| 1 | Social influence in creating, maintaining, and breaking the status quo 2025, , 329-343 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 2 | Willingness to Engage in Religious Collective Action: The Role of Group Identification and Identity Fusion | 1.9 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 3 | Racial majority group’s support for racial equality in Malaysia. | 0.9 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 4 | The impact of generative artificial intelligence on socioeconomic inequalities and policy making | 3.3 | 185 | Citations (PDF) |
| 5 | Caught between two worlds: Social identity change among second‐generation Afghan immigrants in Iran | 2.4 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 6 | When stigma is the norm: How weight and social norms influence the healthcare we receive | 2.4 | 13 | Citations (PDF) |
| 7 | Contributors to social well-being from the perspective of older migrants in Australia | 3.0 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 8 | Australia Day or Invasion Day? Perspectives on the Continuing Impact of Colonialism Underlies Public Contestations Around Australia's National Day | 3.7 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 9 | Restless in an Unequal World: Economic Inequality Fuels the Desire for Wealth and Status | 3.7 | 37 | Citations (PDF) |
| 10 | A social identity analysis of how pay inequality divides the workplace | 3.3 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 11 | Moral Expansiveness Around the World: The Role of Societal Factors Across 36 Countries | 4.4 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 12 | A history of collective resilience and collective victimhood: Two sides of the same coin that explain Black Americans' present‐day responses to oppression | 3.2 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 13 | How conceptualizing obesity as a disease affects beliefs about weight, and associated weight stigma and clinical decision‐making in health care | 2.8 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 14 | Mindreading across cultural boundaries | 2.4 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 15 | Preserving prosociality in the face of inequality: A role for multiple group memberships and superordinate group identification | 3.3 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 16 | The Language of Inequality: Evidence Economic Inequality Increases Wealth Category Salience | 3.7 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 17 | Social identity makes group-based social connection possible: Implications for loneliness and mental health | 6.6 | 129 | Citations (PDF) |
| 18 | Moral Polarization Predicts Support for Authoritarian and Progressive Strong Leaders via the Perceived Breakdown of Society | 3.7 | 40 | Citations (PDF) |
| 19 | Ageing well in a foreign land: group memberships protect older immigrants’ wellbeing through enabling social support and integration | 2.7 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 20 | How economic inequality shapes social class stereotyping | 2.8 | 54 | Citations (PDF) |
| 21 | The impact of economic inequality on conspiracy beliefs | 2.8 | 80 | Citations (PDF) |
| 22 | Cracks before the crisis: Polarization prior to COVID‐19 predicts increased collective angst and economic pessimism | 2.3 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 23 | How being rooted in the past can shape the future: The role of social identity continuity in the wish for a strong leader | 8.1 | 16 | Citations (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 public | 3.2 | 23 | Citations (PDF) |
| 25 | Perceived legitimacy of weight-based discrimination: Consequences for group identity, collective action, body satisfaction, and self-esteem | 5.2 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 26 | “Let’s get physical” — or social: The role of physical activity versus social group memberships in predicting depression and anxiety over time | 4.8 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 27 | GROUPS 2 CONNECT: An online activity to maintain social connection and well‐being during COVID‐19 | 3.1 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 28 | Unlocking collective cooperation in the midst of COVID‐19: The role of social support in predicting the social class disparity in cooperation | 3.2 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 29 | Experiments make a good breakfast, but a poor supper | 0.9 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 30 | Developing high-reliability organisations: A social identity model | 5.7 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 31 | Economic inequality and conspiracy theories | 6.6 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 32 | Group? What group? A computational model of the group needs a psychology of “us” (not “them”) | 0.9 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 33 | The diversity of social connectedness experiences among older migrants in Australia | 2.4 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 34 | Individual, group, and temporal perspectives on the link between wealth and realistic threat | 1.8 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 35 | State level income inequality affects cardiovascular stress responses: Evidence from the Midlife in the United States (MIDUS) study | 4.5 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 36 | ‘They’re discriminated against, but so are we’: White Australian‐born perceptions of ingroup and immigrant discrimination over time are not zero sum | 3.2 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 37 | Prosperous But Fearful of Falling: The Wealth Paradox, Collective Angst, and Opposition to Immigration | 3.7 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 38 | Rethinking the nature of the person at the heart of the biopsychosocial model: Exploring social changeways not just personal pathways | 4.5 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 39 | Personal and Political: Post‐Traumatic Stress Through the Lens of Social Identity, Power, and Politics | 3.7 | 55 | Citations (PDF) |
| 40 | Collective psychological ownership and the rise of reactionary counter‐movements defending the status quo | 3.2 | 30 | Citations (PDF) |
| 41 | Life Change, Social Identity, and Health | 23.5 | 136 | Citations (PDF) |
| 42 | Social identification-building interventions to improve health: a systematic review and meta-analysis | 10.2 | 202 | Citations (PDF) |
| 43 | Autochthony Belief and Making Amends to Indigenous Peoples: The Role of Collective Moral Emotions | 1.4 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 44 | COVID‐19 and social psychological research: A silver lining | 1.6 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 45 | To what extent are conspiracy theorists concerned for self versus others? A COVID‐19 test case | 2.3 | 74 | Citations (PDF) |
| 46 | Trust predicts COVID-19 prescribed and discretionary behavioral intentions in 23 countries | 2.5 | 203 | Citations (PDF) |
| 47 | Children’s experience of economic inequality: How earning position influences prosocial behavior | 1.7 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 48 | Physiological stress responses to inequality across income groups in a virtual society | 2.4 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 49 | Responding to Climate Change Disaster | 3.1 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 50 | Robots should be seen and not heard…sometimes: Anthropomorphism and AI service robot interactions | 10.0 | 126 | Citations (PDF) |
| 51 | How economic inequality affects prosocial behavior in children across development | 2.2 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 52 | Consequences of Economic Inequality for the Social and Political Vitality of Society: A Social Identity Analysis | 3.7 | 79 | Citations (PDF) |
| 53 | Negotiating inclusion: Revealing the dynamic interplay between individual and group inclusion goals | 2.3 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 54 | The more you have, the more you want? Higher social class predicts a greater desire for wealth and status | 2.3 | 42 | Citations (PDF) |
| 55 | Enhancing mental health recovery by joining arts-based groups: a role for the social cure approach | 2.0 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 56 | Understanding Support for Populist Radical Right Parties: Toward a Model That Captures Both Demand-and Supply-Side Factors | 1.4 | 64 | Citations (PDF) |
| 57 | The Attitudes of Deconverted and Lifelong Atheists Towards Religious Groups: The Role of Religious and Spiritual Identity | 1.8 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 58 | Subjective status and perceived legitimacy across countries | 2.3 | 47 | Citations (PDF) |
| 59 | The benefits of ethnic activity group participation on older immigrant well-being and host country adjustment | 2.4 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 60 | The role of relative deprivation in majority‐culture support for multiculturalism | 2.4 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 61 | Using social and behavioural science to support COVID-19 pandemic response | 10.8 | 3,893 | Citations (PDF) |
| 62 | The effect of economic inequality on young children's prosocial decision‐making | 2.3 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 63 | From marches to movements: building and sustaining a social movement following collective action | 6.6 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 64 | How Economic Inequality Fuels the Rise and Persistence of the Yellow Vest Movement | 1.0 | 98 | Citations (PDF) |
| 65 | Economic inequality and the rise of far‐right populism: A social psychological analysis | 2.4 | 113 | Citations (PDF) |
| 66 | Group life shapes the psychology and biology of health: The case for a sociopsychobio model | 2.5 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 67 | The Social Identity Approach to Health 2019, , 31-39 | | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 68 | “Our Country Needs a Strong Leader Right Now”: Economic Inequality Enhances the Wish for a Strong Leader | 4.1 | 147 | Citations (PDF) |
| 69 | Unpacking the relationship between religiosity and conspiracy beliefs in Australia | 3.2 | 59 | Citations (PDF) |
| 70 | Identification with arts‐based groups improves mental wellbeing in adults with chronic mental health conditions | 2.4 | 65 | Citations (PDF) |
| 71 | Feeling Hurt: Revisiting the Relationship Between Social and Physical Pain | 3.6 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 72 | The dynamic nature of social norms: New perspectives on norm development, impact, violation, and enforcement | 2.8 | 67 | Citations (PDF) |
| 73 | The Role of Religious Fundamentalism in the Intersection of National and Religious Identities | 1.5 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 74 | Longing for one’s home country: National nostalgia and acculturation among immigrants and natives | 2.4 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 75 | A Multidimensional Analysis of Religious Extremism | 2.5 | 39 | Citations (PDF) |
| 76 | Economic inequality enhances inferences that the normative climate is individualistic and competitive | 2.3 | 116 | Citations (PDF) |
| 77 | Editorial Statement: Social Issues and Policy Review | 6.1 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |
| 78 | The wealth paradox: Prosperity and opposition to immigration | 2.3 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 79 | Putting a Social Psychological Spotlight on Economic Inequality 2019, , 1-18 | | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 80 | GROUPS 4 HEALTH reduces loneliness and social anxiety in adults with psychological distress: Findings from a randomized controlled trial. | 4.2 | 159 | Citations (PDF) |
| 81 | The social psychology of responses to trauma: social identity pathways associated with divergent traumatic responses | 6.8 | 174 | Citations (PDF) |
| 82 | High Economic Inequality Makes Us Feel Less Wealthy | 0.9 | 44 | Citations (PDF) |
| 83 | Do People Want More Wealth and Status in Unequal Societies? 2019, , 289-303 | | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 84 | Social cure, what social cure? The propensity to underestimate the importance of social factors for health | 4.5 | 185 | Citations (PDF) |
| 85 | Social Isolation Predicts Frequent Attendance in Primary Care | 2.9 | 54 | Citations (PDF) |
| 86 | Our Followers Are Lions, Theirs Are Sheep: How Social Identity Shapes Theories About Followership and Social Influence | 3.7 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 87 | Exploring interpersonal recognition as a facilitator of students’ academic and professional identity formation in higher education | 2.9 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 88 | The Reception of Immigrants and Refugees in Western Countries: The Challenges of Our Time | 3.5 | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 89 | Shared Adversity Increases Team Creativity Through Fostering Supportive Interaction | 2.5 | 27 | Citations (PDF) |
| 90 | Ageing well in a foreign land as a process of successful social identity change | 2.0 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 91 | Multiple social groups support adjustment to retirement across cultures | 4.5 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 92 | Cultural Values Moderate the Impact of Relative Deprivation | 2.4 | 48 | Citations (PDF) |
| 93 | Beyond the 'crisis and losers of globalisation' thesis | 0.0 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 94 | Regaining In-Group Continuity in Times of Anxiety About the Group’s Future | 1.3 | 44 | Citations (PDF) |
| 95 | The unfolding impact of leader identity entrepreneurship on burnout, work engagement, and turnover intentions. | 4.4 | 69 | Citations (PDF) |
| 96 | Identity fusion “in the wild”: Moving toward or away from a general theory of identity fusion? | 0.9 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 97 | A Meta-Analytic Review of Social Identification and Health in Organizational Contexts | 9.8 | 252 | Citations (PDF) |
| 98 | To be or not to be (an older driver): social identity theory and driving cessation in later life | 2.7 | 43 | Citations (PDF) |
| 99 | Restoring Agency to the Human Actor | 9.1 | 31 | Citations (PDF) |
| 100 | Personal autonomy in group‐based interventions | 2.3 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 101 | The promise of a better group future: Cognitive alternatives increase students’ self‐efficacy and academic performance | 3.2 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 102 | A social identity analysis of responses to economic inequality | 6.6 | 108 | Citations (PDF) |
| 103 | “Fear of Falling”: Economic Instability Enhances Collective Angst among Societies’ Wealthy Class | 3.5 | 99 | Citations (PDF) |
| 104 | Cultural Identity and the Expression of Depression: A Social Identity Perspective | 2.4 | 75 | Citations (PDF) |
| 105 | The different paths to post‐merger identification for employees from high and low status pre‐merger organizations | 6.3 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 106 | Gossiping About Deviance: Evidence That Deviance Spurs the Gossip That Builds Bonds | 4.1 | 79 | Citations (PDF) |
| 107 | Choir singing and creative writing enhance emotion regulation in adults with chronic mental health conditions | 5.6 | 61 | Citations (PDF) |
| 108 | References 2017, , 192-209 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 109 | Towards a Psychological Analysis of Anomie | 3.7 | 79 | Citations (PDF) |
| 110 | Social Connectedness and Health 2017, , 2174-2182 | | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 111 | Stepping in the Shoes of Leaders of Populist Right-Wing Parties | 1.3 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 112 | Collective memory of a dissolved country: Group-based nostalgia and guilt assignment as predictors of interethnic relations between diaspora groups from former Yugoslavia | 1.1 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 113 | Social Identity Change and Driving in Later Life 2017, , 2196-2200 | | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 114 | The Importance of Developing Students’ Academic and Professional Identities in Higher Education | 0.9 | 45 | Citations (PDF) |
| 115 | A Social Identity Approach to Understanding Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Allegations | 2.5 | 28 | Citations (PDF) |
| 116 | The Florence Nightingale Effect: Organizational Identification Explains the Peculiar Link Between Others’ Suffering and Workplace Functioning in the Homelessness Sector | 2.5 | 22 | Citations (PDF) |
| 117 | The More (Social Group Memberships), the Merrier: Is This the Case for Asians? | 2.5 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 118 | Multiple Social Identities Enhance Health Post-Retirement Because They Are a Basis for Giving Social Support | 2.5 | 76 | Citations (PDF) |
| 119 | Explaining the Appeal of Populist Right‐Wing Parties in Times of Economic Prosperity | 3.7 | 180 | Citations (PDF) |
| 120 | Social identities promote well‐being because they satisfy global psychological needs | 2.3 | 331 | Citations (PDF) |
| 121 | Two pathways through adversity: Predicting well‐being and housing outcomes among homeless service users | 3.2 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 122 | Social group memberships in retirement are associated with reduced risk of premature death: evidence from a longitudinal cohort study | 2.0 | 103 | Citations (PDF) |
| 123 | Beyond old dichotomies: Individual differentiation can occur through group commitment, not despite it | 0.9 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 124 | Breaking the cycle of homelessness: Housing stability and social support as predictors of long-term well-being | 3.7 | 76 | Citations (PDF) |
| 125 | Social Identity Mapping: A procedure for visual representation and assessment of subjective multiple group memberships | 3.2 | 144 | Citations (PDF) |
| 126 | Editorial overview: Current issues and new directions in intergroup relations | 6.6 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 127 | Potent Intergroup Perceptions Are Strategic and Shared | 2.2 | 0 | Citations (PDF) |
| 128 | Not “just words”: Exposure to homophobic epithets leads to dehumanizing and physical distancing from gay men | 2.3 | 64 | Citations (PDF) |
| 129 | Enhancing Well‐being of Homeless Individuals by Building Group Memberships | 2.4 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 130 | Blurring Human–Machine Distinctions: Anthropomorphic Appearance in Social Robots as a Threat to Human Distinctiveness | 3.7 | 265 | Citations (PDF) |
| 131 | Revisiting the Measurement of Anomie | 2.5 | 92 | Citations (PDF) |
| 132 | Increased Pain Communication following Multiple Group Memberships Salience Leads to a Relative Reduction in Pain-Related Brain Activity | 2.5 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 133 | The Sins of Their Fathers: When Current Generations Are Held to Account for the Transgressions of Previous Generations | 3.7 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 134 | Having a Lot of a Good Thing: Multiple Important Group Memberships as a Source of Self-Esteem | 2.5 | 205 | Citations (PDF) |
| 135 | Relative Deprivation and Relative Wealth Enhances Anti-Immigrant Sentiments: The V-Curve Re-Examined | 2.5 | 156 | Citations (PDF) |
| 136 | Discrimination and well-being amongst the homeless: the role of multiple group membership | 2.5 | 81 | Citations (PDF) |
| 137 | Bridging and bonding interactions in higher education: social capital and students’ academic and professional identity formation | 2.5 | 61 | Citations (PDF) |
| 138 | The Impact of Self‐Categorizing as “Homeless” on Well‐Being and Service Use | 1.6 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 139 | Understanding Cultural Identification | 2.4 | 9 | Citations (PDF) |
| 140 | The dark side of inclusion: Undesired acceptance increases aggression | 3.3 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 141 | Why a nudge is not enough: A social identity critique of governance by stealth | 3.9 | 248 | Citations (PDF) |
| 142 | Social Identity Change and Driving in Later Life 2015, , 1-5 | | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 143 | Social Connectedness and Health 2015, , 1-10 | | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 144 | Social Connectedness and Health 2015, , 1-10 | | 46 | Citations (PDF) |
| 145 | Depression and Social Identity | 9.8 | 426 | Citations (PDF) |
| 146 | Leadership as social identity management: Introducing the Identity Leadership Inventory (ILI) to assess and validate a four-dimensional model | 8.1 | 380 | Citations (PDF) |
| 147 | Overplaying the diversity card: When a superordinate group overrepresents the prevalence of a minority group | 3.3 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 148 | The Positive Consequences of Pain | 9.8 | 123 | Citations (PDF) |
| 149 | What makes a group worth dying for? Identity fusion fosters perception of familial ties, promoting self-sacrifice. | 6.2 | 279 | Citations (PDF) |
| 150 | How Groups Affect Our Health and Well‐Being: The Path from Theory to Policy | 6.1 | 306 | Citations (PDF) |
| 151 | No guts, no glory: How framing the collective past paves the way for anti-immigrant sentiments | 2.4 | 119 | Citations (PDF) |
| 152 | 50:50 Hindsight: Appreciating Anew the Contributions of Milgram's Obedience Experiments | 3.5 | 12 | Citations (PDF) |
| 153 | Social isolation schema responds to positive social experiences: Longitudinal evidence from vulnerable populations | 5.6 | 49 | Citations (PDF) |
| 154 | The more prototypical the better? The allure of being seen as one sees oneself | 3.3 | 11 | Citations (PDF) |
| 155 | When Reality Bites: Hopeful Thinking Mediates the Discrimination–Life Satisfaction Relationship | 1.6 | 5 | Citations (PDF) |
| 156 | Low status groups show in-group favoritism to compensate for their low status and compete for higher status | 3.3 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 157 | The difficulty of recognizing less obvious forms of group-based discrimination | 3.3 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 158 | Deviance and Dissent in Groups | 23.5 | 225 | Citations (PDF) |
| 159 | Pain as Social Glue: Shared Pain Increases Cooperation | 4.1 | 305 | Citations (PDF) |
| 160 | Gustatory pleasure and pain. The offset of acute physical pain enhances responsiveness to taste | 2.7 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 161 | Feeling connected again: Interventions that increase social identification reduce depression symptoms in community and clinical settings | 4.8 | 217 | Citations (PDF) |
| 162 | Social and transitional identity: exploring social networks and their significance in a therapeutic community setting | 0.1 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 163 | Social group memberships protect against future depression, alleviate depression symptoms and prevent depression relapse | 4.5 | 436 | Citations (PDF) |
| 164 | How the disadvantaged appraise group-based exclusion: The path from legitimacy to illegitimacy | 6.8 | 34 | Citations (PDF) |
| 165 | What Are We Fighting For?: The Effects of Framing on Ingroup Identification and Allegiance | 2.3 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 166 | The dangers of isolating the individual: the need for a dynamic and socially structured model of personality – commentary on Ferguson (2011) | 10.2 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 167 | Minority goals for interaction with the majority: Seeking distance from the majority and the effect of rejection on identification | 2.3 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 168 | “It Will Not Always Be This Way” | 4.4 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 169 | Neurogenic and Psychogenic Acute Postconcussion Symptoms Can Be Identified After Mild Traumatic Brain Injury | 2.7 | 20 | Citations (PDF) |
| 170 | Bringing Back the System | 4.4 | 36 | Citations (PDF) |
| 171 | Difference makes the heart grow fonder: Perceiving intergroup difference enhances minority groups’ willingness to integrate | 3.3 | 6 | Citations (PDF) |
| 172 | Losing Our Humanity | 3.7 | 129 | Citations (PDF) |
| 173 | The Many Ways to Be Marginal in a Group | 9.8 | 127 | Citations (PDF) |
| 174 | Physical Pain and Guilty Pleasures | 4.4 | 14 | Citations (PDF) |
| 175 | Rebels <i>without</i> a cause: Discrimination appraised as legitimate harms group commitment | 3.3 | 7 | Citations (PDF) |
| 176 | The hidden costs of surveillance for performance and helping behaviour | 3.3 | 17 | Citations (PDF) |
| 177 | When group membership gets personal: A theory of identity fusion. | 5.0 | 646 | Citations (PDF) |
| 178 | Cyber-dehumanization: Violent video game play diminishes our humanity | 2.8 | 94 | Citations (PDF) |
| 179 | The past as a determinant of the present: Historical continuity, collective angst, and opposition to immigration | 2.3 | 144 | Citations (PDF) |
| 180 | The role of psychological symptoms and social group memberships in the development of post‐traumatic stress after traumatic injury | 2.8 | 65 | Citations (PDF) |
| 181 | Sugaring o'er the devil: Moral superiority and group identification help individuals downplay the implications of ingroup rule‐breaking | 2.3 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 182 | What's left behind: Identity continuity moderates the effect of nostalgia on well-being and life choices. | 6.2 | 146 | Citations (PDF) |
| 183 | On the nature of identity fusion: Insights into the construct and a new measure. | 6.2 | 375 | Citations (PDF) |
| 184 | That 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 | 2.7 | 103 | Citations (PDF) |
| 185 | Deviant but desirable: Group variability and evaluation of atypical group members | 2.8 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 186 | Fiftieth Anniversary Editorial | 3.2 | 2 | Citations (PDF) |
| 187 | Celebrating the BJSP's 50th Anniversary | 3.2 | 1 | Citations (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 | 2.6 | 52 | Citations (PDF) |
| 189 | Living With HIV/AIDS: A Psychosocial Perspective on Coping With Prejudice and Discrimination1 | 2.4 | 44 | Citations (PDF) |
| 190 | “We Are, Therefore We Should”: Evidence That In-Group Identification Mediates the Acquisition of In-Group Norms1 | 2.4 | 23 | Citations (PDF) |
| 191 | Group commitment in the face of discrimination: The role of legitimacy appraisals | 2.3 | 53 | Citations (PDF) |
| 192 | When groups have a lot to lose: Historical continuity enhances resistance to a merger | 2.3 | 70 | Citations (PDF) |
| 193 | Negotiating dual identities: The impact of group‐based rejection on identification and acculturation | 2.3 | 84 | Citations (PDF) |
| 194 | Recovering From Strain and Enduring Pain | 4.4 | 182 | Citations (PDF) |
| 195 | Cleansing the Soul by Hurting the Flesh | 4.1 | 121 | Citations (PDF) |
| 196 | Responding to group-based discrimination | 3.3 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 197 | Who is watching over you? The role of shared identity in perceptions of surveillance | 2.3 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 198 | Rule transgressions in groups: The conditional nature of newcomers' willingness to confront deviance | 2.3 | 18 | Citations (PDF) |
| 199 | The social treatment: The benefits of group interventions in residential care settings. | 2.8 | 171 | Citations (PDF) |
| 200 | Different meanings of the social dominance orientation concept: Predicting political attitudes over time | 3.2 | 25 | Citations (PDF) |
| 201 | Watching over your own: How surveillance moderates the impact of shared identity on perceptions of leaders and follower behaviour | 2.3 | 19 | Citations (PDF) |
| 202 | When groups are wrong and deviants are right | 2.3 | 8 | Citations (PDF) |
| 203 | Declining autobiographical memory and the loss of identity: Effects on well-being | 1.1 | 110 | Citations (PDF) |
| 204 | Dying and Killing for One’s Group | 4.1 | 201 | Citations (PDF) |
| 205 | The bases of identification: When optimal distinctiveness needs face social identity threat | 3.2 | 50 | Citations (PDF) |
| 206 | Minority-group identification: Responses to discrimination when group membership is controllable 2009, , 155-176 | | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 207 | Social identification, stress and citizenship in teams: a five‐phase longitudinal study | 3.2 | 105 | Citations (PDF) |
| 208 | The Social Cure | 0.1 | 103 | Citations (PDF) |
| 209 | Getting Together to Get Ahead: The Impact of Social Structure on Women's Networking | 5.9 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 210 | Social Identity, Health and Well‐Being: An Emerging Agenda for Applied Psychology | 6.1 | 1,046 | Citations (PDF) |
| 211 | EU Identification and Endorsement in Context: The Importance of Regional Identity Salience | 3.3 | 21 | Citations (PDF) |
| 212 | When I equals we: Exploring the relation between social and personal identity of extreme right‐wing political party members | 3.2 | 62 | Citations (PDF) |
| 213 | The more (and the more compatible) the merrier: Multiple group memberships and identity compatibility as predictors of adjustment after life transitions | 3.2 | 411 | Citations (PDF) |
| 214 | When is individual mobility costly? The role of economic and social identity factors | 2.3 | 100 | Citations (PDF) |
| 215 | Maintaining group memberships: Social identity continuity predicts well-being after stroke | 2.1 | 494 | Citations (PDF) |
| 216 | Group-Directed Criticisms and Recommendations for Change: Why Newcomers Arouse More Resistance Than Old-Timers | 3.7 | 72 | Citations (PDF) |
| 217 | Why minority group members resent impostors | 2.3 | 39 | Citations (PDF) |
| 218 | Playing the game: when group success is more important than downgrading deviants | 2.3 | 58 | Citations (PDF) |
| 219 | The impact of individualist and collectivist group norms on evaluations of dissenting group members | 2.8 | 95 | Citations (PDF) |
| 220 | Differentiation between and within groups: the influence of individualist and collectivist group norms | 2.3 | 55 | Citations (PDF) |
| 221 | Sticking to our guns: social identity as a basis for the maintenance of commitment to faltering organizational projects | 6.3 | 116 | Citations (PDF) |
| 222 | When Group Members Admit to Being Conformist: The Role of Relative Intragroup Status in Conformity Self-Reports | 3.7 | 84 | Citations (PDF) |
| 223 | Protecting Threatened Identity: Sticking with the Group by Emphasizing Ingroup Heterogeneity | 3.7 | 37 | Citations (PDF) |
| 224 | Taking the strain: Social identity, social support, and the experience of stress | 3.2 | 626 | Citations (PDF) |
| 225 | When differences matter: intergroup distinctiveness and the evaluation of impostors | 2.3 | 29 | Citations (PDF) |
| 226 | Loyalty Without Conformity: Tailoring Self-Perception as a Means of Balancing Belonging and Differentiation | 2.1 | 24 | Citations (PDF) |
| 227 | Suppressing the negative effect of devaluation on group identification: The role of intergroup differentiation and intragroup respect | 2.8 | 38 | Citations (PDF) |
| 228 | Beyond balance: To understand “bias,” social psychology needs to address issues of politics, power, and social perspective | 0.9 | 3 | Citations (PDF) |
| 229 | Cynicism and disengagement among devalued employee groups: the need to ASPIRe | 4.6 | 33 | Citations (PDF) |
| 230 | Social identity, social influence and reactions to potentially stressful tasks: support for the self-categorization model of stress | 3.2 | 184 | Citations (PDF) |
| 231 | The Individual Within the Group: Balancing the Need to Belong With the Need to Be Different | 9.8 | 396 | Citations (PDF) |
| 232 | Intergroup Distinctiveness and Differentiation: A Meta-Analytic Integration. | 6.2 | 306 | Citations (PDF) |
| 233 | Individualist and collectivist norms: when it's ok to go your own way | 2.3 | 105 | Citations (PDF) |
| 234 | Not being what you claim to be: impostors as sources of group threat | 2.3 | 63 | Citations (PDF) |
| 235 | The divisive potential of differences and similarities: The role of intergroup distinctiveness in intergroup differentiation | 6.8 | 85 | Citations (PDF) |
| 236 | Predicting the Paths of Peripherals: The Interaction of Identification and Future Possibilities | 3.7 | 133 | Citations (PDF) |
| 237 | Being Attuned to Intergroup Differences in Mergers: The Role of Aligned Leaders for Low-Status Groups | 3.7 | 45 | Citations (PDF) |
| 238 | On being peripheral: effects of identity insecurity on personal and collective self-esteem | 2.3 | 86 | Citations (PDF) |
| 239 | ?We'reall individuals?: group norms of individualism and collectivism, levels of identification and identity threat | 2.3 | 344 | Citations (PDF) |
| 240 | Changing identity: Predicting adjustment to organizational restructure as a function of subgroup and superordinate identification | 3.2 | 155 | Citations (PDF) |
| 241 | Distinctiveness and the definition of collective self: A tripartite model. 2002, , 147-171 | | 76 | Citations (PDF) |
| 242 | Similarity as a source of differentiation: the role of group identification | 2.3 | 115 | Citations (PDF) |
| 243 | Rebels with a Cause: Group Identification as a Response to Perceived Discrimination from the Mainstream | 3.7 | 347 | Citations (PDF) |
| 244 | In-group variability and motivation to reduce subjective uncertainty. | 1.2 | 65 | Citations (PDF) |
| 245 | Discrimination Constrained and Justified: Variable Effects of Group Variability and In-Group Identification | 2.8 | 51 | Citations (PDF) |
| 246 | Defining dimensions of distinctiveness: Group variability makes a difference to differentiation. | 6.2 | 139 | Citations (PDF) |
| 247 | Strength of identification and intergroup differentiation: the influence of group norms | 2.3 | 194 | Citations (PDF) |
| 248 | Distinctiveness threat and prototypicality: combined effects on intergroup discrimination and collective self‐esteem | 2.3 | 160 | Citations (PDF) |
| 249 | Intergroup norms and intergroup discrimination: Distinctive self-categorization and social identity effects. | 6.2 | 364 | Citations (PDF) |
| 250 | Effects of Stereotypicality and Perceived Group Variability on the Use of Attitudinal Information in Impression Formation | 3.7 | 10 | Citations (PDF) |
| 251 | Out of mind but back in sight: Stereotypes on the rebound. | 6.2 | 653 | Citations (PDF) |
| 252 | Social Identity, Stigma, and Health 0, , 301-316 | | 16 | Citations (PDF) |
| 253 | Trying to unplug for 24 hours: Conspiracy mentality predicts social isolation and negative emotions when refraining from internet use | 0.0 | 1 | Citations (PDF) |