James G Hillman (@hillmanjg) 's Twitter Profile
James G Hillman

@hillmanjg

SSHRC Funded Postdoctoral Research Fellow ๐Ÿณ๏ธโ€๐ŸŒˆ
Ohio State University

ID: 1081583256854843394

calendar_today05-01-2019 16:08:38

14 Tweet

55 Followers

50 Following

Society for Personality and Social Psychology (@spspnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"'When we do see someone admit that they are wrong, the wrongness admitter is seen as more communal, more friendly,' @Akfetterman says. Itโ€™s almost never the case, in his studies, 'that when you admit youโ€™re wrong, people think you are less competent.'" bit.ly/2VAPTnl

Society for Personality and Social Psychology (@spspnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"Researchers find that both conscious and unconscious bias regarding race and sexual orientation declined significantly between 2007 and 2016." bit.ly/2Fds6EZ via Pacific Standard

StanceGrounded (@_sjpeace_) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Guess who weren't IMMIGRANTS? The Las Vegas Shooter The Sandy Hook Shooter The Parkland Shooter The Charleston Church Shooter The Aurora Movie Theater Shooter The Gabby Giffords Shooter Majority of the terrorism in the U.S is DOMESTIC, HOMEGROWN, WHITE MALE! Retweet!

Terry Crews (@terrycrews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Iโ€™m just saying what we already knew. No pretending. No blaming. No more silence. No more complicity. No more excusing. We can do better. Pray for yourself.

Devin I. Fowlie (@fowlie_i) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excited to share that our new paper Social Verification Theory: A New Way to Conceptualize Validation, Dissonance, and Belonging (with the incredible James G Hillman) is in-press at Personality and Social Psychology Review bit.ly/3zzjlj5

Rolf Degen (@degenrolf) 's Twitter Profile Photo

People intuitively assume that things are getting better in their personal environment while society is going downhill. For areas they know little about and which are of little relevance to themselves, they fall back on the "will improve" assumption. journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11โ€ฆ

People intuitively assume that things are getting better in their personal environment while society is going downhill. For areas they know little about and which are of little relevance to themselves, they fall back on the "will improve" assumption. journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11โ€ฆ
James G Hillman (@hillmanjg) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Excited to share my work with @SonEunju_ca that's finally online! We explore how perceptions of changeability may affect people's responses to inconsistency with others, and how these responses may vary culturally. journals.sagepub.com/doi/full/10.11โ€ฆ