Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others who share their names or first initials—is a mainstay of modern psychology textbooks, but the interpretation of prior field studies has recently come under criticism for lack of adequate control, reverse causality, and ethnic heterogeneity. Using unique data from the New Orleans District Attorney’s Office on 48,988 defendants that were randomly assigned to judges from 1988-1999, we identify the causal effect of matching first initials. In contrast to positive affect, we find that judges assign 8% longer sentences on average (about two-three months) when they match on first initials. The effect is robust to controls and removal of outliers. No...
Race matters in the criminal justice system. Black defendants appear to fare worse than similarly si...
Several studies provide evidence that judgments on punishment are influenced by variables that are m...
The hypothesis was tested that the Name-Letter Effect or affective overvaluation of own name-letters...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Implicit egotism is the notion that major life decisions are influenced by name-similarity. This pap...
Three articles published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology have shown that a dispr...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious selfregulation, whi...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious self-regulation, wh...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
Consumers subconsciously prefer brand names that resemble their own names - an effect called name le...
Selective attention and justice sensitivity (JS), a personality trait reflecting individual differen...
In today’s demonstration, we explored the audience’s positive and negative associations with blacks ...
Race matters in the criminal justice system. Black defendants appear to fare worse than similarly si...
Several studies provide evidence that judgments on punishment are influenced by variables that are m...
The hypothesis was tested that the Name-Letter Effect or affective overvaluation of own name-letters...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
Implicit egotism—in particular, positive unconscious associations that individuals have with others ...
People tend to prefer things that remind them of themselves, such as their name. This unconscious p...
Implicit egotism is the notion that major life decisions are influenced by name-similarity. This pap...
Three articles published in the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology have shown that a dispr...
The present study demonstrates that implicit egotism is relevant to not only letter attractiveness r...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious selfregulation, whi...
A recent study suggested that the name letter effect is a product of unconscious self-regulation, wh...
It is now generally accepted that unconscious processesmodulate human behavior. Nelson and Simmons (...
Consumers subconsciously prefer brand names that resemble their own names - an effect called name le...
Selective attention and justice sensitivity (JS), a personality trait reflecting individual differen...
In today’s demonstration, we explored the audience’s positive and negative associations with blacks ...
Race matters in the criminal justice system. Black defendants appear to fare worse than similarly si...
Several studies provide evidence that judgments on punishment are influenced by variables that are m...
The hypothesis was tested that the Name-Letter Effect or affective overvaluation of own name-letters...