I checked 15 psychology journals on Thursday, July 16, 2026 using the Crossref API. For the period July 09 to July 15, I found 43 new paper(s) in 12 journal(s).

Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science

Artificial-Intelligence-Mediated Contamination in Online Research: Taxonomy, Risk Gradient, and Recommendations
Zhicheng Lin
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For 2 decades, online research has relied on a quality heuristic: Careful, coherent responding is good data. That heuristic is no longer reliable. Autonomous artificial-intelligence (AI) agents can now pass nearly all conventional quality checks, and in text-rich crowd-work tasks, reported use of large language models approaches one third. When such consultation shapes the response process itself—not just its surface expression—the resulting data appear human-generated while embedding systematic, model-shaped distortions. I synthesize emerging evidence on how AI-mediated contamination varies across research settings in prevalence, mechanism, and inferential consequence; and distinguish three contamination pathways (full delegation, partial mediation, and spillover) and three vulnerability zones (text-rich tasks at highest risk, browser-based cognitive paradigms as an emerging vulnerability, and supervised or identity-vetted settings at lower risk). Even modest contamination can shift estimated public opinion, compress attitudinal extremes, and, over time, feed back into the training data for future models. Current platform countermeasures may raise the cost of contamination but have not been independently validated under adversarial conditions. I argue for a shift from ad hoc detection to infrastructure redesign: contamination-aware sensitivity analyses, explicit stratification of data collection by evidential role, transparency norms that balance open science with adversarial robustness, and a minimum reporting checklist for online studies in vulnerable settings. I close by asking when AI mediation should be treated not as contamination but as part of the ecological baseline of human responding—a question that requires the field to specify the target cognitive system in any given study.

Behavior Research Methods

Dependent latent class partial credit models for careless and insufficient effort responding in online survey data
Jieyuan Dong, Hongyun Liu, Yang Liu
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The English spaced compound word database
Casey M. Riedmann, Barbara J. Juhasz, Simon P. Liversedge, Chuanli Zang
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Compound words combine existing words to form a new concept. Spaced compound words represent one form of compound words in which the orthographic space is preserved between the two constituent words (e.g., coffee table ). While recent research has mostly focused on unspaced compound words, spaced compound words offer important insight into the cognitive processes that support lexical retrieval and comprehension. Critically, whether readers process spaced compound words as single lexical units has important implications for how these items are stored and accessed in memory. To support future research, we developed the English Spaced Compound Word Database, wherein we collected familiarity, age-of-acquisition (AoA), and semantic transparency (ST) ratings for 1,162 spaced compound words. We conducted correlational analyses to compare these ratings across words, as well as across previously collected data on compound words’ constituents. These analyses revealed a strong association overall between familiarity ratings and AoA, as well as familiarity and ST. When examining the relationship between ratings and the characteristics of a compound word’s constituents, we found a strong relationship between frequency, AoA, and structural simplicity (i.e., number of characters, syllables, morphemes, and lexical similarity) within all three rating tasks. These findings provide a basis for testing future theoretical models of lexical processing and reading.
Estimating sample size in conceptual property norms by standardizing coverage
Enrique Canessa, Sergio E. Chaigneau, Rodrigo Lagos
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Collecting data from YouTube using the official API: A tutorial and a ready-to-use tool
Kévin Campos-Moinier
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Correction for the pupil size artifact improves the measurement of fixation drift with a head-mounted pupil tracker
Thomas Eggert
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The exactness of pupil-based video-oculography (pVOG) is limited by the pupil size artifact (PSA), involving shifts in pupil position with changes in pupil diameter. This study investigates PSA’s effects on fixation drift measurement and compares two correction methods. The first, the “interpolation method,” creates calibrations for different pupil sizes by adjusting illumination and interpolating between them based on the current pupil diameter. The second, the “regression method,” uses natural fluctuations in pupil size during fixation to estimate PSA gain via regression, then corrects pupil position accordingly. Here, the regression method was optimized for correcting fixation drift measurements by removing microsaccades and frequency components below 1 Hz and above 15 Hz. PSA was compared with size-related pupil displacements relative to the limbus to better investigate its cause. Pupil dilation caused downward and temporal shifts (PSA gains: 0.23 deg/mm horizontally, 0.62 deg/mm vertically). The PSA affected vertical fixation drifts ( R 2 = 14%) more strongly than horizontal drifts ( R 2 = 1.5%). The mean and precision of PSA gain estimates did not differ between methods. Both reduced the determination of fixation drift by pupil diameter changes ( R 2 ). PSA stability over 12 min was confirmed in 77% of cases. Power spectral density analysis supported the effectiveness of the regression correction, aligning with previous findings. PSA is probably caused mainly by the shift of the pupil relative to the limbus, as it did not differ significantly from the shift in camera coordinates. Overall, the regression method is a promising technique for correcting PSA in pVOG to improve fixation drift measurements.
Complex dynamics in psychological data: Mapping individual symptom trajectories to group-level patterns
Eleonora Vitanza, Pietro De Lellis, Chiara Mocenni, Manuel Ruiz Marin
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The performance of Bayesian fit indices in approximate measurement invariance testing with many groups in cross-cultural research
Chunhua Cao, Xinya Liang, Lijin Zhang, Yangmeng Xu
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Reliability and statistical power: Conceptual background and practical implications
Attila Krajcsi
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In the behavioral sciences, robust phenomena having large effect sizes and related statistical power may be unreliable. This relation is in contrast to the view that both statistical power and reliability depend similarly on measurement error. In this view, robust but unreliable phenomena can be considered as a reliability paradox. The mathematical relation and possible independence of statistical power and reliability have been discussed in the statistical literature for decades. A common misconception related to the relationship between statistical power and reliability is that absolute reliability (measurement error) is often confounded with relative reliability (ratio of the true score variance to the total score variance). The present work reviews and discusses how measurement error and individual differences influence the relative reliability and robustness of a phenomenon. It discusses why relative reliability and robustness are partly related and why they are generally independent. Following these considerations, it summarizes how measurement error and group heterogeneity can be potentially manipulated to optimize the reliability and robustness of a measured phenomenon.

Computers in Human Behavior

Generic title: Not a research article
Corrigendum to ‘Perceptions and adoption of AI in public relations: Innovation attributes, threats, and practical implications’ [Computers in Human Behavior 184C (2026) 109087]
Sung-Un Yang, Cen April Yue, Arunima Krishna, Donald K. Wright
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Understanding Social-Cognitive-Norm Mechanisms Driving Disinformation Verification among Indonesian Young Adults on Social Media
Yonathan Dri Handarkho, Th. Devi Indriasari, Yohanes Sigit Purnomo Wuryo Putro, Citra Yayu' Palangan
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Attentional priority for social reward is modulated by attentional bias toward game
Dongyu Liu, Xinyu Zhang, Boxiang Li, Christian Montag, Jon D. Elhai, Haibo Yang
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The creative tax of videoconferencing: How ideological diversity mitigates creativity losses in virtual teams
Daphna Shwartz-Asher, Yossef Tobol
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AI disclosure formats and user responses to AI-generated video: Evidence from a cross-national experiment
Yuya Shibuya, Yair Amichai-Hamburger
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Psychological Pathways to Digital Safety: A Sequential Model of Attitudinal Endorsement, Environment Cognition, and WTP for Malicious Comment Prevention
Heejoo Lim, Hyeonjeong Kim
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When Social Media Memes Become Mean to Peers: Discrimination Recognition and Group Norms in Adolescent Bullying
Rongyi Chen, Qing Xiao, Shike Lin, Jingjia Xiao, Menghan Yin, Yucong Ma, Bingbing Zhang, Hua Zhong
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Cultural, Organisational, and Individual Factors Contributing to Cyber Incident Reporting: A Systematic Literature Review
Rick van der Kleij, Olivier Spinnler, Julia Broderick-Hale, Katie Hendriks, Anthonie Drenth, Joshua van Wijgerden
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Fake or trustworthy? A TCCM- and bibliometric-based hybrid review of online review research
Munmun Ghosh, Arindam Ghosh
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Group Processes & Intergroup Relations

Sexual Orientation Stereotyping of Race Categories Referring to Men, and Vice Versa: An Intersectional Analysis in the Italian Context
Rosandra Coladonato, Federico D’Atri, Francesca Trevisan, Patrice Rusconi, Mauro Bianchi, Valentina Piccoli, Andrea Carnaghi
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We employed a multi-method approach to assess both stereotypes related to male race and male sexual orientation, and then analyzed how race stereotypes applied to sexual orientation categories and vice versa. Results from Study 1−3 a-b ( N = 552), along with internal meta-analyses, showed that White, Black, and Asian men were more strongly stereotyped as heterosexual than gay. This pattern was equally strong for White and Black men but weaker for Asian men. White men were more associated with heterosexual traits, while Black men were more perceived as lacking gay traits than the other race categories. Heterosexual men displayed a race-graded structure, favoring White over Black and then Asian traits. In contrast, the race-graded structure of gay men disfavored Black traits only, compared to White and Asian traits. The theoretical implications regarding the intersection of race and sexual orientation categories, as well as the social impact of these findings, are discussed.

Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Between law and conscience: Act legality shapes moral evaluation
Mane Kara-Yakoubian, Jonathan A. Fugelsang, Alexander C. Walker
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How and why the omission bias affects victims' and third parties' responses to interpersonal transgressions
Justin M. Ludwig, Karina Schumann
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When it is important to be more virtuous: Cultural tightness exacerbates moral superiority
Lipeng Yin, Zaixuan Zhang, Zhansheng Chen
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Do people think I'm late in life? An intersubjective approach to culture and the optimal timing of life
Lu Zang, Heejung S. Kim
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Underestimating sexism: Is gender categorization key?
Melanie C. Steffens, Franziska Ehrke, Karolina Hansen, Laura Loths, Jenny Dettmann
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Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Evolving together: Dynamic transactions of antagonistic and self-centered traits with couple relationships.
Anna Braig, Matthew D. Johnson, Marcus Mund, Franz J. Neyer
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Mental contrasting prevents a negative future by changing the explicit and implicit meaning of reality.
SunYoung Kim, Peter M. Gollwitzer, Gabriele Oettingen
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Tightening up under threat: Social class shapes the strength of norms.
Ying Lin, Jesse R. Harrington, Michele J. Gelfand
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Unconscious mental content in implicit evaluation: Evidence from misprediction.
Benedek Kurdi, David E. Melnikoff, Adam Morris
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Multivariate Behavioral Research

Handling Missing Data in Intensive Longitudinal Data with Mixed Missing Mechanisms
Zhilin Wan, Yue Liu
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Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

To Regulate or Not to Regulate? Situational and Individual Differences in Emotion Regulation Initiation in Daily Life
Tabea Springstein, Anna C. Bankston, Tammy English
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Situational and individual differences shape how and why people regulate emotions, but whether emotion regulation is initiated remains understudied. We hypothesize that, for example, less familiar situations might be associated with more regulation initiation, and people who believe emotions are controllable initiate regulation more frequently. Using experience sampling ( N = 216; 7x/14 days), we found that participants initiated regulation 60% of the time over the past 2 hr. As predicted, people initiated regulation in less familiar, less pleasant contexts, and with more dominant, less warm social partners. Unexpectedly, individuals who believe emotions are uncontrollable were more likely to initiate regulation, even after accounting for affect. These findings highlight that while attention has mostly focused on strategy selection or efficacy, meaningful situational and individual differences also exist at the emotion regulation initiation stage when individuals determine whether to expend regulatory resources to maintain well-being.
Perceived Pain Sensitivity and Treatment Recommendations for Socially Mobile Individuals: The Mediating Role of Perceived Tenacity
Zhijie Xie, Fangfang Wen, Lujun Shen, Chen Liu, Lei Yang
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While prior research shows that higher-class individuals are perceived as more sensitive to pain than lower-class individuals, little is known about how perceptions of pain are shaped by changes in social class. Across a pilot study and five experiments with Chinese and U.S. participants (N = 1,202), we investigated whether social mobility direction influences judgments of pain sensitivity and treatment, and whether perceived tenacity serves as a mediating mechanism. Results indicated that although Chinese and U.S. participants perceived higher-class individuals as more pain-sensitive, they judged upwardly mobile individuals as less sensitive to pain than downwardly mobile individuals. This effect was driven by the attribution of greater tenacity to upwardly mobile targets, which in turn predicted lower pain sensitivity ratings and fewer pain treatment recommendations. These findings reveal a novel psychological pathway through which dynamic social class information shapes pain perception and treatment decisions, extending the literature beyond static class-based stereotypes.
Stable Worldviews or Context-Sensitive Systems? Longitudinal Evidence on the Development of Epistemically Suspect Beliefs Across Two Sociopolitical Contexts
Sinan Alper, Kivanc Konukoglu, Fatih Bayrak, Ceyhun Yener, Ece Sezen Bagci, Burak Dogruyol, Onurcan Yilmaz
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Are epistemically suspect beliefs (ESBs)—including conspiracy, paranormal, and pseudoscientific beliefs—stable worldviews, or do they shift alongside changes in the sociopolitical context? Although often treated as enduring dispositions, little is known about their within-person development or sensitivity to sociopolitical conditions. We address this question using two five-wave panel studies conducted over 2 years in TĂŒrkiye ( N = 595–2,077) and the United Kingdom ( N = 350–959). Latent growth models show modest mean-level declines in ESBs alongside strong cross-domain coupling in both levels and trajectories. However, co-development patterns were context-sensitive. In TĂŒrkiye, within-person increases in perceived corruption covaried with increases in conspiracy beliefs, whereas this pattern did not consistently emerge in the United Kingdom. These findings indicate that ESBs are neither purely static dispositions nor fully context-driven reactions but exhibit a durable cross-domain structure with bounded sensitivity to sociopolitical conditions.

Psychological Bulletin

How spatial skills relate to science achievement: A meta-analytic review.
Kinnari Atit, Emily Grossnickle Peterson, Katie Gilligan-Lee, Zachary Hawes, Jihyun Lee
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Universal interventions to improve young children’s mental well-being: A systematic review and meta-analysis.
Jiying Ling, Sisi Chen, Nancy T. Browne, Melissa G. Gomes
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Individual differences in personality trait changes across the lifespan: A meta-analysis of longitudinal studies.
Peter Haehner, Christopher J. Hopwood, Lukas Schellenberg, Ted Schwaba, Wiebke Bleidorn
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Tackling challenges in large language model–based data extraction via context engineering: A commentary on Jansen et al. (2025).
Junsong Lu, X. T. (XiaoTian) Wang
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Psychological Methods

Identifying careless responding in ecological momentary assessment: Inconsistent signals from different detection methods in the WARN-D Data.
Leonie V. D. E. Vogelsmeier, Björn S. Siepe, Esther Ulitzsch, Gudrun Eisele, Joran Geeraerts, Adam Klocek, Ricarda K. K. Proppert, Carlotta L. Rieble, Rayyan Tutunji, Egon Dejonckheere, Peter Kuppens, Eiko I. Fried
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Sample size planning for studies with multiple measurement trials.
Douglas G. Bonett
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Evaluating local structural-after-measurement and traditional approaches for the estimation of complex nonlinear effects among latent variables.
Felipe Fontana Vieira, Kjell Solem Slupphaug, Yves Rosseel
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Post Hoc comparisons in fixed-effect ANOVA: A sequential fusion approach with calibrated error control.
Yvonnick Noel
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Bayesian marginalized zero-inflated Poisson model with random effects for single-case experimental designs: A simulation study.
Chendong Li, Wen Luo
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Psychological Science

Replication of “Procrastination, Deadlines, and Performance: Self-Control by Precommitment”
Kyle Hyndman, Alberto Bisin
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We present the results of a replication of Study 2 from Ariely and Wertenbroch on the role of deadlines in mitigating procrastination. We show that our results do not replicate those of the original article. In our replication, with adult participants enrolled at a large public university in the United States, changes in the deadlines had a negligible effect on the three performance metrics and several survey metrics used in the original study. Evenly spaced deadlines, externally imposed on participants by the experimenters, did not stand out for their effectiveness in reducing procrastination in participants. The data further indicate consistency with several patterns of participant behavior that should be expected irrespective of our main replication results.

Psychology of Popular Media

Exploring public perceptions of social media: A preregistered mixed-methods study.
Evelyn A. H. Murray, Michael Larkin, Daniel J. Shaw, Charlotte R. Pennington
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Understanding why people consume true crime: A systematic scoping review of psychological motivations.
Dolores FernĂĄndez, Diego Montoya-BermĂșdez, MarĂ­a V. Jimeno, Gloria GarcĂ­a-PĂ©rez
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