Yphtach Lelkes Annenberg School of Communication University of Pennsylvania American partisans misperceive the diversity, not the extremity, of other partisans’ attitudes Misperceptions about the political “other” are commonly cited as a central cause of partisan animosity in America. Previous work has focused almost exclusively on American partisans’ perceptions of how extreme the “average” […]
Events
“Grid” Film Screening and Discussion RSVP: https://forms.gle/sTaJwB1p8QVF883q8 Drinks and donuts will be provided! You are invited to a special screening of “Grid,” directed by Julia Ongchoco and featuring Joan Ongchoco and Cynthia Zhou. The screening will take place in the SAIL Room, and will be followed by a lively panel discussion […]
We will also stream this seminar via Zoom. For the link, contact us: pennmindcore@sas.upenn.edu Tomáš Jagelka Institute for Applied Microeconomics University of Bonn Accounting for Individual-Specific Reliability of Self-Assessed Measures of Economic Preferences and Personality Traits Measures based on self-assessments, which are increasingly important in empirical economic research, are plagued by measurement error. […]
Emily Cowan Murty Lab Temple University “The effects of mnemonic variability on the spacing effect over multiple time scales”
Minorities and Philosophy (MAP) graduate student group is hosting their inaugural Visiting Speaker Series talk, which lies at the intersection of philosophy, psychology, and neuroscience. The talk will be given by Polaris Koi, and is titled “What are my options? Decision sets in complex environments” (abstract available here)