realizacije anketnih istraživanja putem interneta., The paper tests the assumption that the respondents’ specific conceptualization of a survey, evident in the comments on the survey itself, is related to the differences in their attitudes and relevant orientations expressed in the survey. The empirical basis of the paper is the EU and Russia images in Serbian public in 2018 survey (N = 5,240), conducted online. The survey covered a wide range of topics, with the focus on Serbia’s relations with Russia and the European Union. Comments on the survey that the respondents could give were analyzed by a combination of qualitative and quantitative content analysis. The analysis has shown that a minority of respondents gave a comment (17%), as well as that negative comments were dominant. They include general objections, objections to the methodological procedures and questionnaire content (ambiguous questions, long questionnaire etc.), but also negative reactions that indicate specific conceptualizations of the survey: the survey is perceived as a pro-systemic activity, i.e. in favor of the ruling elite, as an ideologically driven practice, as an instrument of citizens’ misuse. Negative comments are more likely to be given by the respondents who have more intense (pro-Russian or pro-Western) attitudes. The findings indicate that the perception of the survey can be a systematic source of variability in the respondents’ responses, but also an important indicator of the citizens’ attitudes towards significant aspects of the state and society. The methodological implications of the obtained findings pertaining to conducting surveys online are also discussed.",
publisher = "Institut društvenih nauka",
journal = "Predstave o Evropskoj uniji i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije",
booktitle = "Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova",
pages = "111-90",
url = "https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3456"
}
Pavlović, Z.. (2021). Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova. in Predstave o Evropskoj uniji i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije
Institut društvenih nauka., 90-111.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3456
Pavlović Z. Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova. in Predstave o Evropskoj uniji i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije. 2021;:90-111.
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3456 .
Pavlović, Zoran, "Napravljeno po narudžbini?“ Javno mnjenje o istraživanju javnog mnjenja u kontekstu proruskih i prozapadnih stavova" in Predstave o Evropskoj uniji i Rusiji u javnosti Srbije (2021):90-111,
https://hdl.handle.net/21.15107/rcub_reff_3456 .

Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije

Pavlović, Zoran; Todosijević, Bojan; Stanojević, Dragan

(Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd, 2021)

TY  - JOUR
AU  - Pavlović, Zoran
AU  - Todosijević, Bojan
AU  - Stanojević, Dragan
PY  - 2021
UR  - http://reff.f.bg.ac.rs/handle/123456789/3267
AB  - Sve je više podataka koji ukazuju da je politička ideologija važna determinanta poštovanja pravila i preporuka za borbu protiv korona virusa. Ovaj rad analizira ulogu samopozicioniranja u odnosu na levičarsku ili desničarsku ideologiju u podržavanju vladinih mera za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 i sprovođenju preporuka za održavanje fizičke distance u Srbiji. Istraživanje je sprovedeno onlajn, na uzorku od 656 ispitanika. Testirana su dva hijerarhijska regresiona modela u kojima su uzrast, iskustvo sa COVID-19, percepcija opasnosti koju korona virus predstavlja i politička ideologija bili prediktori: (1) podrške politici (vlade, za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i (2) (praktikovanja, prim. prev.) fizičkog distanciranja. Rezultati pokazuju da se stepen podrške politici (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) može predvideti na osnovu rastuće percepcije rizika i izraženije desničarske ideologije. Percepcija rizika predviđa održavanje fizičke distance, a predviđaju ga i uzrast i iskustvo sa COVID-19. Rezultati takođe pokazuju da je politička ideologija moderator povezanosti između percepcije rizika s jedne strane i podržavanja politike (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i održavanja fizičke distance s druge strane. Opažanje pandemije kao veće pretnje je povezano sa snažnijim podržavanjem politike (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i fizičkom distancom samo kod desničarski orijentisanih osoba. Čini se da su oni naročito osetljivi na opaženu pretnju.
AB  - There is growing research evidence that political ideology is an important determinant of complying with the rules and recommendations aimed at fighting the coronavirus. This paper analyses the role of the left-right ideology self-positioning in supporting the government measures in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic and practicing the physical distancing guidelines in Serbia. The study was conducted online on a sample of 656 respondents. Two hierarchical multiple regression models with age, the COVID-19 experience, the perception of risk posed by the coronavirus, and political ideology predicting: (1) policy support and (2) physical distancing were tested. The results show that policy support was predicted by increasing risk perception and the right-leaning ideology. Risk perception predicted physical distancing practices, and so did age and the COVID-19 experience. The results also indicate that the relationship between risk perception and both policy support and physical distancing is moderated by political ideology. Perceiving the ongoing pandemic as a greater threat is related to higher policy support and physical distancing among the right-leaning persons only. They seem especially sensitive to the perceived threat.
PB  - Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd
T2  - Psihologija
T1  - Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije
T1  - Support for the measures in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic: The role of political ideology
EP  - 222
IS  - 2
SP  - 207
VL  - 54
DO  - 10.2298/PSI201027039P
ER  - 
@article{
author = "Pavlović, Zoran and Todosijević, Bojan and Stanojević, Dragan",
year = "2021",
abstract = "Sve je više podataka koji ukazuju da je politička ideologija važna determinanta poštovanja pravila i preporuka za borbu protiv korona virusa. Ovaj rad analizira ulogu samopozicioniranja u odnosu na levičarsku ili desničarsku ideologiju u podržavanju vladinih mera za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 i sprovođenju preporuka za održavanje fizičke distance u Srbiji. Istraživanje je sprovedeno onlajn, na uzorku od 656 ispitanika. Testirana su dva hijerarhijska regresiona modela u kojima su uzrast, iskustvo sa COVID-19, percepcija opasnosti koju korona virus predstavlja i politička ideologija bili prediktori: (1) podrške politici (vlade, za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i (2) (praktikovanja, prim. prev.) fizičkog distanciranja. Rezultati pokazuju da se stepen podrške politici (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) može predvideti na osnovu rastuće percepcije rizika i izraženije desničarske ideologije. Percepcija rizika predviđa održavanje fizičke distance, a predviđaju ga i uzrast i iskustvo sa COVID-19. Rezultati takođe pokazuju da je politička ideologija moderator povezanosti između percepcije rizika s jedne strane i podržavanja politike (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i održavanja fizičke distance s druge strane. Opažanje pandemije kao veće pretnje je povezano sa snažnijim podržavanjem politike (vlade za borbu protiv pandemije, prim. prev.) i fizičkom distancom samo kod desničarski orijentisanih osoba. Čini se da su oni naročito osetljivi na opaženu pretnju., There is growing research evidence that political ideology is an important determinant of complying with the rules and recommendations aimed at fighting the coronavirus. This paper analyses the role of the left-right ideology self-positioning in supporting the government measures in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic and practicing the physical distancing guidelines in Serbia. The study was conducted online on a sample of 656 respondents. Two hierarchical multiple regression models with age, the COVID-19 experience, the perception of risk posed by the coronavirus, and political ideology predicting: (1) policy support and (2) physical distancing were tested. The results show that policy support was predicted by increasing risk perception and the right-leaning ideology. Risk perception predicted physical distancing practices, and so did age and the COVID-19 experience. The results also indicate that the relationship between risk perception and both policy support and physical distancing is moderated by political ideology. Perceiving the ongoing pandemic as a greater threat is related to higher policy support and physical distancing among the right-leaning persons only. They seem especially sensitive to the perceived threat.",
publisher = "Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd",
journal = "Psihologija",
title = "Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije, Support for the measures in fighting the COVID-19 pandemic: The role of political ideology",
pages = "222-207",
number = "2",
volume = "54",
doi = "10.2298/PSI201027039P"
}
Pavlović, Z., Todosijević, B.,& Stanojević, D.. (2021). Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije. in Psihologija
Društvo psihologa Srbije, Beograd., 54(2), 207-222.
https://doi.org/10.2298/PSI201027039P
Pavlović Z, Todosijević B, Stanojević D. Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije. in Psihologija. 2021;54(2):207-222.
doi:10.2298/PSI201027039P .
Pavlović, Zoran, Todosijević, Bojan, Stanojević, Dragan, "Podrška merama za borbu protiv pandemije COVID-19 - uloga političke ideologije" in Psihologija, 54, no. 2 (2021):207-222,
https://doi.org/10.2298/PSI201027039P . .
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