I checked 15 psychology journals on Monday, March 23, 2026 using the Crossref API. For the period March 16 to March 22, I found 33 new paper(s) in 12 journal(s).

Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science

Google-Search Data for Psychological Scientists: A Tutorial and Best Practices
Jordan W. Moon, Michael Barlev
Full text
Google searches have been described as the most important data set on the human psyche ever assembled. Google-search data—accessible through a tool called Google Trends—can provide new insights on topics as varied as stereotypes and prejudices, political attitudes, religious identity and belief, personality, motivations, psychological well-being, mental health, and culture. Google Trends can generate highly customized data sets: Users can compare the popularity of search terms across most of the world or access longitudinal data as far back as 2004, and they can do so with high geographical and temporal granularity. Notwithstanding these opportunities, Google Trends has significant limitations. Without appropriate caution, users can easily rely on data that are not meaningful or draw mistaken conclusions. We provide a comprehensive overview and tutorial covering (a) opportunities of Google Trends for psychological scientists; (b) how Google Trends scores are calculated, how reliable they are, and why some queries might yield low-quality data; (c) instructions with accompanying R code for creating custom data sets beyond what Google Trends provides by default; (d) example analyses for studies that could be done using Google Trends data; (e) an overview of common pitfalls; and (f) recommendations for safeguarding data quality and their interpretation.
SCORES: A Clustering Tool for Free-Text Responses
Luis Klocke, Thekla Morgenroth, Yanzhe Zeng, Benjamin Paaßen
Full text
Free-text responses are a crucial part of psychological research, enabling participants to respond without bias toward a predefined set of answers. Unfortunately, many established methods for analyzing such responses require extensive manual coding, which is time- and resource-intensive. To address this issue, automatic-processing methods based on word embeddings and clustering techniques have been proposed. In this article, we introduce SCORES (Semantic Clustering of Open Responses via Embedding Similarity), a user-friendly, graphical tool that makes such automatic methods easy to use and understand for psychological researchers.

Behavior Research Methods

Blink parameters are confounded by vertical eye orientation in video-based eye tracking: Comparing pupil- and eyelid-based methods
Wolf Culemann, Ignace T. C. Hooge, Diederick C. Niehorster, Angela Heine, Marcus Nyström
Full text
Blink characteristics such as duration, amplitude, and eyelid velocity are widely used indicators of cognitive and physiological states. While early magnetic search coil studies suggested that vertical eye orientation relative to the head influences blink measurements, subsequent research has largely ignored this factor. No studies have investigated whether vertical eye orientation effects replicate in modern video-based methods or whether different video-based blink-detection approaches show similar sensitivities to changes in vertical eye orientation. In this study, we investigated how vertical eye orientation affects blink parameters estimated using both pupil-based and eyelid-based detection. We recorded pupil diameter and estimated eye openness from video data as seventeen participants performed voluntary blinks from three vertical eye orientations while keeping their heads stationary. Vertical eye orientation systematically influenced all measured blink parameters. Eye openness at blink onset and closing amplitude decreased with downward eye orientation. With more downward eye orientation, closing velocity increased, whereas opening velocity decreased. Crucially, pupil-based measurements of blink duration showed much larger vertical eye orientation effects than measurements of eye openness (32% vs. 8% increase of blink duration from upward to downward eye orientation), though eyelid-based estimates are sensitive to how blink onset and offset are derived. These results show that the vertical eye orientation is a systematic confounding factor in video-based blink measurement, with the measurement method influencing the magnitude of observed effects. The findings have important implications for studies investigating blink characteristics where vertical eye orientation varies, and we conclude with practical recommendations for study design and reporting.
Walking towards the future: Exploring OpenTUG’s validity in automatic walking activity analyses and the relationship to cognition in vestibular patients
Emilie Lacroix, Marius Grandjean, Margaux Huyberechts, Lucie Steenbergen, Seyed Abolfazl Ghasemzadeh, Christophe De Vleeschouwer, NaĂŻma Deggouj, Martin Gareth Edwards
Full text
Correction: Collection of body–object interaction ratings for 5,637 Japanese words
Masaya Mochizuki, Naoto Ota
Full text

Computers in Human Behavior

When Tech Makes the Team: Mind Perception as a Unifying Framework for Human and Human-Agent Teams
Alexandra M. Harris-Watson, Lindsay E. Larson
Full text
Formation and Resolution of the Knowledge Sharing Dilemma Under Competitive Pressure: An Evolutionary Game Approach Based on Complex Networks
Maishuang Sun, Huayi Wang
Full text
Self-Regulation and overreliance on artificial intelligence: Unpacking a Paradox through a Mixed-Methods Study in Higher Education
Héctor Galindo-Domínguez, Nahia Delgado, Martín Sainz-de-la-Maza, Jose-María Etxabe
Full text
How artificial intelligence functionalities boost consumer benefit and impulse shopping? The significant role of responsive communication and conversational communication
Hua Pang, Yi Wang, Mohan Sun, Rui Wang
Full text
Beyond Symptoms: Latent Profiles of Student Burnout and Their Social-Cognitive Associations in Online Learning
Yaxin Tu, Changqin Huang, Chengling Gao, Yun-Fang Tu, Yafeng Pan, Gwo-Jen Hwang
Full text
Polite or playful? How service robot type and apology style influence negative word-of-mouth after service failures
Minjung Cho, Joonheui Bae, Erin Cho, Sung Hung Kevin Bae
Full text
Strategic Counter-Misinformation Engagement on Social Media: An Empirical Investigation of Corporate Response Tactics and Consumer Attitude Reconstruction
Xi Han, Xiangxiang Zhou, Tianqi Luo, Yuan Chen, Wenting Han
Full text
Disclosures and Literacy as Determinants of AI-Influencer Recognition and Well-Being
Michaela Forrai, Delia Cristina Balaban, Desirée Schmuck
Full text
From Stress to Emotional Well-being: Exploring How Multiplayer Online Video Games Foster Emotional Resilience Among Generation Z Players
Doarka Das, Juha Munnukka, Outi Niininen
Full text
Gendered inequalities in online harms: Fear, safety work, and online participation
Florence E. Enock, Francesca Stevens, Tvesha Sippy, Jonathan Bright, Miranda Cross, Pica Johansson, Judy Wajcman, Helen Z. Margetts
Full text

Journal of Experimental Social Psychology

Two wrongs is what makes it more right: How retaliatory incivility receives social leniency
Merrick R. Osborne, Suhaib Abdurahman, Ali Omrani, Jackson P. Trager, Morteza Dehghani
Full text
Registered report stage I: Defending or defying democracy? Investigating the relationship between conspiracy beliefs and support for democratic principles [registered report - stage I]
Tisa Bertlich, Felicitas Flade, Roland Imhoff
Full text
Managing threatened identities across everyday situations
N. Derek Brown, Drew S. Jacoby-Senghor, Allyson P. Mackey, Michael L. Slepian
Full text
Just a means to an end? Individuals support direct democracy instrumentally, irrespective of conspiracy mentality
Tisa Bertlich, Fiona Kazarovytska, Roland Imhoff
Full text
Approach-avoidance action tendencies: A replicable approach/avoidance compatibility effect can be found when valence is task irrelevant
Yoann Julliard, Cédric Batailler, François Ric, Marine Rougier, Maude Tagand, Mae Braud, Dominique Muller
Full text

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

The unexpected importance of expectations in self-conscious emotions.
Jessica L. Tracy, Gabrielle C. Ibasco
Full text

Multivariate Behavioral Research

A Hierarchical Ordinal Regression Model for Treatment-Reversal Designs with Application to Non-Overlap Effect Sizes
James Ohisei Uanhoro, Megan Rojo
Full text
Evaluating the Performance of R-Squared Measures in Multilevel Models
Diego Iglesias, Miguel A. Sorrel, Ricardo Olmos
Full text

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

Narratives About Deported Migrants Who Served in the U.S. Military Reduce Animosity Toward Migrants in the United States
Samantha L. Moore-Berg, Opeyemi S. Adeojo, Roman A. Gallardo, Nour Kteily, Boaz Hameiri
Full text
Animosity toward immigrants, especially those who are undocumented, has reached high levels in many parts of the United States. What can be done to counteract anti-immigrant hostility? One solution is to implement media interventions, which are uniquely positioned to reduce animosity. We thus conducted two studies to assess the efficacy of three media interventions to reduce anti-immigrant attitudes. In Study 1 ( N = 2,050), we conducted an intervention tournament and found that one video was particularly effective at reducing anti-immigrant hostility and support for anti-immigrant policies, especially among Republicans. This video shared the story of undocumented immigrants who served in the U.S. military but were subsequently deported due to their legal status. In Study 2 ( N = 3,000), we replicated these findings among nationally representative partisan voters. These results suggest that a simple media intervention has the power to improve attitudes toward undocumented immigrants across the political spectrum.

Psychological Bulletin

Misogynous messages in the media increase hostility to women: Evidence from a meta-analysis of 257 experimental and nonexperimental studies.
Christa Nater, Lilly Felber, Ronja LĂŒke, Alice H. Eagly, Tobias Greitemeyer, David I. Miller, Angela R. Dorrough
Full text

Psychological Methods

The invariance partial pruning approach to the network comparison in time-series and panel data.
Xinkai Du, Sverre Urnes Johnson, Sacha Epskamp
Full text
Drawing credible directed acyclic graphs for causal inference.
Nathan J. Quimpo, Peter M. Steiner
Full text

Psychological Science

Commentary: On the Equal-Opportunity Jerk “Defense”: Rudeness Complicates Sexism Attributions but Comes at a Cost
Shiyao Bao, Anna Bajet, RocĂ­o MartĂ­nez, Johannes MĂŒller-Trede, Isabelle Engeler, Sebastian HafenbrĂ€dl
Full text
Sexism is a pervasive and persistent problem. In their 2022 article “The ‘Equal-Opportunity Jerk’ Defense: Rudeness Can Obfuscate Gender Bias” ( Psychological Science , Vol. 33, pp. 397–411), Belmi et al. argued that sexism can be obfuscated and go unpunished if perpetrators also act rudely toward men: the “equal-opportunity jerk defense.” We introduce a simple Bayesian model that accounts for Belmi et al.’s findings and corroborated their predictions and implications in five preregistered experiments ( N = 6,968 U.S. adults recruited via Prolific). We replicated that being rude toward men decreased perceived sexism but importantly found that it came at the cost of increased punishment (Study 1). Moreover, rudeness primarily decreased actors’ perceived sexism, whereas their actions were still perceived as sexist (Study 2). Sexism ratings were sensitive to prior beliefs about the prevalence of sexism and to the diagnosticity of observed sexist behavior (Supplementary Studies S1-S2), in line with a broader Bayesian perspective. Bias in sexism ratings thus need not implicate fallacious cognitive processes or an “illusion of gender blindness.”
The Relation Between Attributions of Mental Capacities and Moral Standing Across Six Diverse Cultures
Bastian Jaeger, Maarten Bosten
Full text
Whose welfare and interests matter from a moral perspective? This question is at the center of many polarizing debates, for example, on the ethicality of abortion or meat consumption. A widely cited hypothesis holds that attributions of moral standing are guided by which mental capacities an entity is perceived to have. Specifically, perceived sentience (the capacity to feel pleasure and pain) is thought to be the primary determinant, rather than perceived agency (the capacity to navigate the world and social relationships) or other abilities. This has been described as a general feature of moral cognition, but the evidence for this is mixed and overwhelmingly based on Western participants. Here, we examined the link between attributions of mind and moral standing across six culturally diverse countries—Brazil, Nigeria, Italy, Saudi Arabia, India, and the Philippines—using a sample of 1,255 participants (aged 18–74 years old) who were recruited via the online platform Toloka. In every country, entities’ moral standing was most strongly related to their perceived sentience.
From Capture to Control: Initial Capture Increases Learned Suppression
Yue Zhang, Nicholas Gaspelin
Full text
Salient stimuli have the potential to distract us from our immediate goals. Much research has therefore aimed to understand how we learn to use attention to resist distraction by salient stimuli. We propose a new hypothesis whereby an initial instance of distraction can improve future suppression of salient stimuli. Across three experiments ( N = 120 college students, aged 18–35 years), we provide evidence for this hypothesis using a new eye-tracking approach. The results demonstrated that an initial instance of distraction occurred before salient distractors were suppressed. Notably, if this initial instance of distraction was eliminated or weakened via experimental manipulations, learned suppression of the distracting stimuli was greatly reduced. Together, these findings suggest that attentional capture can serve as a learning signal that improves future attentional control. They also indicate that learned suppression emerges rapidly, which has strong implications for models of attention and cognitive control.

Psychology of Music

Gaze behavior, attention allocation, and automaticity in expert chamber music coaches
Robin S Heinsen, Robert A Duke
Full text
Two artist-level chamber music coaches wore eye-tracking glasses while teaching a chamber rehearsal, then participated in two interviews to discuss their teaching – first, immediately after the rehearsal, then approximately 2 weeks later, while watching their lesson videos and eye-tracking recordings. Teachers’ eye movements revealed rich networks of rapid information tracking and goal-directed attention, but both teachers struggled to articulate details of their thinking or their attention allocation, suggesting that they conceive of their teaching behaviors in a broad construal, and the complex attentional behaviors detected in their gaze behavior occurred unconsciously. This is among the first studies to explore attentional mechanisms that underlie expert music teaching in context, specifically analyzing teachers’ momentary attention allocation among several students in relation to specific proximal performance goals. Results illustrate how teachers solved intricate problems, decided what to pursue, and kept track of multiple students in ways that are inaccessible via overt behavior observation. Comparing gaze behavior to interview data suggests that these teachers’ descriptions of their thinking may be incomplete representations of their pedagogical expertise.

Psychology of Popular Media

Interrelational dynamics in problematic video game use: A network analysis.
Chloé Nguyen, Valentin Flaudias, Quentin Hallez
Full text
Once upon a swipe: The impact of storytelling on dating profile appeal.
Gurit E. Birnbaum, Kobi Zholtack
Full text