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253 papers • 27,508 citations • Sorted by year • Download PDF (PDF by citations)
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1Social influence in creating, maintaining, and breaking the status quo
2025, , 329-343
0Citations (PDF)
2Willingness to Engage in Religious Collective Action: The Role of Group Identification and Identity Fusion1.93Citations (PDF)
3Racial majority group’s support for racial equality in Malaysia.
Peace and Conflict, 2024, 30, 48-57
0.93Citations (PDF)
4The impact of generative artificial intelligence on socioeconomic inequalities and policy making
PNAS Nexus, 2024, 3,
3.3185Citations (PDF)
5Caught between two worlds: Social identity change among second‐generation Afghan immigrants in Iran2.41Citations (PDF)
6When stigma is the norm: How weight and social norms influence the healthcare we receive2.413Citations (PDF)
7Contributors to social well-being from the perspective of older migrants in Australia3.05Citations (PDF)
8Australia Day or Invasion Day? Perspectives on the Continuing Impact of Colonialism Underlies Public Contestations Around Australia's National Day
Political Psychology, 2023, 44, 61-77
3.78Citations (PDF)
9Restless in an Unequal World: Economic Inequality Fuels the Desire for Wealth and Status3.737Citations (PDF)
10A social identity analysis of how pay inequality divides the workplace3.311Citations (PDF)
11Moral Expansiveness Around the World: The Role of Societal Factors Across 36 Countries4.420Citations (PDF)
12A history of collective resilience and collective victimhood: Two sides of the same coin that explain Black Americans' present‐day responses to oppression3.222Citations (PDF)
13How conceptualizing obesity as a disease affects beliefs about weight, and associated weight stigma and clinical decision‐making in health care2.819Citations (PDF)
14Mindreading across cultural boundaries2.41Citations (PDF)
15Preserving prosociality in the face of inequality: A role for multiple group memberships and superordinate group identification3.37Citations (PDF)
16The Language of Inequality: Evidence Economic Inequality Increases Wealth Category Salience3.740Citations (PDF)
17Social identity makes group-based social connection possible: Implications for loneliness and mental health6.6129Citations (PDF)
18Moral Polarization Predicts Support for Authoritarian and Progressive Strong Leaders via the Perceived Breakdown of Society
Political Psychology, 2022, 43, 671-691
3.740Citations (PDF)
19Ageing well in a foreign land: group memberships protect older immigrants’ wellbeing through enabling social support and integration
Ageing and Society, 2022, 42, 1710-1732
2.712Citations (PDF)
20How economic inequality shapes social class stereotyping2.854Citations (PDF)
21The impact of economic inequality on conspiracy beliefs2.880Citations (PDF)
22Cracks before the crisis: Polarization prior to COVID‐19 predicts increased collective angst and economic pessimism2.36Citations (PDF)
23How being rooted in the past can shape the future: The role of social identity continuity in the wish for a strong leader
Leadership Quarterly, 2022, 33, 101608
8.116Citations (PDF)
24‘Who wants to silence us’? Perceived discrimination of conspiracy theory believers increases ‘conspiracy theorist’ identification when it comes from powerholders – But not from the general public3.223Citations (PDF)
25Perceived legitimacy of weight-based discrimination: Consequences for group identity, collective action, body satisfaction, and self-esteem
Body Image, 2022, 41, 156-162
5.23Citations (PDF)
26“Let’s get physical” — or social: The role of physical activity versus social group memberships in predicting depression and anxiety over time4.828Citations (PDF)
27GROUPS 2 CONNECT: An online activity to maintain social connection and well‐being during COVID‐193.112Citations (PDF)
28Unlocking collective cooperation in the midst of COVID‐19: The role of social support in predicting the social class disparity in cooperation3.22Citations (PDF)
29Experiments make a good breakfast, but a poor supper0.90Citations (PDF)
30Developing high-reliability organisations: A social identity model
Safety Science, 2022, 153, 105814
5.718Citations (PDF)
31Economic inequality and conspiracy theories6.629Citations (PDF)
32Group? What group? A computational model of the group needs a psychology of “us” (not “them”)0.90Citations (PDF)
33The diversity of social connectedness experiences among older migrants in Australia2.49Citations (PDF)
34Individual, group, and temporal perspectives on the link between wealth and realistic threat1.81Citations (PDF)
35State level income inequality affects cardiovascular stress responses: Evidence from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study
Social Science and Medicine, 2022, 311, 115359
4.52Citations (PDF)
36‘They’re discriminated against, but so are we’: White Australian‐born perceptions of ingroup and immigrant discrimination over time are not zero sum3.27Citations (PDF)
37Prosperous But Fearful of Falling: The Wealth Paradox, Collective Angst, and Opposition to Immigration3.725Citations (PDF)
38Rethinking the nature of the person at the heart of the biopsychosocial model: Exploring social changeways not just personal pathways
Social Science and Medicine, 2021, 272, 113566
4.524Citations (PDF)
39Personal and Political: Post‐Traumatic Stress Through the Lens of Social Identity, Power, and Politics
Political Psychology, 2021, 42, 501-533
3.755Citations (PDF)
40Collective psychological ownership and the rise of reactionary counter‐movements defending the status quo3.230Citations (PDF)
41Life Change, Social Identity, and Health
Annual Review of Psychology, 2021, 72, 635-661
23.5136Citations (PDF)
42Social identification-building interventions to improve health: a systematic review and meta-analysis
Health Psychology Review, 2021, 15, 85-112
10.2202Citations (PDF)
43Autochthony Belief and Making Amends to Indigenous Peoples: The Role of Collective Moral Emotions
Social Justice Research, 2021, 34, 53-80
1.410Citations (PDF)
44COVID‐19 and social psychological research: A silver lining1.614Citations (PDF)
45To what extent are conspiracy theorists concerned for self versus others? A COVID‐19 test case2.374Citations (PDF)
46Trust predicts COVID-19 prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions in 23 countries
PLoS ONE, 2021, 16, e0248334
2.5203Citations (PDF)
47Children’s experience of economic inequality: How earning position influences prosocial behavior
Cognitive Development, 2021, 58, 101043
1.710Citations (PDF)
48Physiological stress responses to inequality across income groups in a virtual society2.47Citations (PDF)
49Responding to Climate Change Disaster
European Psychologist, 2021, 26, 161-171
3.125Citations (PDF)
50Robots should be seen and not heard…sometimes: Anthropomorphism and AI service robot interactions
Psychology and Marketing, 2021, 38, 2393-2406
10.0126Citations (PDF)
51How economic inequality affects prosocial behavior in children across development2.29Citations (PDF)
52Consequences of Economic Inequality for the Social and Political Vitality of Society: A Social Identity Analysis
Political Psychology, 2021, 42, 241-266
3.779Citations (PDF)
53Negotiating inclusion: Revealing the dynamic interplay between individual and group inclusion goals2.320Citations (PDF)
54The more you have, the more you want? Higher social class predicts a greater desire for wealth and status2.342Citations (PDF)
55Enhancing mental health recovery by joining arts-based groups: a role for the social cure approach
Arts and Health, 2020, 12, 169-181
2.031Citations (PDF)
56Understanding Support for Populist Radical Right Parties: Toward a Model That Captures Both Demand-and Supply-Side Factors1.464Citations (PDF)
57The Attitudes of Deconverted and Lifelong Atheists Towards Religious Groups: The Role of Religious and Spiritual Identity1.88Citations (PDF)
58Subjective status and perceived legitimacy across countries2.347Citations (PDF)
59The benefits of ethnic activity group participation on older immigrant well-being and host country adjustment2.45Citations (PDF)
60The role of relative deprivation in majority‐culture support for multiculturalism2.420Citations (PDF)
61Using social and behavioural science to support COVID-19 pandemic response
Nature Human Behaviour, 2020, 4, 460-471
10.83,893Citations (PDF)
62The effect of economic inequality on young children's prosocial decision‐making2.321Citations (PDF)
63From marches to movements: building and sustaining a social movement following collective action6.634Citations (PDF)
64How Economic Inequality Fuels the Rise and Persistence of the Yellow Vest Movement1.098Citations (PDF)
65Economic inequality and the rise of far‐right populism: A social psychological analysis2.4113Citations (PDF)
66Group life shapes the psychology and biology of health: The case for a sociopsychobio model2.531Citations (PDF)
67The Social Identity Approach to Health
2019, , 31-39
10Citations (PDF)
68“Our Country Needs a Strong Leader Right Now”: Economic Inequality Enhances the Wish for a Strong Leader
Psychological Science, 2019, 30, 1625-1637
4.1147Citations (PDF)
69Unpacking the relationship between religiosity and conspiracy beliefs in Australia3.259Citations (PDF)
70Identification with arts‐based groups improves mental wellbeing in adults with chronic mental health conditions2.465Citations (PDF)
71Feeling Hurt: Revisiting the Relationship Between Social and Physical Pain
Review of General Psychology, 2019, 23, 320-335
3.628Citations (PDF)
72The dynamic nature of social norms: New perspectives on norm development, impact, violation, and enforcement2.867Citations (PDF)
73The Role of Religious Fundamentalism in the Intersection of National and Religious Identities1.512Citations (PDF)
74Longing for one’s home country: National nostalgia and acculturation among immigrants and natives2.422Citations (PDF)
75A Multidimensional Analysis of Religious Extremism2.539Citations (PDF)
76Economic inequality enhances inferences that the normative climate is individualistic and competitive2.3116Citations (PDF)
77Editorial Statement: Social Issues and Policy Review6.11Citations (PDF)
78The wealth paradox: Prosperity and opposition to immigration2.348Citations (PDF)
79Putting a Social Psychological Spotlight on Economic Inequality
2019, , 1-18
17Citations (PDF)
80GROUPS 4 HEALTH reduces loneliness and social anxiety in adults with psychological distress: Findings from a randomized controlled trial.4.2159Citations (PDF)
81The social psychology of responses to trauma: social identity pathways associated with divergent traumatic responses6.8174Citations (PDF)
82High Economic Inequality Makes Us Feel Less Wealthy0.944Citations (PDF)
83Do People Want More Wealth and Status in Unequal Societies?
2019, , 289-303
8Citations (PDF)
84Social cure, what social cure? The propensity to underestimate the importance of social factors for health
Social Science and Medicine, 2018, 198, 14-21
4.5185Citations (PDF)
85Social Isolation Predicts Frequent Attendance in Primary Care2.954Citations (PDF)
86Our Followers Are Lions, Theirs Are Sheep: How Social Identity Shapes Theories About Followership and Social Influence
Political Psychology, 2018, 39, 23-42
3.731Citations (PDF)
87Exploring interpersonal recognition as a facilitator of students’ academic and professional identity formation in higher education2.911Citations (PDF)
88The Reception of Immigrants and Refugees in Western Countries: The Challenges of Our Time
Journal of Social Issues, 2018, 74, 662-673
3.516Citations (PDF)
89Shared Adversity Increases Team Creativity Through Fostering Supportive Interaction2.527Citations (PDF)
90Ageing well in a foreign land as a process of successful social identity change2.033Citations (PDF)
91Multiple social groups support adjustment to retirement across cultures
Social Science and Medicine, 2018, 208, 200-208
4.533Citations (PDF)
92Cultural Values Moderate the Impact of Relative Deprivation2.448Citations (PDF)
93Beyond the 'crisis and losers of globalisation' thesis
Queensland Review, 2018, 25, 27-38
0.06Citations (PDF)
94Regaining In-Group Continuity in Times of Anxiety About the Group’s Future
Social Psychology, 2018, 49, 311-329
1.344Citations (PDF)
95The unfolding impact of leader identity entrepreneurship on burnout, work engagement, and turnover intentions.4.469Citations (PDF)
96Identity fusion “in the wild”: Moving toward or away from a general theory of identity fusion?0.93Citations (PDF)
97A Meta-Analytic Review of Social Identification and Health in Organizational Contexts9.8252Citations (PDF)
98To be or not to be (an older driver): social identity theory and driving cessation in later life
Ageing and Society, 2017, 37, 1597-1608
2.743Citations (PDF)
99Restoring Agency to the Human Actor9.131Citations (PDF)
100Personal autonomy in group‐based interventions2.318Citations (PDF)
101The promise of a better group future: Cognitive alternatives increase students’ self‐efficacy and academic performance3.220Citations (PDF)
102A social identity analysis of responses to economic inequality6.6108Citations (PDF)
103“Fear of Falling”: Economic Instability Enhances Collective Angst among Societies’ Wealthy Class
Journal of Social Issues, 2017, 73, 61-79
3.599Citations (PDF)
104Cultural Identity and the Expression of Depression: A Social Identity Perspective2.475Citations (PDF)
105The different paths to post‐merger identification for employees from high and low status pre‐merger organizations6.325Citations (PDF)
106Gossiping About Deviance: Evidence That Deviance Spurs the Gossip That Builds Bonds
Psychological Science, 2017, 28, 1610-1619
4.179Citations (PDF)
107Choir singing and creative writing enhance emotion regulation in adults with chronic mental health conditions5.661Citations (PDF)
108References
2017, , 192-209
0Citations (PDF)
109Towards a Psychological Analysis of Anomie
Political Psychology, 2017, 38, 1009-1023
3.779Citations (PDF)
110Social Connectedness and Health
2017, , 2174-2182
12Citations (PDF)
111Stepping in the Shoes of Leaders of Populist Right-Wing Parties
Social Psychology, 2017, 48, 40-46
1.320Citations (PDF)
112Collective memory of a dissolved country: Group-based nostalgia and guilt assignment as predictors of interethnic relations between diaspora groups from former Yugoslavia1.124Citations (PDF)
113Social Identity Change and Driving in Later Life
2017, , 2196-2200
0Citations (PDF)
114The Importance of Developing Students’ Academic and Professional Identities in Higher Education0.945Citations (PDF)
115A Social Identity Approach to Understanding Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Allegations
PLoS ONE, 2016, 11, e0153205
2.528Citations (PDF)
116The Florence Nightingale Effect: Organizational Identification Explains the Peculiar Link Between Others’ Suffering and Workplace Functioning in the Homelessness Sector2.522Citations (PDF)
117The More (Social Group Memberships), the Merrier: Is This the Case for Asians?2.534Citations (PDF)
118Multiple Social Identities Enhance Health Post-Retirement Because They Are a Basis for Giving Social Support2.576Citations (PDF)
119Explaining the Appeal of Populist Right‐Wing Parties in Times of Economic Prosperity
Political Psychology, 2016, 37, 275-292
3.7180Citations (PDF)
120Social identities promote well‐being because they satisfy global psychological needs2.3331Citations (PDF)
121Two pathways through adversity: Predicting well‐being and housing outcomes among homeless service users3.229Citations (PDF)
122Social group memberships in retirement are associated with reduced risk of premature death: evidence from a longitudinal cohort study
BMJ Open, 2016, 6, e010164
2.0103Citations (PDF)
123Beyond old dichotomies: Individual differentiation can occur through group commitment, not despite it0.90Citations (PDF)
124Breaking the cycle of homelessness: Housing stability and social support as predictors of long-term well-being
Housing Studies, 2016, 31, 410-426
3.776Citations (PDF)
125Social Identity Mapping: A procedure for visual representation and assessment of subjective multiple group memberships3.2144Citations (PDF)
126Editorial overview: Current issues and new directions in intergroup relations6.60Citations (PDF)
127Potent Intergroup Perceptions Are Strategic and Shared
Psychological Inquiry, 2016, 27, 319-323
2.20Citations (PDF)
128Not “just words”: Exposure to homophobic epithets leads to dehumanizing and physical distancing from gay men2.364Citations (PDF)
129Enhancing Well‐being of Homeless Individuals by Building Group Memberships2.424Citations (PDF)
130Blurring Human–Machine Distinctions: Anthropomorphic Appearance in Social Robots as a Threat to Human Distinctiveness3.7265Citations (PDF)
131Revisiting the Measurement of Anomie
PLoS ONE, 2016, 11, e0158370
2.592Citations (PDF)
132Increased Pain Communication following Multiple Group Memberships Salience Leads to a Relative Reduction in Pain-Related Brain Activity
PLoS ONE, 2016, 11, e0163117
2.57Citations (PDF)
133The Sins of Their Fathers: When Current Generations Are Held to Account for the Transgressions of Previous Generations
Political Psychology, 2015, 36, 479-487
3.78Citations (PDF)
134Having a Lot of a Good Thing: Multiple Important Group Memberships as a Source of Self-Esteem
PLoS ONE, 2015, 10, e0124609
2.5205Citations (PDF)
135Relative Deprivation and Relative Wealth Enhances Anti-Immigrant Sentiments: The V-Curve Re-Examined
PLoS ONE, 2015, 10, e0139156
2.5156Citations (PDF)
136Discrimination and well-being amongst the homeless: the role of multiple group membership2.581Citations (PDF)
137Bridging and bonding interactions in higher education: social capital and students’ academic and professional identity formation2.561Citations (PDF)
138The Impact of Self‐Categorizing as “Homeless” on Well‐Being and Service Use1.634Citations (PDF)
139Understanding Cultural Identification2.49Citations (PDF)
140The dark side of inclusion: Undesired acceptance increases aggression3.324Citations (PDF)
141Why a nudge is not enough: A social identity critique of governance by stealth3.9248Citations (PDF)
142Social Identity Change and Driving in Later Life
2015, , 1-5
2Citations (PDF)
143Social Connectedness and Health
2015, , 1-10
18Citations (PDF)
144Social Connectedness and Health
2015, , 1-10
46Citations (PDF)
145Depression and Social Identity9.8426Citations (PDF)
146Leadership as social identity management: Introducing the Identity Leadership Inventory (ILI) to assess and validate a four-dimensional model
Leadership Quarterly, 2014, 25, 1001-1024
8.1380Citations (PDF)
147Overplaying the diversity card: When a superordinate group overrepresents the prevalence of a minority group3.38Citations (PDF)
148The Positive Consequences of Pain9.8123Citations (PDF)
149What makes a group worth dying for? Identity fusion fosters perception of familial ties, promoting self-sacrifice.6.2279Citations (PDF)
150How Groups Affect Our Health and Well‐Being: The Path from Theory to Policy6.1306Citations (PDF)
151No guts, no glory: How framing the collective past paves the way for anti-immigrant sentiments2.4119Citations (PDF)
15250:50 Hindsight: Appreciating Anew the Contributions of Milgram's Obedience Experiments
Journal of Social Issues, 2014, 70, 587-602
3.512Citations (PDF)
153Social isolation schema responds to positive social experiences: Longitudinal evidence from vulnerable populations5.649Citations (PDF)
154The more prototypical the better? The allure of being seen as one sees oneself3.311Citations (PDF)
155When Reality Bites: Hopeful Thinking Mediates the Discrimination–Life Satisfaction Relationship1.65Citations (PDF)
156Low status groups show in-group favoritism to compensate for their low status and compete for higher status3.336Citations (PDF)
157The difficulty of recognizing less obvious forms of group-based discrimination3.37Citations (PDF)
158Deviance and Dissent in Groups
Annual Review of Psychology, 2014, 65, 461-485
23.5225Citations (PDF)
159Pain as Social Glue: Shared Pain Increases Cooperation
Psychological Science, 2014, 25, 2079-2085
4.1305Citations (PDF)
160Gustatory pleasure and pain. The offset of acute physical pain enhances responsiveness to taste
Appetite, 2014, 72, 150-155
2.736Citations (PDF)
161Feeling connected again: Interventions that increase social identification reduce depression symptoms in community and clinical settings
Journal of Affective Disorders, 2014, 159, 139-146
4.8217Citations (PDF)
162Social and transitional identity: exploring social networks and their significance in a therapeutic community setting
Therapeutic Communities, 2014, 35, 10-20
0.163Citations (PDF)
163Social group memberships protect against future depression, alleviate depression symptoms and prevent depression relapse
Social Science and Medicine, 2013, 98, 179-186
4.5436Citations (PDF)
164How the disadvantaged appraise group-based exclusion: The path from legitimacy to illegitimacy6.834Citations (PDF)
165What Are We Fighting For?: The Effects of Framing on Ingroup Identification and Allegiance2.36Citations (PDF)
166The dangers of isolating the individual: the need for a dynamic and socially structured model of personality – commentary on Ferguson (2011)
Health Psychology Review, 2013, 7, S79-S84
10.23Citations (PDF)
167Minority goals for interaction with the majority: Seeking distance from the majority and the effect of rejection on identification2.310Citations (PDF)
168“It Will Not Always Be This Way”4.421Citations (PDF)
169Neurogenic and Psychogenic Acute Postconcussion Symptoms Can Be Identified After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury2.720Citations (PDF)
170Bringing Back the System4.436Citations (PDF)
171Difference makes the heart grow fonder: Perceiving intergroup difference enhances minority groups’ willingness to integrate3.36Citations (PDF)
172Losing Our Humanity3.7129Citations (PDF)
173The Many Ways to Be Marginal in a Group9.8127Citations (PDF)
174Physical Pain and Guilty Pleasures4.414Citations (PDF)
175Rebels <i>without</i> a cause: Discrimination appraised as legitimate harms group commitment3.37Citations (PDF)
176The hidden costs of surveillance for performance and helping behaviour3.317Citations (PDF)
177When group membership gets personal: A theory of identity fusion.
Psychological Review, 2012, 119, 441-456
5.0646Citations (PDF)
178Cyber-dehumanization: Violent video game play diminishes our humanity2.894Citations (PDF)
179The past as a determinant of the present: Historical continuity, collective angst, and opposition to immigration2.3144Citations (PDF)
180The role of psychological symptoms and social group memberships in the development of post‐traumatic stress after traumatic injury2.865Citations (PDF)
181Sugaring o'er the devil: Moral superiority and group identification help individuals downplay the implications of ingroup rule‐breaking2.333Citations (PDF)
182What's left behind: Identity continuity moderates the effect of nostalgia on well-being and life choices.6.2146Citations (PDF)
183On the nature of identity fusion: Insights into the construct and a new measure.6.2375Citations (PDF)
184That which doesn’t kill us can make us stronger (and more satisfied with life): The contribution of personal and social changes to well-being after acquired brain injury
Psychology and Health, 2011, 26, 353-369
2.7103Citations (PDF)
185Deviant but desirable: Group variability and evaluation of atypical group members2.825Citations (PDF)
186Fiftieth Anniversary Editorial3.22Citations (PDF)
187Celebrating the BJSP's 50th Anniversary3.21Citations (PDF)
188‘I remember therefore I am, and I am therefore I remember’: Exploring the contributions of episodic and semantic self-knowledge to strength of identity
British Journal of Psychology, 2011, 102, 184-203
2.652Citations (PDF)
189Living With HIV/AIDS: A Psychosocial Perspective on Coping With Prejudice and Discrimination12.444Citations (PDF)
190“We Are, Therefore We Should”: Evidence That In-Group Identification Mediates the Acquisition of In-Group Norms12.423Citations (PDF)
191Group commitment in the face of discrimination: The role of legitimacy appraisals2.353Citations (PDF)
192When groups have a lot to lose: Historical continuity enhances resistance to a merger2.370Citations (PDF)
193Negotiating dual identities: The impact of group‐based rejection on identification and acculturation2.384Citations (PDF)
194Recovering From Strain and Enduring Pain4.4182Citations (PDF)
195Cleansing the Soul by Hurting the Flesh
Psychological Science, 2011, 22, 334-335
4.1121Citations (PDF)
196Responding to group-based discrimination3.318Citations (PDF)
197Who is watching over you? The role of shared identity in perceptions of surveillance2.319Citations (PDF)
198Rule transgressions in groups: The conditional nature of newcomers' willingness to confront deviance2.318Citations (PDF)
199The social treatment: The benefits of group interventions in residential care settings.
Psychology and Aging, 2010, 25, 157-167
2.8171Citations (PDF)
200Different meanings of the social dominance orientation concept: Predicting political attitudes over time3.225Citations (PDF)
201Watching over your own: How surveillance moderates the impact of shared identity on perceptions of leaders and follower behaviour2.319Citations (PDF)
202When groups are wrong and deviants are right2.38Citations (PDF)
203Declining autobiographical memory and the loss of identity: Effects on well-being1.1110Citations (PDF)
204Dying and Killing for One’s Group
Psychological Science, 2010, 21, 1176-1183
4.1201Citations (PDF)
205The bases of identification: When optimal distinctiveness needs face social identity threat3.250Citations (PDF)
206Minority-group identification: Responses to discrimination when group membership is controllable
2009, , 155-176
10Citations (PDF)
207Social identification, stress and citizenship in teams: a five‐phase longitudinal study
Stress and Health, 2009, 25, 21-30
3.2105Citations (PDF)
208The Social Cure
Scientific American Mind, 2009, 20, 26-33
0.1103Citations (PDF)
209Getting Together to Get Ahead: The Impact of Social Structure on Women's Networking5.963Citations (PDF)
210Social Identity, Health and Well‐Being: An Emerging Agenda for Applied Psychology
Applied Psychology, 2009, 58, 1-23
6.11,046Citations (PDF)
211EU Identification and Endorsement in Context: The Importance of Regional Identity Salience3.321Citations (PDF)
212When I equals we: Exploring the relation between social and personal identity of extreme right‐wing political party members3.262Citations (PDF)
213The more (and the more compatible) the merrier: Multiple group memberships and identity compatibility as predictors of adjustment after life transitions3.2411Citations (PDF)
214When is individual mobility costly? The role of economic and social identity factors2.3100Citations (PDF)
215Maintaining group memberships: Social identity continuity predicts well-being after stroke2.1494Citations (PDF)
216Group-Directed Criticisms and Recommendations for Change: Why Newcomers Arouse More Resistance Than Old-Timers3.772Citations (PDF)
217Why minority group members resent impostors2.339Citations (PDF)
218Playing the game: when group success is more important than downgrading deviants2.358Citations (PDF)
219The impact of individualist and collectivist group norms on evaluations of dissenting group members2.895Citations (PDF)
220Differentiation between and within groups: the influence of individualist and collectivist group norms2.355Citations (PDF)
221Sticking to our guns: social identity as a basis for the maintenance of commitment to faltering organizational projects6.3116Citations (PDF)
222When Group Members Admit to Being Conformist: The Role of Relative Intragroup Status in Conformity Self-Reports3.784Citations (PDF)
223Protecting Threatened Identity: Sticking with the Group by Emphasizing Ingroup Heterogeneity3.737Citations (PDF)
224Taking the strain: Social identity, social support, and the experience of stress3.2626Citations (PDF)
225When differences matter: intergroup distinctiveness and the evaluation of impostors2.329Citations (PDF)
226Loyalty Without Conformity: Tailoring Self-Perception as a Means of Balancing Belonging and Differentiation
Self and Identity, 2005, 4, 81-95
2.124Citations (PDF)
227Suppressing the negative effect of devaluation on group identification: The role of intergroup differentiation and intragroup respect2.838Citations (PDF)
228Beyond balance: To understand “bias,” social psychology needs to address issues of politics, power, and social perspective0.93Citations (PDF)
229Cynicism and disengagement among devalued employee groups: the need to ASPIRe4.633Citations (PDF)
230Social identity, social influence and reactions to potentially stressful tasks: support for the self-categorization model of stress
Stress and Health, 2004, 20, 3-9
3.2184Citations (PDF)
231The Individual Within the Group: Balancing the Need to Belong With the Need to Be Different9.8396Citations (PDF)
232Intergroup Distinctiveness and Differentiation: A Meta-Analytic Integration.6.2306Citations (PDF)
233Individualist and collectivist norms: when it's ok to go your own way2.3105Citations (PDF)
234Not being what you claim to be: impostors as sources of group threat2.363Citations (PDF)
235The divisive potential of differences and similarities: The role of intergroup distinctiveness in intergroup differentiation6.885Citations (PDF)
236Predicting the Paths of Peripherals: The Interaction of Identification and Future Possibilities3.7133Citations (PDF)
237Being Attuned to Intergroup Differences in Mergers: The Role of Aligned Leaders for Low-Status Groups3.745Citations (PDF)
238On being peripheral: effects of identity insecurity on personal and collective self-esteem2.386Citations (PDF)
239?We'reall individuals?: group norms of individualism and collectivism, levels of identification and identity threat2.3344Citations (PDF)
240Changing identity: Predicting adjustment to organizational restructure as a function of subgroup and superordinate identification3.2155Citations (PDF)
241Distinctiveness and the definition of collective self: A tripartite model.
2002, , 147-171
76Citations (PDF)
242Similarity as a source of differentiation: the role of group identification2.3115Citations (PDF)
243Rebels with a Cause: Group Identification as a Response to Perceived Discrimination from the Mainstream3.7347Citations (PDF)
244In-group variability and motivation to reduce subjective uncertainty.
Group Dynamics, 2000, 4, 184-198
1.265Citations (PDF)
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250Effects of Stereotypicality and Perceived Group Variability on the Use of Attitudinal Information in Impression Formation3.710Citations (PDF)
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252Social Identity, Stigma, and Health
0, , 301-316
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253Trying to unplug for 24 hours: Conspiracy mentality predicts social isolation and negative emotions when refraining from internet use0.01Citations (PDF)