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Jeffrey Lees
Jeffrey Lees
Associate Research Scholar, Princeton University
Verified email at princeton.edu - Homepage
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Inaccurate group meta-perceptions drive negative out-group attributions in competitive contexts
J Lees, M Cikara
Nature Human Behaviour 4 (3), 279-286, 2020
221*2020
The general fault in our fault lines
K Ruggeri, B Većkalov, L Bojanić, TL Andersen, S Ashcroft-Jones, ...
Nature Human Behaviour 5, 1369–1380, 2021
1242021
Understanding and combating misperceived polarization
J Lees, M Cikara
Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B 376 (1822), 20200143, 2021
932021
Intentions to comply with COVID-19 preventive behaviors are associated with personal beliefs, independent of perceived social norms
J Lees, JS Cetron, MC Vollberg, N Reggev, M Cikara
PsyArXiv, 2020
242020
Megastudy identifying effective interventions to strengthen Americans’ democratic attitudes
JG Voelkel, M Stagnaro, J Chu, S Pink, J Mernyk, C Redekopp, I Ghezae, ...
OSF Preprints, 2023
232023
Twitter’s disputed tags may be ineffective at reducing belief in fake news and only reduce intentions to share fake news among Democrats and Independents
J Lees, A McCarter, DM Sarno
Journal of Online Trust and Safety 1 (3), 2022
12*2022
The Spot the Troll Quiz game increases accuracy in discerning between real and inauthentic social media accounts
J Lees, JA Banas, D Linvill, MC Patrick, P Warren
PNAS Nexus 2 (4), pgad094, 2023
102023
Addressing climate change with behavioral science: A global intervention tournament in 63 countries
M Vlasceanu, KC Doell, JB Bak-Coleman, B Todorova, ...
Science advances 10 (6), eadj5778, 2024
82024
Is the moral domain unique? A social influence perspective for the study of moral cognition
J Lees, F Gino
Social and Personality Psychology Compass 11 (8), e12327, 2017
82017
Morally questionable actors' meta-perceptions are accurate but overly positive
J Lees, L Young, A Waytz
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 102, 104371, 2022
52022
Misperceptions of support for climate policy represent multiple phenomena predicted by different factors across intergroup boundaries
J Lees, G Colaizzi, MH Goldberg, SM Constantino
OSF Preprints, 2023
22023
Women, the intellectually humble, and liberals write more persuasive political arguments
J Lees, H Todd, M Barranti
PNAS Nexus 2 (5), pgad143, 2023
22023
Implicit attitudes matter for social judgments of others' preference, but do not make those judgments more or less accurate
J Lees
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 97, 104202, 2021
22021
Hierarchy-Enhancing Misinformation: Social Dominance Motives Are Uniquely Associated With Republicans’ Belief In and Sharing of Election-Related Misinformation
J Lees, VA Parker
PsyArXiv, 2021
22021
A theory of wisdom needs theory of mind
J Lees, L Young
Psychological Inquiry 31 (2), 168-173, 2020
22020
Meta-perception and Misinformation
S Bogart, J Lees
Current Opinion in Psychology 54, 101717, 2023
12023
Community-engaged research is best positioned to catalyze systemic change
H Caggiano, SM Constantino, J Lees, R Majumdar, EU Weber
PsyArXiv, 2023
12023
Political violence and inaccurate metaperceptions
J Lees
Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences 119 (19), e2204045119, 2022
12022
Alluring or Alarming? The Polarizing Effect of Forbidden Knowledge in Political Discourse
VA Parker, AE Wilson, JM Lees, M Facciani, E Kehoe
2024
Is socially responsible capitalism truly polarizing?
DF Stone, J Lees
2024
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