Quote if from this paper by @olivia.science and @andreaeyleen.bsky.social π bsky.app/profile/oliv...
Quote if from this paper by @olivia.science and @andreaeyleen.bsky.social π bsky.app/profile/oliv...
"Correlation does not imply cognition" β¨
Original video, for anyone who has been unlucky enough to miss it β€οΈππβ¨ #ChefsKiss
www.youtube.com/watch?v=EDwb...
If you're obsessed with "Confessions on a Dance Floor," like me, then yesterday Madonna's YouTube channel appeared to release a new 15-min. documentary video about the making of the iconic video, "Hung Up" ... it's awesome. Happy Saturday Night (Fever)! π»π€©πͺ©ππβ¨
www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFYI...
Check out the new Psychophysiology special issue "Psychophysiology on Physiological and Neurophysiological Synchronisation between individuals β Methodological Approaches and Evaluations". Submit by 28 February 2026! @hedwigeisenbarth.bsky.social
onlinelibrary.wiley.com/page/journal...
A headshot of social psychologist Dr. Jennifer Eberhardt.
We are proud to include Jennifer Eberhardt (Stanford University) on the SPSP Heritage Wall, recognizing her research on the the psychological associations between race and crime.
Learn more + consider donating to our Heritage Initiative to support future scholars: ow.ly/at7o50XeVkP
This image, titled "Allegory for a Career Trajectory" depicts a forest. The trees have different colours, like a technicolor rainbow. The trees bear the names of people who influenced the development of Elizabeth Page-Gould's ideas, knowledge, abilities, and career--and certainly personal growth. There is a tree that goes sideways across the image labelled "LP-G." This tree has many names coming off it's branches, representing the incredible students whom Page-Gould has had the honour to mentor. This image served as the backdrop to Page-Gould's acceptance speech for the SESP Career Trajectory Award.
It was my honour to accept the Career Trajectory Award from the Society for Experimental Social Psychology in Lisbon, Portugal this weekend. π For the acceptance speech, I created an βAllegory for a Career Trajectory.β Thank you, to Everyone!
Animated version: youtu.be/Svjw7JBddPw
@page-gould.bsky.social: Prejudice reduction is not enough, we need to acknowledge the systemic aspects
#SESP2025
She is far too un-self-promoting to do this herself, so I'm shouting out *THE* Elizabeth Page-Gould (@page-gould.bsky.social) for winning the SESP Career Trajectory Award!
Liz is the reason they had to invent the high-warmth/high competence quadrant. She is such a gem and so damn deserving of this.
Psych-DS is (1) spellcheck for your datasets and (2) a pathway to standardizing data in our academic fields that *everyone* can learn.
And it's live RIGHT NOW!
psych-ds.github.io
(This is the announcement post I've been leading up to)
Thank you for this beautiful tribute, Neil β€οΈ
Thank you so much for this, Neil. πππ
Social psychology lost a giant, and I lost a dear friend and collaborator. Still processing the loss of Sam Sommers, and probably will be for some time. Cherish the time you have with your people, folks.
now.tufts.edu/2025/03/20/r...
I would like to share that the family requests donations be made to the Innocence Project (innocenceproject.org/donate/) or the American Civil Liberties Union (action.aclu.org/give/now) in lieu of flowers. ππ
Thank you so much. I am very sorry for your loss. β€οΈπ€
Sam Sommers, thank you for walking next to me for some of the time you were here. It was always a delight, every time you appeared. β¨ Your presence in my life was a gift. I am grateful for every moment I got to spend with you. ππ€ Rest in peace, my friend. β€οΈ
My deepest condolences are to his beloved family. Samβs relationship with his family was deep and inspiring. I can only imagine how hard it is to lose a father and spouse like that. They deserve our utmost care, support, love, and respect. π«Άπβ€οΈ
Itβs been a hard few days, harder than I predicted. π Sam was one of those people that was kind of all positive, so itβs just hard. I also texted him on Tuesday evening, after he had passed away but before I knew that and thatβs getting to me a bit. π
We needed more Sams in this world, not less. π€
Altogether, Sam loved social psychology and his vision for the future of our field was a beautiful one. Letβs honor Dr. Samuel R. Sommers whenever we get the opportunity to do so. ππ»π€©β€οΈπβοΈβ¨
Sam Sommers was a visionary for our field. He regularly assumed roles that gave him scholarly leadership of our fieldβs trajectory across domains.
Through this collaboration, I have found fulfillment and inspiration. It has also taken my writing to the next plateau, because of the generosity and brilliance of Samβs and Neilβs feedback, in particular.
Around 2017, Tim Wilson, Elliot Aronson, and Sam reached out to me to be a possible co-author on the Aronson Social Psychology textbook, and that was when our scholarly collaboration began. Neil joined the party 4 - 5 years ago now, and it's been so synergistic.β¨ππ
(There is definitely a lesson in here to early career scholars to not blow off the peer reviews you do! π€βοΈ)
I remembered that, at the time, he had written back to me and thanked me for a high-quality review. His note had meant a lot to me, at the time, as a new professor. However, I had no idea how much that one review would pay off for me!
Sam would later say that he did that all because of the quality of a *peer review* that I wrote as an ad-hoc reviewer for a paper he handled while he was an Associate Editor at the Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.
Early in my career, Sam appeared as this random sponsor of me. We didnβt really know each other until about 2017, but he reached out to me a few times before then to random nominate me for awards. (β£οΈπ€©π)
We had a really deep and meaningful conversation at dinner, too. I will always treasure the advice and stories he shared with me. He was so wise in this way that was both confident in his truth but highly open and humble. Sam Sommers, you were a special person. πβ€οΈ
Sam passed away on Sunday, and I found out on Wednesday. It was one of those calls where, despite the fact that what the caller says is totally shocking, I knew what was going to be said. Thereβs something about the way people set those calls up and then start the conversation β¦ Sam was dead. πππ€
Dr. Sam R. Sommers was one of those truly good people who also happened to be a total powerhouse. It is with deep sadness that I share the news of his death. Everyone who had Sam in their lives was lucky, and I am grateful for every moment he shared with me. β€οΈππ« now.tufts.edu/2025/03/20/r...
He guided the research direction of our field as an Editor. He guided the intellectual direction of our field through his textbooks. He showed the importance of our field to people outside academia through popular books. He led his local community as the Chair of the Tufts Psychology Department.