If this works out, you might consider publishing it in jerhre:
http://www.csueastbay.edu/JERHRE/
the Journal of empirical research on human research ethics. It is
just the sort of thing they are looking for.
-Chuck Huff
- Chuck Huff 1520 St. Olaf Avenue
- Psychology & Computer Science St.Olaf College
- Tel: 507.646.3169 Northfield, MN 55057-1098
- Fax: 507.646.3774 http://www.stolaf.edu/people/huff
David Kreiner wrote:
...Anyway, she is finding that there is a tendency for students to
perceive particular procedures as more coercive to other students
than to themselves. I want her to look in the social psych.
literature for possible explanations for this pattern, but I'm
having trouble giving her good guidance about what concepts to look
for in the literature...
If resistance to coercion is considered desirable, then the
belief that one is better able to resist coercive pressures than
other students do can be considered a self-serving cognition. I
would search using phrases like "self serving bias" and "self
enhancement." One possible source is:
Helweg-Larsen, M., & Shepperd, J. A. (2001). Do moderators of the
optimistic bias affect personal or target risk estimates? A review
of the literature. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 5,
74-95.
--Dave
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___________________________________________________________________
David E. Campbell, Ph.D. <mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]>[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Department of Psychology Phone: 707-826-3721
Humboldt State University FAX: 707-826-4993
Arcata, CA 95521-8299
<http://www.humboldt.edu/%7Ecampbell/psyc.htm>www.humboldt.edu/~campbell/psyc.htm
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