Published in Pers Soc Psychol Bull on February 01, 2007
Social Dominance Orientation Relates to Believing Men Should Dominate Sexually, Sexual Self-Efficacy, and Taking Free Female Condoms Among Undergraduate Women and Men. Sex Roles (2012) 0.82
Polyculturalism and Sexist Attitudes: Believing Cultures are Dynamic Relates to Lower Sexism. Psychol Women Q (2014) 0.75
Personality and prejudice: a meta-analysis and theoretical review. Pers Soc Psychol Rev (2008) 1.29
Environmental consequences of the desire to dominate and be superior. Pers Soc Psychol Bull (2013) 0.94
The dimensional structure of people's fears, threats, and concerns and their relationship with right-wing authoritarianism and social dominance orientation. Int J Psychol (2013) 0.91
Differential effects of intergroup contact for authoritarians and social dominators: a dual process model perspective. Pers Soc Psychol Bull (2011) 0.82
Big-five personality, social worldviews, and ideological attitudes: further tests of a dual process cognitive-motivational model. J Soc Psychol (2009) 0.77
What's in a flag? Subliminal exposure to New Zealand national symbols and the automatic activation of egalitarian versus dominance values. J Soc Psychol (2011) 0.77
The role of intellectual openness in the relationship between hand preference and positive schizotypy. Laterality (2008) 0.76
A sinister plot? Facts, beliefs, and stereotypes about the left-handed personality. Laterality (2012) 0.76
Why Wealthier People Think People Are Wealthier, and Why It Matters: From Social Sampling to Attitudes to Redistribution. Psychol Sci (2015) 0.75
The dual process model of ideology and prejudice: a longitudinal test during a global recession. J Soc Psychol (2013) 0.75
Hidden consequences of political efficacy: Testing an efficacy-apathy model of political mobilization. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol (2015) 0.75
Māori identity signatures: A latent profile analysis of the types of Māori identity. Cultur Divers Ethnic Minor Psychol (2015) 0.75
The personality bases of ideology: a one-year longitudinal study. J Soc Psychol (2010) 0.75