
Prof. Dr. Joris Lammers
Position im Cluster Investigator
Clustermitglied seit 2020
Forschungsbereiche
Forschungsschwerpunkte
Soziale Macht, Moralpsychologie, Sexismus und Geschlecht und politische Psychologie
Lebenslauf
Joris Lammers ist Professor am Social Cognition Center Cologne (SoCCCo) an der Fakultät für Humanwissenschaften der Universität zu Köln. Er hat einen Master-Abschluss in Politikwissenschaft und in Psychologie von der Universität Leiden (2003) und promovierte an der Universität Groningen (2008) in Sozialpsychologie. Nachdem er an der Universität Tilburg und der Universität Köln als Juniorprofessor gearbeitet hatte, wurde Joris Lammers Professor an der Universität Bremen, bevor er zu ECONtribute nach Köln wechselte. Er ist Mitherausgeber der Zeitschrift Journal of Experimental Social Psychology und Mitglied der European Association of Social Psychology.
Publikationen
Veröffentlichungen
-
Does Framing Climate Change Policies to Fit with Epistemic Needs for Predictability Reduce Conservatives’ Opposition?
Lammers, J., Schulte, A., & Baldwin, M. (2023). Does Framing Climate Change Policies to Fit with Epistemic Needs for Predictability Reduce Conservatives’ Opposition? Analyses of Social Issues and Public Policy. -
Collective Nostalgia and Political Ideology
Lammers, J. (2023). Collective Nostalgia and Political Ideology. Current Opinion in Psychology. -
Political-Ideological Differences in Cultural Pessimism and Nostalgia Reflect People’s Evaluation of Their Nation’s Historical Developments
Lammers, J., & Uğurlar, P. (2023). Political-Ideological Differences in Cultural Pessimism and Nostalgia Reflect People’s Evaluation of Their Nation’s Historical Developments. Social Psychological and Personality Science. -
Disentangling the Factors behind Shifting Voting Intentions: The Bandwagon Effect Reflects Heuristic Processing, while the Underdog Effect Reflects Fairness Concerns.
Lammers, J., Bukowski, M., Potoczek, A., Fleischmann, A., & Hofmann, W. (2022). Disentangling the Factors behind Shifting Voting Intentions: The Bandwagon Effect Reflects Heuristic Processing, while the Underdog Effect Reflects Fairness Concerns. Journal of Social and Political Psychology. -
How Vertical Elevation Affects Self-Other Integration as Measured by the Joint Simon Effect
Van der Weiden, A., Pril, D., Dittrich, K., Richter, J., & Lammers, J. (2021) How Vertical Elevation Affects Self-Other Integration as Measured by the Joint Simon Effect. Acta Psychologica. -
A Chronic Lack of Perceived Personal Control Increases Women and Men’s Self-Reported Preference for High-Status Characteristics When Selecting Romantic Partners in Simulated Dating Situations
Lammers, J., & Imhoff, R. (2021). A Chronic Lack of Perceived Low Personal Control Increases Women and Men’s Self-Reported Preference for High-Status Characteristics When Selecting Romantic Partners in Simulated Dating Situations. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 19485506211016309. -
Why People Hate Congress but Love Their Own Congressperson: An Information Processing Explanation
Lammers, J., Pauels, E., Fleischmann, A., & Galinsky, A. D. (2021). Why People Hate Congress but Love Their Own Congressperson: An Information Processing Explanation. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 01461672211002336. -
Two Sides of the Same Coin: A New Look at Differences and Similarities across Political Ideology
Lammers, J., & Baldwin, M. (2022) Two Sides of the Same Coin: A New Look at Differences and Similarities across Political Ideology. Cambridge handbook of political psychology, Cambridge University Press. -
Power and Moral Thinking
Fleischmann, A., & Lammers, J. (2020). Power and moral thinking. Current opinion in psychology, 33, 23-27. -
Make America Gracious Again: Collective Nostalgia can Increase and Decrease Support for Right-Wing Populist Rhetoric
Lammers, J., & Baldwin, M. (2020). Make America gracious again: Collective nostalgia can increase and decrease support for right‐wing populist rhetoric. European Journal of Social Psychology. -
Correcting Misperceptions of Exponential Coronavirus Growth Increases Support for Social Distancing
Lammers, J., Crusius, J., & Gast, A. (2020). Correcting misperceptions of exponential coronavirus growth increases support for social distancing. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117(28), 16264-16266.