Three studies examined the relationship between need for cogni-tion and support for punitive responses to crime. The results of Study 1 (N = 110) indicated that individuals high in need for cognition were less supportive of punitive measures than their low need for cognition counterparts. This finding was replicated in Study 2 (N = 1,807), which employed a nationally represen-tative probability sample and included a more extensive battery of control variables. The purpose of Study 3 (N = 255) was to identify a third variable that might explain this relationship. This final study’s results suggest that attributional complexity mediates the relationship between need for cognition and punitiveness. High need for cognition individuals are less ...
Contains fulltext : 204644.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The aim of the ...
This study examined several interrelated issues in social-developmental psychology: (a) the relation...
PURPOSE: Research assessing violent extremist risk factors thus far largely ignored the role of cogn...
just-deserts rationale. Such findings are consistent with several other examples of how people appar...
Based on past findings that attributionally more complex people make less fundamental attribution er...
There exists strong evidence for the proposition that individual psychological dispositions, social ...
This article reports experiments assessing how general threats to social order and severity of a cri...
This study explores the conditions under which experimentally primed anger influences both attributi...
This study explores the relationship between intellectual ability (IA) and the treatment needs of ma...
The purpose of the present study was to examine the relationship between individual factors and puni...
Previous research has found that individuals performing either physical (Latane, Williams, & Harkins...
Although there has been a cognitive revolution in psychology, and recent reviews reveal that almos...
While the focus of criminology has traditionally been the sociological correlates of criminal behavi...
In the present research, we examined a discrepancy between people's beliefs about, versus punitive r...
Studies have shown that offenders have impaired cognitive abilities yet it is unclear if cognitive d...
Contains fulltext : 204644.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The aim of the ...
This study examined several interrelated issues in social-developmental psychology: (a) the relation...
PURPOSE: Research assessing violent extremist risk factors thus far largely ignored the role of cogn...
just-deserts rationale. Such findings are consistent with several other examples of how people appar...
Based on past findings that attributionally more complex people make less fundamental attribution er...
There exists strong evidence for the proposition that individual psychological dispositions, social ...
This article reports experiments assessing how general threats to social order and severity of a cri...
This study explores the conditions under which experimentally primed anger influences both attributi...
This study explores the relationship between intellectual ability (IA) and the treatment needs of ma...
The purpose of the present study was to examine the relationship between individual factors and puni...
Previous research has found that individuals performing either physical (Latane, Williams, & Harkins...
Although there has been a cognitive revolution in psychology, and recent reviews reveal that almos...
While the focus of criminology has traditionally been the sociological correlates of criminal behavi...
In the present research, we examined a discrepancy between people's beliefs about, versus punitive r...
Studies have shown that offenders have impaired cognitive abilities yet it is unclear if cognitive d...
Contains fulltext : 204644.pdf (publisher's version ) (Open Access)The aim of the ...
This study examined several interrelated issues in social-developmental psychology: (a) the relation...
PURPOSE: Research assessing violent extremist risk factors thus far largely ignored the role of cogn...