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Nathan Jones (SED & CISS Affiliate)
Surfacing Principals’ Beliefs About Instruction for Students With Disabilities: A Qualitative Analysis (
Exceptional Children, December 2023) Jones and his colleagues
highlight how underlying beliefs regarding the purpose of special education and students, teaching, and learning drove principals’ visions of instructional quality more than specific practices did.
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Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate)
Listening to Autistic Voices Regarding Competing for Social Status (
Autism, December 2023) Caldwell-Harris and her coauthor
review writings by autistic people and suggest that autistic people find status-seeking illogical, and prefer egalitarian relationships.
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Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) and Shinae Choi (Previous Visiting Scholar, Professor of Consumer Sciences & CISS Affiliate)
Just the Two of Us? The Psychological Impact of Martial Dissolution on Childless Older Adults (
Innovation in Aging, December 2023) Carr and Choi
discuss implications for understanding late-life mental health, underscoring that childlessness does not uniformly compromise mental health among unmarried persons, and that some parent-child relations (especially step-relations) may be a source of stress rather than solace.
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Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Religious Stress Coping, Memory, and Markers of Brain Pathology in Individuals with Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer’s Disease from the Colombia-Boston Biomarker Study (Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, December 2023). Cronin-Golomb and her coauthors examined religious stress coping in cognitively unimpaired mutation carriers from the world’s largest ADAD kindred and its relation to markers of brain pathology and memory. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate)
Memory Learning Curve and in vivo Brain Pathology in Non-Demented Individuals with Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer’s Disease: Findings from the Colombia-Boston Biomarker Study (
Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, December 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her coauthors used fNIRS to measure brain activity in prefrontal and motor region of interests (ROIs) during single- and dual-task walking, with the goal of identifying neural correlates.
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Kristin Long (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Siblings FORWARD: Development of a New Program to Engage Siblings of Autistic Adults in Future Planning (Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, January 2024) Long and her coauthors consider the Siblings FORWARD (Focusing on Relationships, Well-being, and Responsibility aheaD) program concept for supporting siblings of autistic adults finding strong enthusiasm for the Siblings FORWARD concept warrants moving forward to examine preliminary acceptability and feasibility
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William Grimes (CAS, Political Science & Pardee) The Varieties of Financial Statecraft and Middle Powers: Assessing South Korea’s Strategic Involvement in Regional Financial Cooperation (The Pacific Review, January 2024) Grimes and his coauthors posit that middle powers’ relative position within their home regions explains such differences among the financial statecraft of emerging powers.
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Mary Elizabeth Collins (SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) Disconnected Youth in Urban Areas: Can Youth Councils Enhance Connection to School and Work? (Journal of Applied Youth Studies, November 2023) Collins and her co-authors find that most urban areas had operating youth councils and that youth disconnection rates were lower in areas with youth councils. |
Michelle Amazeen (COM, Director, Communication Research Center & CISS Affiliate) Refuting Misinformation: Examining Theoretical Underpinnings of Refutational Interventions (Current Opinion in Psychology, November 2023) Amazeen and her co-author examine the theoretical grounding and advancements in the literature on prebunking and debunking interventions. |
Annika Schmeding (GRS ‘2020, Anthropology) Sufi Civilities: Religious Authority & Political Change in Afghanistan (Stanford University Press, November 2023) Schmeding offers a rare on-the-ground view into how Sufi leaders react to moments of transition within a highly insecure environment, and how humanity shines through the darkness during times of turmoil. |
Erica Larsen (GRS ’19, Anthropology) Ethics of Belonging: Education, Religion & Politics in Manado, Indonesia (Hawaii University Press, November 2023) Larson investigates the dynamics of ethical deliberation about religious coexistence. In this analysis, schools are understood as central sites for exchange about the ethics and politics of belonging in the nation. |
Thomas Barfield (CAS, Anthropology) Shadow Empires: An Alternative Imperial History (Princeton University Press, 2023) Barfield offers an original study of empire creation and its consequences, from ancient through early modern times |
Merry I. White (CAS, Anthropology) Ways of Eating: Exploring Food Through History & Culture (University of California Press, November 2023) White and her co-author introduce readers to world food history and food anthropology offering new ways to understand food in relation to its natural and cultural histories and the social rules that shape our meals. |
Louis Chude-Sokei (CAS, African American and Black Diaspora Studies) Technologie Und Race: Essays Der Migration (Translated by Utku Mogultay) (August Verlag, May 2023) Chude-Sokei shares penetrating investigations into the interconnections of slavery, its afterlife and technological development, the story of the slave who was present at the “birth of America” and became a national attraction from 1835 onwards. |
John Thornton (CAS, History) Afonso I Mvemba a Nzinga, King of Kongo: His Life and Correspondence (Translated by Luis Madureira) (Hackett Publishing, November 2023) Thornton offers translations of the extant letters of the king of Kongo’s history, Afonso I (r. 1506–1542), and analysis of what these letters tell us about the life and times of one of the most important rulers anywhere in the world during the sixteenth century. |
Anne Short Gianotti (CAS, Earth and Environment & CISS Affiliate) Animating the urban: between infrastructure and encounter (Urban Geography, November 2023) Short Gianotti and her colleagues offer generative tools grounded in another-than-human standpoint inviting us to “think cities”differently. |
Mary Elizabeth Collins (SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) The Global Context of Youth Engagement: A Scoping Review of Youth Councils in Municipal Government (Children and Youth Services Review, November 2023) Collins and her colleagues demonstrate the promise of youth engagement in policy decision-making, but also the need for more systematic research documenting the best practices and impacts of municipal youth councils. |
Amanda Tarullo (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Child Biological Stress and Maternal Caregiving Style Are Associated with school Readiness (Early Childhood Research Quarterly, November 2023) Tarullo and her c0-authors provide new evidence that biological stress is related to academic competency in early childhood and demonstrate the importance of structured, non-intrusive parenting when preparing children for long-term academic success. |
Tarek Hassan (CAS, Economics) The Immigrant Next Door (American Economic Review, November 2023) Hassan and his colleagues study how decades-long exposure to individuals of a given foreign descent shapes natives’ attitudes and behavior toward that group, showing that long-term exposure to a given foreign ancestry leads to more generous behavior specifically toward that group’s ancestral country. |
Frank Korom (CAS, Anthropology) Oral Hagiographies of Guru Bawa (The Routledge Companion to the Anthropology of Performance, November 2023) In this chapter, Korom explores how storytelling plays a vital and fundamental role in what Weber calls “routinization”. |
Joshua R. Robinson (CAS, Archeology) A Context for Connectivity: Insights to Environmental Heterogeneity in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene of Southern Africa Through Measuring Isotope Space and Overlap (Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology, November 2023) In this publication, Robinson tests whether sites within the same environmental zones overlap in isotope space and finds that there is greater intra-regional environmental heterogeneity than expected. |
Jonathan Mijs (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Does Informing Citizens About the Non-meritocratic Nature of Inequality Bolster Support for a Universal Basic Income? Evidence From a Population-Based Survey Experiment (European Societies, November 2023) Mijs and his co-authors theorize that citizens’ precarization and policymakers’ enthusiasm for a universal basic income (UBI) due to people overestimating society’s meritocratic nature, finding that a UBI may be deemed too radical an approach to addressing inequality. |
Fallou Ngom (CAS, Anthropology) and Daivi Rodima-Taylor (BU NEH Ajami Project Manager) Ajami Literacies of Africa: The Wolof, Mandinka, Hausa, and Fula Traditions (Islamic Africa, November 2023) Ngom and Rodima-Taylor co-edited a special issue in Islamic Africa (vols. 14.2 and 15.1), situating African Ajami studies within participatory multimedia and digital archiving approaches, and centers around the knowledge generated through the African Ajami research project funded by the National Endowment for the Humanities. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Rates and Predictors of Returns to Homelessness Among Veterans, 2018-2022 (American Journal of Preventive Medicine, November 2023) Byrne and his co-author examine rates and predictors of returns to homelessness among veterans finding that the most critical period seems to be the first year [after placement], when 1 in 10 veterans return to homelessness. |
Mary Elizabeth Collins (SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) Post-Secondary Vocational Education for Youth Leaving Care: Examining a Potential Pathway to Successful Outcomes (British Educational Research Journal, November 2023) In this paper, Collins and her co-authors examine PSVE for care leavers by reviewing available data, examining policy context and utilising relevant theories. We offer next steps in policy, practice and theory development. |
Michael Otto (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Caveat Emptor: Mental Health Specialty Certifications and the Public’s Preferences for Clinical Care (American Psychologist, November 2023) Otto and his colleagues examine preferences for mental health clinicians among potential consumers and factors that may inform these preferences, specifically comparing preferences for doctoral-level mental health clinicians and masters-level clinicians with and without specialty certification for treating anxiety symptoms. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) Are Dominant figures More Trustworthy? Examining the Relation Between Parental Authoritarianism and Children’s Trust Preferences in the United States and China (Infant and Child Development, November 2023) Corriveau and her authors propose that different levels of authoritarianism – advocacies to obey authorities – in Western and Eastern cultures may explain the potential difference in children’s selective trust. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Issues for Studies on E-cigarettes and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disorder (American Journal of Preventative Medicine, November 2023) Stokes and his colleagues contend that the article “Cigarettes, ENDS use, and Chronic Obstructive Pulmonary Disease Incidence: A Prospective Longitudinal Study,” Cook et al.1 stating that e-cigarette use has no relation to COPD is not well supported. |
Molly Richard (CISS Postdoctoral Fellow) Race Matters in Addressing Homelessness: A Scoping Review and Call for Critical Research (American Journal of Community Psychology, August 2023) Richard reviews research at the intersections of race and homelessness to advance efforts to understand and address racial inequities. In addition to charting findings and implications, included studies are appraised against research principles developed by Critical Race Theory scholars, mapping the potential of existing research on race and homelessness to challenge racism. |
William Grimes (Pardee & CISS Affailiate) Financial Cooperation in the Asia-Pacific as Regime Complex: Explaining Patterns of Coverage, Membership, and Rules (International Relations of the Asia-Pacific, November 2023) and his co-author focus on the issue area of emergency liquidity provision, where global (International Monetary Fund), regional (Chiang Mai Initiative Multilateralization), and bilateral arrangements co-exist and overlap in complicated ways, forming a regime complex. |
David Glovsky (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) The Fuuta Jalon ʿAjamī Tradition (Islamic Africa, November 2023) Glovsky and his co-author situate Fula ʿAjamī texts in the broader history of Fuuta Jalon, emphasizing the role of these texts in the region’s history and processes of knowledge production. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) and Michael Otto (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) What Good Are Positive Emotions for treatment? A Replication Test of Whether Trait Positive Emotionality Predicts Response to Exposure Therapy for Social Anxiety Disorder (Behaviour Research and Therapy, November 2023) Hofmann and his colleagues conduct a secondary analysis of an exposure therapy trial for social anxiety disorder to test the hypothesis that patients endorsing higher trait positive emotions at baseline would display the greatest treatment response. |
Hiroaki Kaido (CAS, Economics & CISS Affiliate) Applications of Choquet Expected Utility to Hypothesis Testing with Incompleteness (Japanese Economic Review, November 2023) Kaido and his colleague apply the Maximin and Choquet expected utility theories to hypothesis testing in incomplete models. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) and Amanda Tarullo (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) The Development and Diversity of Religious Cognition and Behavior: Protocol for Wave 1 data Collection with Children and Parents by the Developing Belief Network (PLoS One, November 2023) Correveau and her co-authors describe the study protocol for the Developing Belief Network’s first wave of data collection, which aims to explore the development and diversity of religious cognition and behavior. |
Rosella Cappella Zielinski (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) American Arms and Industry in a Changing International Order (Defense Studies, November 2023) Cappella Zielinski and her colleagues discuss the rise of the People’s Republic of China as a peer competitor and the emerging demand that the U.S. deter and, if necessary, win one or more protracted conflicts requires that Washington take a more intentional and direct role in shaping the capability, capacity, and resilience of the U.S. defense industrial base. |
Joshua R. Robinson (CAS, Archeology) A Context for Connectivity: Insights to Environmental Heterogeneity in the Late Pleistocene and Holocene of Southern Africa Through Measuring Isotope Space and Overlap (Journal of Paleolithic Archaeology, November 2023) Robinson analyzes the local manifestations of regional climatic conditions in Southern Africa aiming to test whether sites within the same environmental zones overlap in isotope space and finds that there is greater intra-regional environmental heterogeneity than expected. |
Jonathan Mijs (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Does Informing Citizens About the Non-Meritocratic Nature of Inequality Bolster Support for a Universal Basic Income? Evidence from a Population-Based Survey Experiment (European Societies, November 2023) Mijs and his coauthors suggest that a universal basic income may be deemed too radical an approach to addressing inequality and discuss theoretical and policy implications. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) E-Cigarette Use Among US Adults in the 2021 Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance System Survey (JAMA Network Online, November 2023) Stokes and his co-authors examine recent patterns in current and daily e-cigarette use among US adults in 2021. |
Steven Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) A Constructive Replication of Client Change During Psychodynamic Treatment in an Outpatient Setting (Counseling and Psychotherapy Research, October 2023) Sandage and his colleagues responded to the need for replication in psychotherapy research by extending a prior naturalistic study documenting the effectiveness of long-term psychodynamic treatment. |
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André de Quadros (CAS, AA&BDS) Can I Speak, When and How? Colonization, Subalternity, and Contested Practice (Action, Criticism, and Theory for Music Education, October 2023) de Quadros describes his role as a music teacher who seeks a transgressive pathway in the fragile territory of a new awareness of diversity that continues to perpetuate subtle epistemic violence. |
Mary Elizabeth Collins (SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) Surviving Violence, Ambiguity and Oneself: The Experience of Child Protection Workers in Chile (The British Journal of Social Work, November 2023) Collins and her colleague identify three major complexities that shape and construct the strategies of survival that the Chilean child welfare workers deploy in a neo-liberalised labour context. |
Nathan Jones (SED & CISS Affiliate) Examining Relationships Between Field Placements and Preservice Teachers’ Self-Efficacy and Career Plans (Teacher Education and Special Education, November 2023) Jones and his co-authors argue field placements are the most crucial component of traditional preservice special education teacher preparation by examining how preservice special educators’ experiences of support from cooperating teachers and university supervisors relate to their teacher self-efficacy and their plans to teach. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Disability and Utilization of Telehealth and Traditional Medical Care Services Among Older Americans During the COVID-19 Pandemic (American Council on Consumer Interests, Consumer Interests Annual, November 2023) Carr and her colleagues evaluate how sensory, physical, and cognitive impairments affect older adults’ use of telehealth only, traditional in-person care only, neither, or both (i.e., combined care); and whether these effects differ on the basis of socioeconomic and social resources that may facilitate telehealth use. |
Johannes Schmieder (Professor of Economics & CISS Affiliate) When Institutions Interact: How the Effects of Unemployment Insurance are Shaped by Retirement Policies (National Bureau of Economic Research, November 2023) Schmeider and his colleagues show empirically that the non-employment effects of unemployment insurance (UI) for older workers depend in a first-order way on the structure of retirement policies. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Temporary Financial Assistance for Housing Expenditures and Mortality and Suicide Outcomes Among US Veterans (Journal of General Internal Medicine, November 2023) Byrne and his co-authors find that providing housing-related financial assistance to individuals facing housing instability is associated with improvements in important health outcomes such as all-cause mortality and suicidal ideation. |
Michel Anteby (Questrom Management & Organizations & CISS Affiliate) and Micah Rajunov (Questrom Management & Organizations, PhD) The Darker Side of Strong Organizational Cultures: Looking Forward by Looking Back (Handbook of Handbook of the Sociology of Morality, Volume 2, November 2023) Organizational cultures encompass the norms, values, and beliefs that guide the thinking and actions of organizational members. In this chapter, Anteby and Rajunov highlight the moral power and ambiguity of such cultures. |
Amanda Tarullo (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Sleep, Poverty, and Biological Stress: Mitigating Sleep Health Disparities in Early Childhood (Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences, November 2023) Tarullo and her co-authors argue that in the first years of life, poverty increases the risk of sleep problems such as late bedtimes and frequent night awakenings and that, in turn, children with sleep problems are more likely to go on to have poor physical and mental health outcomes as adults. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration & CISS Affiliate) Is Authenticity the New Luxury? Examining the Components and Dynamics of the Luxury Accommodation Experience (Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research, November 2023) Mody and his colleagues develop a model to capture the components and dynamics of the evolving nature of luxury in the accommodations industry and find that authenticity serves as the primary antecedent of extraordinary experiences in the luxury accommodations industry. |
Michelle Amazeen (COM, Director, Communication Research Center & CISS Affiliate) The Misinformation Recognition and Response Model: An Emerging Theoretical Framework for Investigating Antecedents to and Consequences of Misinformation Recognition (Human Communication Research, 2023) theorizes that how people cope with exposure to misinformation and/or intervention messages is conditioned by both dispositional and situational individual characteristics and is part of a process mediated by informational problem identification, issue motivation, and—crucially—recognition of misinformation. |
Cathie Jo Martin (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Education for All?: Literature, Culture and Education Development in Britain and Denmark (Cambridge University Press, Cambridge Studies in the Comparative Politics of Education, September 2023) Martin argues that fiction writers and their literary narratives inspired education campaigns throughout the nineteenth-century in Denmark. She uses a multidisciplinary perspective to offer a unique gaze into historical policymaking. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Elinore Avni (GRS, Sociology & CISS affiliate) Aging and Morality (Handbook of Sociology of Mortality, Vol 2., October 26, 2023). The authors demonstrate the ethical and moral concerns raised by global population aging. |
Laurence Kotlikoff (CAS, Economics) Public Economic Gains from Tax-Financed Investments in Childhood Immunization in the United States (PLOS Global Public Health, October 2023) Kotlikoff and his colleagues calculated, for each dollar invested in childhood immunization, the public economic yield attributed to childhood Covid vaccination in the U.S. |
Phillipe Copeland (SSW & CISS Affiliate) A Systematic Review of Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion and Antiracism Training Studies: Findings and Future Directions (Translational Behavioral Medicine, October 2023) Copeland and his co-authors evaluate training characteristics, measures, and results of peer-reviewed studies (published between 2000 and 2022) testing DEI or antiracism trainings. |
Iván Fernández-Val (CAS, Economics) Fischer-Schultz Lecture: Generic Machine Learning Inference on Heterogenous Treatment Effects in Randomized Experiments, with an Application to Immunization in India (HAL Open Source, October 2023) Fernández-Val and his colleagues propose strategies to estimate and make inference on key features of heterogeneous effects in randomized experiments. |
Christopher Robertson (LAW & CISS Affiliate) The Effects of Price Transparency and Debt Collection Policies on Intentions to Consume Recommended Health Care: A Randomized Vignette Experiment (Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, October 2023) Robertson and his colleagues test the effect of price disclosure and debt-collection disclosures on willingness to obtain recommended care, finding that disclosing a higher-than-anticipated price increases the probability of declining recommended care. |
André de Quadros
(CAS, Music & African American & Black Diaspora Studies) Displaced Humanity on the Move: Rights, Needs, and Future Directions for Music (The Routledge Handbook of Music and Migration, October 2023) In this chapter, de Quadros discusses how the rapid rise of displacement has drawn attention to how music-making is a potential locus for bonding, transformation, and justice. |
Anne Short Gianotti (CAS, Earth and Environment & CISS Affiliate) Socio-Political and Ecological Dimensions of Municipal Wildlife Management (Society and Natural Resources, October 2023) Short Gianooti and her co-authors find that landscape features, Lyme disease incidence, and an array of concerns about deer prompt municipal governments to explore options for deer management. We show that management champions and small-scale politics are crucial in translating concern to management action. |
Jonathan Mijs (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Anna Dominique (Nikki) Herrera Huang (CAS ’22 & CISS UG Research Intern 2022) and William Regan (CAS ’24 & CISS UG Research Intern 2022) Confronting Racism of Omission (Du Bois Review: Social Science Research on Race, October 2023) Mijs, Huang and Regan study whether (willful) ignorance about racial and ethnic inequality can be addressed through the provision of information. |
Benjamin Siegel (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) Woven, Mined, Milled, and Packed: The Global Destinies of Indian Commodities, 1500–2023 (India in the World, November 2023) Siegel looks at the last five centuries of “Indian things”— commodities that have moved from the Indian subcontinent to people and markets far away, often remaking those far-away peoples’ lives, livelihoods, and ways of thinking about and doing commerce while examining the ways in which growing and shrinking demands for Indian things have altered lives and livelihoods on the Indian subcontinent in obvious and somewhat less obvious ways. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) A – 30 Risk Factors for Poor Sleep Quality and Subjective Cognitive Decline during the COVID-19 Pandemic in an Ethnoracially Diverse US Sample (Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, September 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her colleagues examined associations between sociodemographic characteristics, sleep changes during the COVID-19 pandemic (i.e., increased problems/poorer quality), and SCD in ethnoracially diverse older individuals in the US. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) A – 21 Sex Differences in Cortical Thickness and Cognition in Individuals with Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer’s Disease (Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, September 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her colleagues found sex differences in the relation between cortical thickness and cognition in ADAD carriers, which may be relevant to the differential vulnerability and progression of AD in females and males. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) and David Somers (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences) B – 61 Increased Cortical Efficiency in the Absence of Behavioral Improvement on Working Memory Task Revealed by Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, September 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her colleague sused fNIRS during a working memory task to assess learning effect over time by assessing brain activity (fNIRS signal) and task performance. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Side of Motor Symptom Onset Predicts Sustained Attention Deficits and motor Improvements after Attention Training in Parkinson’s Disease (Neuropsychologia, September 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her co-authors find that participants with left-side onset Parkinson’s Disease exhibited worse performance than those with ride-side onset Parkinson’s Disease on the extended continuous performance task, indicating specific deficits in sustaining attention. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration & CISS Affiliate) The Implications of Generative Artificial Intelligence in Academic Research and Higher Education in Tourism and Hospitality (Tourism Economics, September 2023) Mody and his colleague critically review the effect of generative artificial intelligence (GAI) tools on higher education and research in the tourism and hospitality (TH) field. |
Andrew David (CAS, History) Evaluation of 30 Urban Land Surface Models in the Urban-PLUMBER Project: Phase 1 Results (Quarterly Journal of the Royal Meteorological Society , September 2023) David and his colleagues evaluate 30 land surface models’ ability to simulate surface energy fluxes critical to atmospheric meteorological and air quality simulations and establish minimum and upper performance expectations for participating models using simple information-limited models as benchmarks. |
Ian Sue Wing (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) The Long Shadow of a Major Disaster: Modeled Dynamic Impacts of the Hypothetical HayWired Earthquake on California’s Economy (International Regional Science Review, September 2023) Sue Wing and his co-authors develop and apply a dynamic economic simulation model to analyze the multi-regional impacts of, and mechanisms of recovery from, a major disaster, the HayWired scenario — a hypothetical Magnitude 7.0 earthquake affecting California’s San Francisco Bay Area. |
Joseph Harris (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) UHC Is the Right Goal, But Is Not the Same as the Right to Health (The Lancet Global Health, September 2023) In this publication, Harris speaks to the tensions between the right to health and UHC concepts, stating “The two concepts are not the same thing, and they should not be conflated. |
Taylor Beauvais (GRS, Sociology) Hybrid Representative Sampling of Social Media (Bulletin of Sociological Methodology, September 2023) Beauvais illuminates stark polarization resulting from algorithmic opinion aggregation, with implications in online extremism, media literacy, demographic representation in public discourse, and more. |
David M. Glick (CAS, Political Science) The Profits of Distrust: Citizen-Consumers, Drinking Water, and the Crisis of Confidence in American Governmentby Manuel P Teodoro, Samantha Zuhlke and David Switzer (Political Science Quarterly, September 2023) Glick reviews The Profits of Distrust: Citizen-Consumers, Drinking Water, and the Crisis of Confidence in American Government by Manuel P Teodoro, Samantha Zuhlke and David Switzer. |
Spencer Piston (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Trickle-Down Racism: Trump’s Effect on Whites’ Racist Dehumanizing Attitudes (Ecological and Social Psychology, September 2023) In this publication, Piston and his coauthor show that Trump’s 2016 victory had a polarizing effect on whites’ expression of dehumanizing views of Black people, with important implications for scholars’ understanding of the sociopolitical factors that can affect dehumanizing attitudes and the normalization of racism in the U.S. today. |
Wesley J. Wildman (STH & CISS affiliate) The Winding Way Home (Wildhouse Fiction, September 2023) Wildman ventures into fiction with his new book which is being called a moving story with rare spiritual depth. |
Abigail Sullivan (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) Collective Action Improves Elite-Driven Governance in Rural Development Within China (Humanities and Social Sciences Communications, September 2023) Sullivan and her colleagues indicate that collective action is a mediator, but is more influential in linking governing elites than in linking economic elites with rural development. |
James Cummings (COM & CISS Affiliate) The Power of Personal Ontologies: Individual Traits Prevail Over Robot Traits in Shaping Robot Humanization Perceptions (International Journal of Social Robotics, September 2023) In this study, Cummnings and his coauthor examine facets of robot humanization, defined as how people think of robots as social and human-like entities through perceptions of liking, human-likeness, and rights entitlement. |
Claudia Andersen (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Establishing Key Facts About Restrictive Housing—A Systems-Level Descriptive Analysis of Restrictive Housing and the Implications for Theory, Research, and Policy (Crime & Delinquency, September 2023) Anderson and her colleagues argue that a more detailed understanding of restrictive housing usage is required to advance theory, research, and evidence-based policy and bring data to bear on questions about the prevalence and trends in the use of the most routine forms of restrictive housing in Ohio prisons. |
David Manuel Carballo (CAS, Archeology & CISS Affiliate) Characterization of Obisdian Sub-Source Variability at El Paredon, Mexico (Archeometry, September, 2023) Carballo and his co-authors present a methodology that allows the identification of obsidian sub-sources revealing that Tlaxcalan populations took advantage of a specific obsidian deposit called Tres Cabezas, Puebla. |
H. Denis Wu (COM & CISS Affiliate) The “Populist Imbecile” Versus the “Heartless Shrew”: Polarizing Election Coverage and Voters’ Evaluation in Taiwan (NRJ, September 2023) Wu and his colleagues analyze the news coverage of two major presidential candidates—one populist challenger, the other female incumbent—in the 2020 Taiwan election and shed new light on populist vis-à-vis gendered election coverage in the context of an Asian democracy. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration & CISS Affiliate) Rethinking the Role of Hospitality in Society: The HOST Model (International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, September 2023) Mody and his coauthors provide a critical reflection on the role of hospitality in society. Specifically, criticizing contemporary conceptualizations of hospitality in academic research and practice and suggesting a reconceptualized approach for capturing the full potential of hospitality to elicit transformative social change. |
Paula Austin (CAS, History) Growing Up Jim Crow (Bloomsbury Publishing, The Bloomsbury Handbook of Theories in Childhood Studies, 2023) Austin generates much-needed conversation about childhood in Jim Crow era America. |
Arianne Chernock (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) The Right to Rule and the Rights of Women Queen Victoria and the Women’s Movement (Cambridge University Press, September 2023) Chernock reveals Queen Victoria as a ruler who captured the imaginations of nineteenth-century feminists and draws attention to the intricate and often overlooked connections between the histories of women, the monarchy, and the state. |
Kristin Long (CAS, Psychological and Behavior Science) Associations Between Parental Depression, Communication, and Self-Worth of Siblings Bereaved by Cancer (Journal of Family Psychology, September 2023) Long and her colleagues examine the differences in parental depressive symptoms, parent–child communication, and sibling self-worth between bereaved and nonbereaved families and the indirect effects of parental depressive symptoms and communication quality on the association between bereavement and sibling self-worth. |
Christine Slaughter (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Black Women: Keepers of Democracy, the Democratic Process, and the Democratic Party (Politics & Gender, September 2023) Slaughter and her co-authors find that Black women are motivated by civic duty to participate in elections, whereas civic duty does not motivate Black men and white women. |
Luke Glowacki (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Universal Interpretations of Vocal Music (Psychological and Cognitive Sciences, September 2023) Glowacki and his colleagues demonstrate that the behavioral contexts of three common forms of music are mutually intelligible cross-culturally and imply that musical diversity, shaped by cultural evolution, is nonetheless grounded in some universal perceptual phenomena. |
Sanne Cornelia J Verschuren (Pardee & CISS Affiliate) Challenges to the Nuclear Order: Between Resilience and Contestation (Routledge Handbook of the Future of Warfare, 2024) Verschuren discusses the challenges of nuclear order. |
Elliot Chudyk (GRS, Sociology) Genderplay: Reclaiming and Reconfiguring Femininity through the Gendered Labor Practices of Transmasculine Sex Workers (Social Problems, 2023) Chudyk explores the gendered labor of transmasculine sex workers as they navigate client requests for genderplay, an eroticized form of gender misrecognition. |
Nicholas J. Wagner (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Testing Reciprocal Associations Between Child Anxiety and Parenting Across early Interventions for Inhibited Preschoolers (The Journal of Child Psychology and Psychiatry, August 2023) Wagner and his co-authors find that the development of child anxiety may result from child-to-parent influences rather than the reverse, and highlight the importance of targeting parent and child factors simultaneously in early interventions for young, inhibited children. |
Claudia Andersen (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Disentangling the Relationship Between Serious Disorder Problems and the Use of Supermax Prisons (Criminology & Public Policy, August 2023) Andersen suggests that a prison facility’s level of serious disorder strongly corresponds with its reliance on supermax prisons and that indicators of serious rule breaking, and not minor forms of it, are strongly associated with a person’s odds of experiencing a supermax transfer. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate), Swathi Kiran (Sargent), Yuanyuan Gao (BU Neurophotonics Center), Vaibhav Tripathi (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences, ’23), Theresa Ellis, (Director, Center for Neurorehabilitation), Alexander von Lühmann (BU Neurophotonics Center), Meryem Yücel,(ENG, Biomedical Engineering), David Boas, (Director, BU Neurophotonics Center), David Somers (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences) Observability of Visual Working Memory Brain Circuitry With Functional Near-Infrared Spectroscopy (Journal of Vision, August 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her colleagues provide a basis for establishing a set of best practices for the application of fNIRS to the study of visual working memory. |
Léa Tân Combette (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) and Deborah Kelemen (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Early Education and Natural Selection: Examining Conceptual Understanding and Mindset Effects (Center for Open Science, August 2023) Combette and Kelemen argue that formal education on natural selection should commence at an early age as research has shown that misconceptions about evolution can emerge in early childhood and persistently hinder later scientific learning and reasoning. |
Michel Anteby (Questrom Management & Organizations & CISS Affiliate) Rebooting One’s Professional Work: The Case of French Anesthesiologists Using Hypnosis (Administrative Science Quarterly, August 2023) Anteby and co-authors analyze how anesthesiologists were able to change their views and reinvent their work. |
Heidi C. Meyer (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences) Intermixed Safety Cues Facilitate Extinction Retention in Adult and Adolescent Mice (Physiology & Behavior, August 2023) Meyer and her co-author inform the parameters by which conditioned safety and extinction learning may be merged to augment the inhibition of fear. |
Wade Campbell (CAS, Archeology & CISS Affiliate) Chasing Copeland and Roger’s “Trial Balloons”: Multi-Scalar Considerations of Early Navajo Rock Art in Dinétah (Landscape Archeology, August 2023) Campbell and his co-author draw on previous research to weigh in on early Navajo rock art with the goal of bolstering discussions of Navajo rock art in Dinétah. |
Merav Shohet (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Structural and Psychosocial Challenges Among Underserved Hemodialysis Patients During and Beyond the COVID-19 Pandemic:A Qualitative Study (Kidney Medicine, August 2023) Shohet and her colleagues show that Psychosocial and environmental factors, including institutional racism and stigmatization, play significant roles in amplifying the burdens shouldered by racial and ethnic minority individuals with kidney disease who now also face the COVID-19 pandemic turned endemic. |
Todd Farchione (BU Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders) and Timothy A Brown (BU Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders) The Unified Protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of Emotional Disorders and Physical Health Comorbidity (Applications of the Unified Protocol in Health Conditions, August 2023) Farchione and his co-authors introduce the unified protocol for Transdiagnostic Treatment of emotional disorders. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Cognitive–Behavioral Treatment for Anxiety and Depression in Parkinson’s Disease (Applications of the Unified Protocol in Health Conditions, August 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her fellow authors discuss treatments for anxiety and depression Parkinson’s patients. |
Claudia Andersen (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Restrictive Housing for Prison Rule Violators: Specific Deterrence or Defiance? (Journal of Experimental Criminology, August 2023) Andersen and her colleagues examine whether segregation (restrictive housing/RH) for first-time prison rule violators in Ohio shapes his/her odds of violations thereafter finding that RH placement corresponded with significantly but modestly lower odds of any misconduct within 12 months after release from RH, but effects on more serious offenses (particularly violence) were weak. |
Todd Farchione (CAS, Psychological & Brain Sciences) Are Changes in Joviality Associated with Cognitive Behavioral Treatment Outcomes? Examining an Emerging Treatment Target (Psychotherapy, August 2023) Farchione and his co-authors find that, for most patients receiving CBT (cognitive behavioral therapy), joviality increased more rapidly in individuals with more severe anxiety but not severe depression. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Effect of Cognitive Behavioural Therapy and Yoga for Generalised Anxiety Disorder on Sleep Quality in a Randomised Controlled Trial: The Role of Worry, Mindfulness, and Perceived Stress as Mediators (Journal of Sleep Research, August 2023) Hofman and his colleagues examined the effects of Kundalini yoga (KY), cognitive behavioral therapy (CBT), and stress education (SEdu) on subjective sleep quality finding that sleep changes were not significantly greater for CBT or KY compared to SEdu. |
Claudia Andersen (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Disparities in Segregation for Prison Control: Comparing Long Term Solitary Confinement to Short Term Disciplinary Restrictive Housing (Justice Quarterly, August 2023) Andersen and her co-authors examined related disparities in the use of extended restrictive housing in Ohio (SC conditions) while expanding the analysis to short term restrictive housing, a substantially more common prison experience. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Husserl’s Other Phenomenology of Feelings: Approval, Value, and Correctness (Husserl Studies, August 2023) Byrne highlights how Husserl’s examinations of approval – as an intention that performs both an axiological and a seemingly cognitive function – lead him to extraordinary observations about the execution of feelings and the truth of judgments. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Comparing Kundalini Yoga, Cognitive Behavioral Therapy, and Stress Education for Generalized Anxiety Disorder: Anxiety and Depression Symptom Outcomes (Psychiatry Research, August 2023) Hofmann and his colleagues summarize seven additional, secondary outcomes measuring anxiety and depression symptoms finding that participants receiving CBT (Cognitive-Behavior Therapy) displayed significantly lower symptom severity. |
Kristin Long (CAS, Psychological and Behavior Science) Children with Exceptionalities (Bloomsbury Publishing, Marriage and Divorce in America: Issues, Trends, and Controversies, August 2023) In this article, Long delves into the issue of children’s wellness in divorce situations. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) The Compassion Balance: Understanding the Interrelation of Self- and Other-Compassion for Optimal Well-being (Mindfulness, July 2023) Hofman and his colleagues examine the role of self-other harmony in the relations between self-compassion, other-compassion, and well-being. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) Autism Spectrum Disorder (ASD) is a Neurodevelopmental Disorder, Which Affects 1 in 44 children and may cause severe disabilities. Besides Socio-Communicational Difficulties and Repetitive Behaviors, ASD also Presents as Atypical Sensorimotor Function and Pain Reactivity. While Chronic Pain Is a Frequent Co-Morbidity in Autism, Pain Management in this Population is Often Insufficient Because of Difficulties in Pain (Etiology and Treatment for Children and Adolescents with Autism Spectrum Disorder, August 2023) Caldwell-Harris and her co-authors discuss various co-morbidities in ASD (Autism Spectrum Disorder), a neurodevelopmental disorder, and show how individuals with ASD face significant inequities in healthcare, despite their high rate of medical co-morbidities. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) I Copy You as I Believe You Know About Our Culture: Combining Imitation and Selective Trust Literatures (Infant and Child Development, August 2023) In this paper, Corriveau and her colleagues contend that children’s imitative tendency may be due to their selection of in‐group members as
cultural experts
, who serve as reliable sources of conventional information. |
Neha Gondal (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate), Noor Toraif (SSW), Pujan Paudel (ENG), and Alison Frisellaa (ENG) From Colorblind to Systemic Racism: Emergence of a Rhetorical Shift in Higher Education Discourse in Response to the Murder of George Floyd (PLOS ONE, August 2023) Gondal and her co-authors reveal two striking rhetorical shifts on race discourse in Institutions of Higher Education (IHEs) in the aftermath of George Floyd’s murder. |
Ian Sue Wing (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) Intensive and Extensive Margins of the Peak Load: Measuring Adaptation with Mixed Frequency Panel Data (Energy Economics, August 2023) In this work, Sue Wing and his colleagues investigate the response of daily electricity peak load to daily maximum temperatures across states in Europe and India and project that in response to climate change around 2050 the peak load may increase by up to 20 India, depending on the degree of warming and the evolution of socio-economic conditions. |
Nathan Jones (SED & CISS Affiliate) Using Performance Tasks to Provide Feedback and Assess Progress in Teacher Preparation (ETS Research Report Series, July 2023) Jones and his colleagues explore the potential for using a new type of short performance task to explore uses both as part of teacher preparation and for assessing key competencies needed for effective teaching. |
Ian Sue Wing (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) and Adam B. Pollack (CAS) Potential Benefits in Remapping the Special Flood Hazard Area: Evidence from the U.S. Housing Market (Journal of Housing Economics, September 2023) Sue Wing, Pollack and their co-authors distinguish capitalization effects of policy-driven (SFHA) versus quasi-objective (First Street) indicators of flood hazard. |
Steven Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) Elise J. Y. Choe (The Albert and Jessie Danielsen Institute), Stephen Waldron (STH), Choi Hee (STH) Intellectual Humility and Religion/Spirituality: a Scoping Review of Research (The Journal of Positive Psychology, July 2023) Sandage, Choe, Waldron and Hee find that definitional confusion around Intellectual Humility is exacerbated by inconsistencies in how it is related to Religion and Spirituality and that empirical research has been mostly limited to cross-sectional studies, consistent with previous reviews and critiques. |
Henry Tonks (Ph.D. Candidate CAS, History) Review Essay: Can American Liberalism Reinvent Itself? (Public Seminar, June 2023) Tonks reviews Illusions of Progress by Brent Cebul, University of Pennsylvania Press. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Systematic Review of Access to Healthcare and Social Services Among US Women Veterans Experiencing Homelessness (Women’s Health, August 2023) Byrne and his colleague find that although women Veterans had similar or better outcomes with permanent housing programming compared to men, gaps remain in the provision of emergency and short-term housing accommodations. |
Todd Farchione (CAS, Psychological & Brain Sciences) and Andrew David (CAS, History) Is Prolonged Grief Disorder an Emotional Disorder? (Loss and Trauma, August 2023) Farchione and his colleagues argue that PGD Prolonged Grief Disorder (PGD) should be conceptualized as an emotional disorder. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) COVID-19 and All-Cause Mortality by Race, Ethnicity, and Age Across Five Periods of the Pandemic in the United States (Population Research and Policy Review, August 2023) Stokes and his co-authors find a disproportionate COVID-19 mortality burden on racial and ethnic minority populations early in the pandemic, which led to an increase in all-cause mortality disparities and a temporary elimination of the Hispanic mortality advantage at certain age groups. |
Leping Wang (GRS, Sociology and CISS Graduate Affiliate). Measuring Wellbeing Among College Students (LearningWell, July 2023). Wang provides a detailed analysis of the measures and scales used to measure psychological well-being among young adults. |
Nazli Kibria (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Decolonizing Migration Studies: Visions and Strategies, Decolonizing Migration Studies: A Brief Introduction (Sociology Forum, July 2023) Kirbria discusses the challenges of shifting the field of Sociology away from its focus on migrant integration within national borders and proposes a variety of decolonizing strategies, from interrogating established categories of migration to integrating scholarship from the global South. |
Michel Anteby (Questrom Management & Organizations & CISS Affiliate) In the Eyes of the Beholder: When Broad vs. Local Perception of Occupational Stigma Differ (Academy of Management Annual MeetingProceedings, July 2023) Anteby and his co-author explore how an occupational membership, amongst instructors in supplementary education in South Korea, may signify varying meanings across different social contexts, resulting in disparate experiences of stigmatization amongst members and find that even when the broad, outside audience’s evaluation of the occupation is overall positive or neutral, some members experience localized stigma. |
Michel Anteby (Questrom Management & Organizations & CISS Affiliate) The Rise of Neo-Experts: Sources, Characteristics, and Implications (Academy of Management Annual Meeting Proceedings, July 2023) Anteby and his co-author offer more conceptual clarity around the question of expertise by detailing its varying sources, characteristics, and implications in light of the rise what they label “neo-experts”. |
Arianne Chernock (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) Suffrage as Philosophy: Women Theorizing the Vote in Britain, 1792–1918 (The Oxford Handbook of American and British Women Philosophers in the Nineteenth Century, July 2023) Chernock examines the centrality of theory, broadly construed, to suffragist and suffragette activity. |
David ManuelCarballo (CAS, Archeology) Mesoamerican Urbanism Revisited: Environmental Change, Adaptation, Resilience, Persistence, and Collapse (PNAS, July 2023) Carballo and his colleagues call for a dialogue among Mesoamerican urban archaeologists, sustainability scientists, and researchers interested in urban adaptation to climate change through a synthetic perspective on the organizational diversity of urbanism, seeking insights into what facilitates and hinders urban adaptation to environmental change. |
Todd Farchione (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Effects of a Contextual Adaptation of the Unified Protocol in Multiple Emotional Disorders in Individuals Exposed to Armed Conflict in Colombia, A Randomized Clinical Trial (JAMA Psychiatry, July 2023) Farchione and his co-authors show a significant pretreatment-to-posttreatment reduction when comparing treatment and waitlist on posttraumatic stress disorder. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Excess Mortality With Alzheimer Disease and Related Dementias as an Underlying or Contributing Cause During the COVID-19 Pandemic in the US (JAMA Neurology, July 2023) In this article, Stokes and his co-authors ask how mortality with Alzheimer disease and related dementias (ADRD) as an underlying or contributing cause change during the COVID-19 pandemic, finding that large increases in mortality with ADRD as an underlying or contributing cause of death occurred in COVID-19 pandemic year 1, but were largely mitigated in pandemic year 2. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) The Role of Experiential Avoidance in the Early Stages of an Online Mindfulness-Based Intervention: Two Mediation Studies (Psychotherapy Research, July 2023) Hofmann and his colleagues examine whether experiential avoidance mediated the effects of MBIs on emotional distress during an early stage of the intervention, finding significant improvement. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) and Sona Kumar (Ph.D. Candidate, SED, Applied Human Development) A Social Cognitive Perspective on Intergroup Relations with Immigrant Learners in Early Childhood (Contemporary Perspectives on Research on Immigration in Early Childhood Education, Information Age Publishing, July 2023) Corriveau and Kumar explore potential barriers to the acculturation and inclusion of young immigrant children into educational settings, concluding with suggestions for ways to mitigate early ingroup biases and promote positive relationships between immigrant and non-immigrant children in classrooms settings. |
Peter Blake (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) The Influence of Friendship on Children’s Fairness Concerns in Three Societies (Evolution and Human Behavior, July 2023) Blake and his co-authors compared the responses of children between 7 and 9 years of age from rural communities in India, Peru and Canada, that are known to have divergent norms of fairness, to disadvantageous allocations (less for self) and advantageous allocations (more for self) suggesting that friendship may shape the expression of fairness concerns in young children, though its influence varies across societies. |
Jonathan Mijs (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Deliberating Inequality: A Blueprint for Studying the Social Formation of Beliefs about Economic Inequality (Social Justice Research, July 2023) Mijs and his co-authors offer this updated version of their publication which helps explain how understandings of inequality arise. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration & CISS Affiliate) Generative Artificial Intelligence in the Hospitality and Tourism Industry: Developing a Framework for Future Research (Journal of Hospitality & Tourism Research, July 2023) Mody and his colleagues offer a critical examination of the effects of GAI applications across a broad spectrum of stakeholders in the HT industry, in an effort to integrate practical and academic insights and foresights and drive academic research forward. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Telehealth Use Among Older Adults with Sensory, Cognitive, and Physical Impairments: A Substitute or Supplement to Traditional Care? (The Journals of Gerontology, July 2023) In this article, Carr and her co-authors study if older adults with disabilities face obstacles to effective telehealth use. |
Nathan D. Jones (SED & CISS Affiliate) Measuring Teachers’ Momentary Affect: An Exploratory Experience Sampling Study (Contemporary Educational Psychology, July 2023) Jones and his colleagues use the experience sampling method to explore the momentary emotions of 238 United States teachers to consider ways in which professional role, professional activity, and affective appraisals relate to teachers’ momentary affective experiences. |
Rosella Cappella Zielinski (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Battlefield Coalitions: Preparation, Organisation, Execution (Taylor & Francis, Understanding Battlefield Coalitions, July 2023) Capella Zielinski and her colleagues discuss battlefield coalitions. |
Rosella Cappella Zielinski (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Regime Type, War Aims, and Coalition Member Effort in Combat (Taylor & Francis, Understanding Battlefield Coalitions, July 2023) Capella Zielinski and her colleagues discuss battlefield coalitions. |
Neha Gondal (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) The Gap Between Public Evaluations and Interactional Status in Social Networks (Social Network Analysis and Mining, July 2023) Gondal finds that evaluations ‘undervalue’ both elite and mid-ranked departments relative to their structural positions and discusses potential explanations and implications of these findings. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Equal Prevalence of Depression in Men and Women with Parkinson’s Disease Revealed by Online Assessment (Archives of Clinical Neuropsychology, July 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her co-authors challenge the prediction that online anonymity might elicit more gender-based parity in depression endorsement, especially in men who consistently report lower rates of depression than women in in-person studies, due to stigma-related underreporting. |
Robert Weller (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Religion in the Folded City: Origami and the Boundaries of the Chronotope (Cambridge University Press, Comparative Studies in Society and History, July 2023) Weller and his co-author rethink the chronotope approach by examining what happened to religious space-times in a Chinese urban development project that completely transformed what had once been five relatively rural townships. |
Eva Garrett (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Human Subsistence and Signatures of Selection on Chemosensory Genes (Communications Biology, July 2023) Garrett and her colleagues explore the effects of subsistence behaviors on olfactory (OR) and taste (TASR) receptor genes among rainforest foragers and neighboring agriculturalists in Africa and Southeast Asia. |
Michael Lyons (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies) Long-term Blood Pressure Patterns in Midlife and Dementia in Later Life: Findings from the Framingham Heart Study (Alzheimer & Dementia, July 2023) Lyons and his co-authors find that cumulative BP over the course of midlife predicts risk of dementia in later life and that long-term blood pressure (BP) patterns are strong indicators of vascular risks. |
Brooke L. Blower (CAS, History) Americans in a World at War: Intimate Histories from the Crash of Pan Am’s Yankee Clipper (Oxford University Press, 2023) In her book, Blower offers a vivid narrative of the ill-fated Pan American flight during World War II that captures the dramatic backstories of its passengers and, through them, the impact of Americans’ global connections. |
Luke Glowacki (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Why Did Foraging, Horticulture and Pastoralism Persist after the Neolithic Transition? The Oasis Theory of Agricultural Intensification (Philosophical Transactions of the Royal Society B, June 2023) In this article, Glowacki and his co-authors suggest that in certain ecologies intensive agriculture may be difficult or impossible to develop but that generally lower rainfall and biodiversity is favorable for its emergence. |
James Cummings (COM & CISS Affiliate) Means vs. Outcomes: Leveraging Psychological Insights for Media-Based Behavior Change Interventions (Springer Nature, Nudging Choices Through Media, June 2023) In this chapter, Cummings provide an overview to a wide assortment of psychological considerations relevant to media-based behavior interventions. |
Christopher Robertson (LAW & CISS Affiliate) 5: The Ballot of Donald and Hillary: Hateful Memories of Celebrity Leaders (Bristol University Press,Interpreting Contentious Memory, June 2023) Robertson and his co-authors argue that candidates with celebrity reputations and who have been previously well-known are particularly likely to be targets of intense discursive abuse. |
Deborah Kelemen (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies & CISS Affiliate) Are Humans Part of the Natural World? U.S. Children’s and Adults’ Concept of Nature and its Relationship to Environmental Concern (Topics in Cognitive Science, June 2023) In this publication, Kelemen and her co-authors explore the extent to which U.S. adults and children understand their role in nature and the relationship of their nature concepts and other individual differences to environmental moral concern and biocentric reasoning. |
Sam Ling (CAS, Psychological & Brain Sciences) Spatial Frequency Tuning in Early Visual Cortex in Individuals with Amblyopia (Investigative Ophthalmology & Visual Science, June 2023) Ling and his colleagues consider how voxel-wise spatial frequency tuning varies between the amblyopic and fellow eye and how this tuning varies as a function of receptive field size and eccentricity. |
Nicholas Wagner (CAS, Psychological and Brain Disorders) Comparison of Behaviorally Inhibited and Typically Developing Children’s Play Behaviors in the Preschool Classroom (Front. Psychol. Sec. Developmental Psychology, June 2023) Wagner and his co-authors find that children identified as BI (behavioral inhibition) did not receive fewer bids for social interaction than their typically developing peers, thereby suggesting that children who are inhibited have difficulty capitalizing on opportunities to engage in social interaction with familiar peers. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) and David Somers (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences) NinjaNIRS: An Open-Source Ecosystem for Wearable, Whole-Head and High Density fNIRS with EEG Co-Localization (Biophotonics Congress: Optics in the Life Sciences 2023, June 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her colleagues seek to provide an open-source ecosystem to increase adoption of functional near-infrared spectroscopy (fNIRS) with integrated EEG in the real world. |
Kristin Long (CAS, Psychological and Behavior Science) Trajectories of Traumatic Stress Symptoms Among Siblings of Children With Cancer: The First Two Years Post-Diagnosis (Journal of Pediatric Psychology, June 2023) In this publication, Long and her co-authors identify and describe trajectories of cancer-related post-traumatic stress symptoms (PTSS) among siblings of children with cancer within two years of diagnosis. |
Mary Elizabeth Collins (SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) Understanding Youth Circumstances in Workforce Development Programs: Opportunities for Social Work (Journal of Social Work, June 2023) Collins and her colleagues report results from two research studies in the United States focused on the workforce development system serving the disconnected youth population. |
Heather Schoenfeld (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Early 21st Century Penal reform: A Comparative Analysis of Four States’ responses to the Problems of Mass Incarceration (Law & Policy, University of Denver, June 2023) Schoenfeld and her co-authors examine how different states responded to mounting problems caused by mass incarceration, highlighting the importance of autonomy from external pressures that allowed penal administrators to respond to mounting problems in ways that reduced their state’s reliance on imprisonment. |
Steven Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) and Todd Farchione (BU Center for Anxiety and Related Disorders) Therapist Experiences and Perspectives on Moving Beyond Symptoms and Into Flourishing: A Grounded Theory Analysis (Counselling Psychology Quarterly, June 2023) Sandage, Farchione and their co-authors suggest how flourishing can be pursued by guiding clients toward their experiences of suffering in order to engage in meaning making and to identify their values. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Psychological and Brain Disorders and Director, Psychotherapy and Emotion Research Laboratory) and Michael Otto (CAS, Psychological and Brain Disorders) Using Pre-Treatment De Novo Threat Conditioning Outcomes to Predict Treatment Response to DCS Augmentation of Exposure-Based CBT (Journal of Psychiatric Research, June 2023) Hofmann and Otto, along with their co-authors, evaluate the value of de novo threat conditioning outcomes—degree of threat acquisition, extinction, and extinction retention—for predicting treatment response to exposure-based CBT for social anxiety disorder, applied with and without DCS augmentation in a sample of 59 outpatients. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration & CISS Affiliate) The Impact of Business Models and State Regulations on the Accommodation Sector: Theory and Empirical Evidence from the Recent Pandemic (International Journal of Contemporary Hospitality Management, June 2023) Mody and his co-authors investigated the effect of the COVID-19 pandemic on key performance metrics of accommodation properties by elaborating on the roles of business models (i.e. franchised, chain-managed and independent hotels, and the sharing economy) and state-level restrictions in the US. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Missing Americans: Early death in the United States— 1933–2021 (PNAS Nexus, June 2023) In this article, Stokes and his colleagues assess how many U.S. deaths would have been averted each year, from 1933–2021, if U.S. age-specific mortality rates had equaled the average of 21 other wealthy nations. |
Spencer Piston (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) The Politics of Racist Dehumanization in the United States (Annual Review of Political Science, June 2023) Piston and his co-author focus on the racist dehumanization of Indigenous and Black people, arguing that processes of dehumanization have long been implicated in both the practice of race-making and concurrent efforts to exploit and dominate racialized groups. |
James J. Feigenbaum (CAS, Economics) Racial Inequality in the Prime of Life: Infectious Disease Mortality in U.S. Cities, 1906–1933 (Cambridge University Press, Social Science History, June 2023) Feigenbaum and his co-authors show that, in the first half of the twentieth century, as infant mortality declined and life expectancy rose, racial inequality in infectious disease mortality increased in American cities. |
Hyeouk Chris Hahm (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Home Away from Home: International Students’ Experiences During the COVID-19 Pandemic and the Role of US Higher Education (Frontiers in Psychology, Sec. Educational Psychology, June 2023) Focused on the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on international students’ overall experiences, Hahm and her co-authors find that that the pandemic exacerbated existing stressors and reveals the importance of US higher education institutions in supporting international students during the pandemic, particularly in terms of their sense of belonging. |
Rachel Brulé (GDP & CISS Affiliate) Women and Power in the Developing World (Annual Review of Political Science, June 2023) Brulé and her co-authors survey the literature on women’s negotiation of power in the developing world find that in the past and present, the developing world provides striking models of women’s negotiation of power that turn conventions of development upside down. |
Steven Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) Conviction, Competence, Context: A Three-Level Model to Promote Racial Diversity, Equity, and Inclusion Among Christians (Journal of Psychology & Christianity, June 2023) Sandage and his colleagues discuss the problem of racial division within the context of American Christianity and present a three-part model for supporting Christians who want to work toward racial diversity/equity/inclusion (DEI), offering some ideas about what a program based on their model might look like. |
Rosella Cappella Zielinski (CAS, Political Science) Paying the Defense Bill: Financin American and Chinese Geostrategic Competition (Texas National Security Review: Volume 6, Issue 2, June 2023) Capella Zielinski and her co-author discuss the decades-long geostrategic competition between the United States and China and consider the cost of financing defense spending. |
Nicholas Wagner (CAS, Psychological and Brain Disorders) Vagal Flexibility Moderates the Links between Observed Sensitive Caregiving in Infancy and Externalizing Behavior Problems in Middle Childhood (Research on Child and Adolescent Psychopathology, June 2023) Wagner and his co-authors explore how patterns of physiological stress reactivity underpin individual differences in sensitivity to early rearing experiences and childhood risk for psychopathology. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Psychological and Brain Disorders and Director, Psychotherapy and Emotion Research Laboratory) CBT for Social Anxiety: Simple Skills for Overcoming Fear and Enjoying People (New Harbinger Publications, 2023) In his upcoming book, Hofmann explains how avoidance might lessen social anxiety in the short-term, but can make anxiety worse in the long run, and offers research-proven skills to address social anxiety. |
Amalia Pérez-Juez (CAS, Archeology) and Paul Goldberg (CAS, Archaeology) The Fabric of Torre d’en Galmés, Menorca, Spain (Geoarcheology, June 2023) Pérez-Juez and her co-author demonstrate that by examining the different fabrics of the site of Torre d’en Galmés on the Spanish Island of Menorca one can gain a better understanding of the geoarchaeology. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Comprehensive Review of the National Surveys That Assess E-cigarette Use Domains Among Youth and Adults in the United States (The Lancet Regional Health – Americas, July 2023) Stokes and his colleagues identify 13 nationally epidemiologic surveys which assess e-cigarette use among U.S. youth and/or adults instrumental in e-cigarette surveillance to provide a resource for the tobacco regulatory science community. |
Pratyusha Tummala-Narra (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies) Women immigrants: Developmental Shifts in the New Culture (Psychological Health of Women of Color, Bloomsbury Publishing, Ch. 13, May 2023) In this chapter, Tummala-Narra discusses mental health among women immigrants. |
Arianne Chernock (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) Forum: The Death of Queen Elizabeth II: Meaning and Media (Journal of British Studies 62, April 2023) Chernock and her colleagues offer this roundtable on the death of Queen Elizabeth II, presented at the North American Conference on British Studies in Chicago in November 2022, which includes an account of the many meanings of Queen Elizabeth II for her subjects and discussion of why so many at home and in the Commonwealth were devoted to her. |
Deborah Kelemen (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies & CISS Affiliate) Is Book Reading Always Best? Children Learn and Transfer Complex Scientific Explanations from Books or Animations (Evolution: Education and Outreach, May 2023) Kelemen and her co-authors examined second graders’ abilities to learn about the concepts of adaptation and speciation via both static storybooks and animated storybooks, concluding that the animated versions are “just as good (and may even be better) than static storybooks”. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) “Religion Evolving: Cultural, Cognitive, and Ecological Dynamics.” Religion Is of Reduced Importance When Not Needed to Solve the Problems of Social Living (Journal for the Cognitive Science of Religion, May 2023) Caldwell-Harris and her co-author conclude when these problems are absent or are solved by secular mechanisms, religion is absent or of reduced importance. |
Frank Korom (CAS, Anthropology) “Ghanaram, Dharmamaṅgal.” Reading Matters: An Unfestschrift for Regina Bendix – (Gottingen University Press, Ulrich Marzolph, pp. 211-215, May 2023) Korom provides the first ever translation of a description of the hero Lausen’s horse from the oldest surviving major work of French literature, The Song of Roland (Fr. La Chanson de Roland), the eleventh century epic poem based on the Battle of Roncevaux Pass in 778 CE. |
Katherine Levine Einstein (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Policing and the Punitive Politics of Local Homelessness Policy (Policing and Punitive Politics of Local Homelessness Policy Brief, BU Initiative on Cities, May 2023) Levine Einstein, along with Alisa Dewald (BU Initiative on Cities) and Charley E. Willison (Cornell University), investigate the involvement of the police in responses to homelessness in cities across the country finding that the police are highly influential in city homelessness policymaking and are frequently involved in implementing homelessness policy |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) Indirect Effects of Early Shared Reading and Access to Books on Reading Vocabulary in Middle Childhood (Scientific Studies of Reading, May 2023) Corrieau and her colleagues investigate the effects of early shared reading and access to books on reading vocabulary in middle childhood and the pathways associated with later reading success. |
Ibram X. Kendi (Founder/Director of the Center for Antiracist Research) An Illusion of Equity: The Legacy of Eugenics in Today’s Education (The University Press of Kentucky, May 2023) Written by Wendy Zagray Warren, this author builds on the work of BU member Ibram X. Kendi in her discussion of inequity and the rhetoric around it. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Impact of the Monetary Value of Housing Assistance on Adult Health Outcomes (Health Services Research, May 2023) Byrne and his co-authors assess the impact of the dollar value of federal low-income housing assistance on adult health outcomes and whether this impact varies across housing assistance programs. |
Jessica Silbey (LAW & CISS Affiliate) Questions of Intellectual Property and Fundamental Values in the Digital Age (Marquette Intellectual Property & Innovation Law Review 27, May 2023) Silbey’s shares her thoughts on intellectual property in the digital age. |
David Carballo (CAS, Archaeology, Anthropology, and Latin American Studies) Looking Forward to New Orleans (Archeological Record 2023, May 2023) Carballo celebrates the 89th annual meeting of the Society of American Archeology which will be coming to New Orleans in April 2024. |
Nicolette Manglos-Weber (School of Theology) An Invitation to the Sociology of Religion: Important Questions Answered by Scholars in the Field (The American Sociologist, May 2023) Manglos-Weber and her colleagues explore what people consider the most important questions in the study of religion and invite readers to discover scholars’ dialogue around those questions. |
Pascual Restrepo (CAS, Economics) Advanced Technology Adoption: Selection or Causal Effects? (AEA Papers and Proceedings, Vol. 113, pp. 210-14, May 2023) Restrepo and his colleagues show that firms that adopt advanced technologies are larger in terms of employment than other firms in their same industry and cohort. |
Robert Reinhart (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) A Meta-Analysis Suggests That tACS Improves Cognition in Healthy, Aging, and Psychiatric Populations (Science Translational Medicine, May 2023) Reinhart and his co-authors suggest that transcranial alternating current stimulation (tACS) has potential for improving cognition, but further studies are needed to confirm this finding. |
Hyeouk Chris Hahm (School of Social Work) Effect of Vicarious Discrimination on Race-Based Stress Symptoms Among Asian American Young Adults During the COVID-19 Pandemic (APA PsycNet, May 2023) Hahm and her colleagues demonstrate that witnessing racial discrimination (“vicarious discrimination”), including via social media, can cause race-based stress symptoms. They conclude that providers should provide the opportunity to address these situations, reducing any trauma experienced. |
Kristin Long (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) Validation of the Psychosocial Assessment Tool Sibling Module Follow-Up Version (Journal of Pediatric Psychology, May 2023) Acknowledging that psychosocial screening is recommended to connect siblings of youth with cancer to psychosocial services, Long and her co-authors aim to validate and establish a clinical cutoff for the recently developed Psychosocial Assessment Tool (PAT) Sibling Module, concluding the follow-up version is a reliable and valid screener for sibling psychosocial risk following cancer diagnosis. |
Kyle Gobrogge (CAS, Women’s, Gender & Sexuality Studies) Neurodevelopmental Model Explaining Associations between Sex Hormones, Personality, and Eating Pathology (Brain Sciences, May 2023) Gobrogge and his co-author investigate the relationships between sex hormones, personality, and eating disorders for decades, showing that that aggressiveness, impulsivity, and obsessive-compulsiveness may mediate or moderate the relationships between sex hormones and eating pathology, but only among females. |
Stefan G. Hofmann (CAS, Physiological & Brain Sciences) The Relationship Between Psychological Inflexibility and Well-Being in Adults: A Meta-Analysis of the Acceptance and Action Questionnaire (AAQ) (Behavior Therapy, May 2023) Hoffman and his co-authors’ findings support the hypothesized link between psychological inflexibility and worse well-being. |
Charles Dellheim (CAS, History) Belonging and Betrayal: How Jews Made the Art World Modern (Austrian History Yearbook, Brandeis University Press, 2021. Pp. 653., May 2023) Historian Charles Delheim recounts the story of the 1900 commission of artist Pierre-Auguste Renoir by two Jewish brothers’, despite his anti-Semitic views, and the doubt about Renoir’s willingness to accept a commission from Jewish patrons. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Estimating Prevalence of Bereavement, Its Contribution to Risk for Binge Drinking, and Other High-Risk Health States in a State Population Survey, 2019 Georgia Behavioral Risk Factor Surveillance Survey (International Journal of Environmental Research and Public Health, May 2023) Carr and her associates use a cross-sectional, population-based survey to estimate the prevalence of binge drinking and its association with new bereavement. |
Ray Fisman (CAS, Economics & CISS Affiliate) Universalism and Political Representation: Evidence from the Field (NBER Working Paper Series, May 2023) In this paper, Fisman and his co-authors find that spatial heterogeneity in universalism is a substantially stronger predictor of geographic variation in political outcomes than traditional economic variables such as income or education. |
Christopher Robertson (LAW, Health Law, Policy, and Management & CISS Affiliate) JD-Next: A Valid and Reliable Tool to Predict Diverse Students’ Success in Law School (Journal of Empirical Legal Studies, May 2023) In the study, Robertson and his co-authors test the validity and reliability of the JD-Next exam as a potential admissions tool for juris doctor programs of education, finding that the JD-Next exam is a valid and reliable predictor of law school performance, comparable to legacy exams. |
Abigail Sullivan (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) Modeling Agent Decision and Behavior in the Light of Data Science and Artificial Intelligence (Environmental Modeling & Software, May 2023) Sullivan and her colleagues call for further developments of Agent-based modeling (ABM), especially modeling agent behaviors, in the light of data science and artificial intelligence. |
Mary Elizabeth Collins(SSW, Social Welfare Policy & CISS Affiliate) Centering Race Equity Within Youth Workforce Development: Utilizing Critical Race Theory (Community, Work & Family, May 2023) In this article, Collins and her co-authors offer suggestions to further race equity in employment and training for youth. |
Heather Schoenfeld (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) The Security Mindset: Corrections Officer Workplace Culture in Late Mass Incarceration (Theoretical Criminology, May 2023) Schoenfeld and her co-author, Grant Everly, find that prison officials’ practice in jail settings “may work against” the positive relationships necessary for prisoner rehabilitation. |
John M Marston (CAS, Archaeology & CISS Affiliate) Crop Introductions and Agricultural Change in Anatolia During the Long First MillenniumCE (Vegetation History and Archaeobotany, May 2023) Marston and his co-author explore regional differences in agricultural practices from the Roman through the Ottoman periods and document the timing of crop introductions. |
Deborah Kelemen (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies & CISS Affiliate) Why We Should Care About Moral Foundations When Preparing for the Next Pandemic: Insights from Canada, the UK and the US (PLOS One, May 2023) Kelemen and her co-authors demonstrate the impact of moral foundations on preventative health behaviors across a range of western democracies. |
Jonathan Mijs (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Learning About Inequality in Unequal America: How Heterogeneity in College Shapes Students’ Beliefs About Meritocracy and Racial Discrimination (Science Direct, May 2023) In this article, Mijs illustrates that growing inequality produces socioeconomically homogeneous settings, which then reduces some peoples’ experience with inequality. This lack of experience and understanding helps to explain why many Americans have not rallied against inequality. |
Timothy Longman (Pardee School of Global Studies & CISS Affiliate) Memorializing Violence as a Political Tool: Public Memory and the Genocide of the Tutsi in Rwanda (Violence and Public Memory, May 2023) In this chapter, Longman centers on the political manipulation of the public memory of the genocide of the Tutsis in Rwanda contending that the government narrative is undermined by the lived experience of Rwandans, many of whom view the RPF as an authoritarian party that benefits an ethnic and national minority.
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Marc Rysman (CAS, Economics
& CISS Affiliate
) Bank Branching Strategies in the 1997 Thai Financial Crisis and Local Access to Credit (CEPR Discussion Papers 17869, C.E.P.R. Discussion Papers, May 2023) Rysman and his co-author find that the effect of financial crises on locations of bank branches affect access to credit for years. |
Neha Gondal (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) & Kristen Tzoc (CAS, Sociology) In Search of the Suitable Candidate: The Role of Status, Upstream and Downstream Diversity in Recruitment Partnerships (Socio-Economic Review, May 2023) BU Sociology faculty Gondal and Tzoc argue that while elite higher education recruitment strives for diversity, there are no imperatives to encourage partnering with diverse accounting firms to ensure diverse management toolkits. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) COVID-19 Mortality by Race and Ethnicity in US Metropolitan and Nonmetropolitan Areas, March 2020 to February 2022 (JAMA Network Open, May 2023) Stokes and his colleagues assess to what extent national decreases in racial and ethnic disparities in COVID-19 mortality between the initial pandemic wave and subsequent Omicron wave reflect reductions in mortality vs other factors, such as the pandemic’s changing geography. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) Expressions of Uncertainty in Invisible Scientific and Religious Phenomena During Naturalistic Conversation (Cognition, May 2023) Corriveau and her co-authors studied the potential effects of culture in the differences in belief of the existence of invisible entities (such as germs or angels) with findings indicating that adults in markedly different belief communities express less confidence in religious entities, rather than scientific entities. |
Deborah Car (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) and Ian Sue Wing (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) Population Aging and Heat Exposure in the 21st Century: Which U.S. Regions Are at Greatest Risk and Why? (The Gerontoligist, May 2023) In this article, Carr and her associates identify the extent to which rising heat exposures are attributable to climate change rather than population aging. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Associations of Category Fluency Clustering Performance with In Vivo Brain Pathology in Autosomal Dominant Alzheimer’s Disease (Journal of the International Neuropsychological Society, April 2023) Cronin-Golomb and her co-authors examine the association between category fluency clustering performance and brain pathology in individuals with autosomal dominant Alzheimer’s disease (ADAD). |
Katherine Levine Einstein (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) 2022 Menino Survey of Mayors: Economic Opportunity, Poverty & Well-Being (Economic Opportunity, Poverty & Well-Being, April 2023) The 2022 Menino Survey of Mayors represents the ninth nationally representative survey of American mayors and is based on interviews with 118 sitting mayors from 38 states. The 2022 Survey explores mayoral views on climate and energy, poverty and rising costs of living, and health and safety. The second and final set of findings, released in April 2023, analyzes mayors’ views on key economic challenges – including poverty and the rising cost of living – and tools they can use at the local level. It also investigates what mayors perceive to be the main public health and public safety challenges in their communities. The 2022 Survey continues with the support of The Rockefeller Foundation. |
Nathan D. Jones (SED & CISS Affiliate) A Descriptive Portrait of the Paraeducator Workforce in Washington State (National Center for Analysis of Longitudinal Data in Education Research Working Paper, April 2023) Jones and his colleagues discuss the status of para-educators in the state of Washington. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) Understanding Quasiregularity and Continua in Language: Beyond “Words and Rules” (Language Studies in India, April 2023) In this article, Caldwell-Harris discusses quasiregularity and continua in language. |
Wade Campbell (CAS, Archeology & CISS Affiliate) Chasing Copeland and Roger’s “Trial Balloons”: Multi-Scalar Considerations of Early Navajo Rock Art in Dinétah (Documenting the Dinétah: Papers in Honor of James M. Copeland, Papers of the Archaeological Society of New Mexico, Vol. 49, 2023, April 2023) Campbell and his co-author draw on previous research to weigh in on early Navajo rock art with the goal of bolstering discussions of Navajo rock art in Dinétah. |
Daryl R. Ireland (CAS, Theology & CISS Affiliate) Visions of Salvation: Chinese Christian Posters in an Age of Revolution (Baylor University Press, April 2023) In his new book, Ireland offers a fresh look at Chinese history by taking a look at Christian propaganda posters from the 1920 ‘s through the 1940’s meant to catch the public’s attention and compete with alternative ideologies about how best to save the nation. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) Social Learning and Religion (The Oxford Handbook of Cultural Evolution, Oxford University Press, April 2023) Corriveau and her co-authors argue that children develop a belief in the existence of God through the cultural input to which they are exposed, highlighting research showing the impact of learning through interaction with family, peers, and the larger environment. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Patterns of Tobacco Product Use and Substance Misuse among Adolescents in the United States (Preventative Medicine Reports, April 2023) Stokes and his co-authors find a substantive correlation between e-cigarette use and substance misuse among adolescents, further strengthening the basis for tobacco prevention efforts. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Change in Homeless and Health Services Use Following Migration Among Veterans with Experience of Homelessness (Journal of General Internal Medicine, April 2023) Byrne and his colleagues explore changes among Veterans, or the larger homeless population, in the utilization of health and homelessness services in relation to a change in housing. |
Makarand Amrish Mody (SPH, Hospitality Administration &CISS Affiliate) Hospitality as the Bridge: Advancing Transformative Service Research Towards Human Flourishing (The Service Industries Journal, April 2023) In his article, Mody offers a new structure – Hospitality-Oriented Systems of Transformation In Services (HOSTIS) which addresses the potential of service organizations to contribute to a society’s growth, development, and holistic well-being. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) Social Robots As Social Learning Partners: Exploring Children’s Early Understanding and Learning from Social Robots (Behavioral and Brain Sciences, April 2023) Corriveau and her co-author argue that children do not view “social robots”, such as voice assistants like Siri or Alexa, as toys but rather as instructors and sources of reliable learning. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Returns to Homelessness: Key Considerations for Using This Metric to Improve System Performance (American Journal of Public Health, April 2023) In this article, Byrne and his co-author pose questions that aim to define and measure homelessness recidivism in a way that enables improvements in homelessness assistance. |
Allison Wigen (CAS, Sociology doctoral candidate) Negotiating Unequal Exchange: Relational Work in Cross-Class Sibling Relationships. (Sociological Forum, March 2023) Wigen examines exchanges of support in cross-class adult sibling relationships, and identifies four types of indirect economic support—proxy support, dependent support, compensatory support, and shared resources—which contribute to our understanding of the dynamics of sibling exchange. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Quantifying the Impact of Evictions and Eviction Filings on Homelessness Rates in the United States (Housing Policy Debate, April 2023) Byrne and his co-authors examine the relationship between eviction filings and homelessness finding that, though the relationship is more nuanced than previously considered, the concerns presented from eviction processes suggest a need for early intervention. |
Charles B. Chang (CAS, Linguistics & CISS Affiliate) Individual Differences in Vowel Compactness Persist Under Intoxication Across First and Second Languages (Proceedings of the International Congress of Phonetic Sciences #20, April 2023) In this article, Chang and his co-authors examine how alcohol intake affects vowel compactness in bilingual speakers. |
Luke Glowacki (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Myths About the Evolution of War Apes Foragers and the Stories We Tell (EcoEvoRxiv, March 2023) Glowacki and his coauthors demonstrate that despite differing points of view, our human ancestors likely experienced a range of relationship, including warfare. |
Thomas Byrne (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Examining the Relationships Between Exposure to Homelessness and Housing Insecurity and Perceptions and Attitudes Toward Homelessness Among Low- and Moderate-Income People (Journal of Social Distress and Homelessness , March 2023) Byrne and his co-authors examine the correlation between perceptions of homeless and home insecurity and the experiences of those exposed to homelessness themselves, finding an increase in sympathetic interactions. |
Phillipe Copeland (SSW & CISS Affiliate) Creation and Validation of the Anti-Racism Efficacy Measure: Factor Analysis and Measurement Invariance (SN Social Sciences, March 2023) Copeland and his coauthors discuss the need for a self-efficacy scale on antiracism to assess the extent to which people feel they are capable of impacting racism in society. Additionally, they show that many students score more positively than expected. |
Steven Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) Compassion and Humility as Predictors of Justice and Diversity Commitments Among Seminary Faculty (Pastoral Psychology, March 2023) In this article, Sandage and his coauthors study the importance of understanding the diversity and justice commitments and goals of seminary faculty. |
Rachel Brulé (GDP & CISS Affiliate) Extreme Weather Expands Women’s Autonomy 2 Where Households are Labor-Constrained: 3 Evidence on the Impact of Droughts in Bangladesh (Research Square, March 2023) Brulé and her co-author study the effects on men and women’s roles due to weather fluctuations, and the resultant loss of income, caused by climate-change in rural and urban Bangladesh homes. |
Andrew C. Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Sociodemographic Differences in e-Cigarette Uptake and Perceptions of Harm (American Journal of Preventive Medicine, March 2023) Stokes and his colleagues conclude that Hispanic, Black, and/or adults of lower socioeconomic status are less likely to transition to e-cigarettes in order to aid in quitting cigarettes and indicate preliminary evidence in harm perceptions may be a cause. |
Ian Sue Wing (CAS, Earth & Environment & CISS Affiliate) Air-conditioning Adoption and Electricity Demand Highlight Climate Change Mitigation-adaption Tradeoffs (Scientific Reports, March 2023) Sue Wing and co-authors discuss the affects climate change has on cooling needs, increasing the demand for power generation and energy carriers, raising concerns about the ability to meet those needs while avoiding disruptions in service. |
Benjamin Siegel (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) Review: On an Empty Stomach: Two Hundred Years of Hunger Relief, by Tom Scott-Smith (Gastronimica, March 2023) Siegel reviews Scott-Smith’s work finding it an “…essential primer on efforts to feed the hungry in the modern world, and of assured interest to a wide range of food scholars.” |
Jessica T. Simes (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Analyzing Child Firearm Assault Injuries by Race and Ethnicity During the COVID-19 Pandemic in 4 Major Us Cities (JAMA Network Open, March 2023) Simes is a co-author of this research letter that focuses on how pandemic-related increases in firearm assaults may have disproportionately affected Black, Hispanic, and Asian children. |
Charles B. Chang (CAS, Linguistics & CISS Affiliate) Exploring the Onset of Phonetic Drift in Voice Onset Time Perception (Languages, March 2023) In his research, Chang studies how recent exposure to a second or foreign language can influence production and/or perception in the first language, a phenomenon referred to as phonetic drift. |
Neha Gondal (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Diffusion of Innovations Through Social Networks: Determinants and Implications (Sociology Compass, March 2023) In this article, Gondal takes stock of the social network field and reviews ongoing debates on the role of social networks in the diffusion of innovations to summarize the sociological implications of the diffusion of innovations through the field. |
Andrew Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Associations Between Mortality From COVID-19 and Other Causes: A State-Level Analysis (PLOS one, March 2023) In this article, Stokes compiles research and information that may help to inform state-level responses aimed at easing the full mortality burden of the COVID-19 pandemic. |
Steven J. Sandage (STH, Psychology of Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) (Re)Framing Resilience: A Trajectory-Based Study Involving Emerging Religious/Spiritual Leaders (Religions, March 2023) Sandage and coauthors examine longitudinal patterns of change in resilience during the pandemic in a sample of emerging leaders. In doing so, they offered a conceptual and methodological approach based on historical and critical evaluations of the study of resilience. |
David M. Carballo (CAS, Archaeology & CISS Affiliate) Sustainability and Duration of Early Central Places in Prehispanic Mesoamerica (Frontiers in Ecology and Evolution, March 2023) During the last millennium BCE, central places were found across many regions of western (non-Maya) Mesoamerica. David M. Caraballo and coauthors compare a subset of these regional centers and find marked differences in their sustainability–defined as the duration of time that they remained central places in their respective regions. |
Deborah Kelemen (CAS, Psychological & Brain Studies & CISS Affiliate) Don’t Bug Me!: The Role of Names, Functions, and Feelings in Shaping Children’s and Adults’ Conservation Attitudes About Unappealing Species (Journal of Environmental Psychology, May 2023) In this article, Kelemen and coauthors drew on cognitive and developmental research to explore the causal influence of scientific naming, and conceptual information about anthropocentric or biocentric functional effects on US urban adults’ and 9- to 11-year-old children’s attitudes about conserving recently discovered insects. |
Steven J. Sandage (STH, Religion and Theology & CISS Affiliate) Relational Spirituality Model in Psychotherapy: Overview and Case Application (Handbook of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies, 2023) This chapter of the Handbook of Spiritually Integrated Psychotherapies summarizes the contours of the relational spirituality model (RSM) of psychotherapy and offers a case application. |
Ray Fisman (CAS, Economics & CISS Affiliate) Risky Business: Why Insurance Markets Fail and What to Do About It (Yale University Press, January 2023) Unraveling the mysteries of insurance markets, Liran Einav, Amy Finkelstein, and Ray Fisman explore such issues as why insurers want to know so much about us and whether we should let them obtain this information; why insurance entrepreneurs often fail (and some tricks that may help them succeed); and whether we’d be better off with government-mandated health insurance instead of letting businesses, customers, and markets decide who gets coverage and at what price. |
Merav Shohet (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Patients’ Perspectives on Race and the Use of Race-Based Algorithms in Clinical Decision-Making: A Qualitative Study (Journal of General Internal Medicine, February 2023) Shohet and colleagues observed twenty-three adult patients recruited at a safety-net hospital in Boston, MA to examine patients’ perspectives on race and the use of race-based algorithms in clinical decision-making. |
Alize Arican (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Counterfactual Future-Thinking (Environment and Planning D: Society and Space, February 2023) In this article, Arican follows two urban experts and homes in on the portrayed landscape of construction. She asks: what makes urban experts stay with a project that might not materialize? The answer lies in what she calls “counterfactual future-thinking”: a way of articulating the future in relation to what might have happened. |
Zach Rossetti (SED, Special Education & CISS Affiliate) Parent Perceptions of Remote Instruction for Students With Extensive Support Needs (Research and Practice for Persons with Severe Disabilities, February 2023) In the wake of the COVID-19 pandemic, schools shifted to nontraditional education overnight, disrupting learning for millions of children in the United States. Rossetti and colleagues interviewed eight mothers of students with extensive support needs (ESN) to learn how nontraditional education impacted the educational experiences of students with ESN. Our findings included the overall perception that nontraditional education was highly unsuccessful and could not replace in-person learning for participants’ children. |
Katherine Levine Einstein (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) 2022 Menino Survey of Mayors: Mayors and the Climate Crisis (Mayors and the Climate Crisis, January 2023) The 2022 Menino Survey of Mayors represents the ninth nationally representative survey of American mayors and is based on interviews with 118 sitting mayors from 38 states. The 2022 Survey explores mayoral views on climate and energy, poverty and rising costs of living, and health and safety. The first set of findings, released in January 2023, delves into mayors’ current views on local climate action, focusing on their beliefs about the underlying issues and threats, their sense of the tools they have at their disposal, and their enthusiasm for using them. The 2022 Survey continues with the support of The Rockefeller Foundation. |
Timothy Longman (Pardee School of Global Studies & CISS Affiliate) Researching Under Constraints: Recent Books on Post-genocide Rwanda (Journal of Human Rights, February 2023) Rwanda has been a focus of substantial scholarly attention, but recent regulations there have made conducting research increasingly challenging. Four books from diverse disciplines show that, despite the ways in which the authoritarian context places constraints on what research can be undertaken and how it can be done, solid scholarship on Rwanda can continue to be produced. They also show that the 1994 genocide against the Tutsi remains the focal point of nearly every book on the country, even those focused on society since 1994. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) Emotions in Cognitive Translation and Interpreting Studies 1 (The Routledge Handbook of Translation, Interpreting and Bilingualism, 2023) In this article, Caldwell-Harris discusses how decision-making is an integral part of the translator’s job: from what texts they choose to translate and when and where, to how they choose to translate every word within the text and greater utilitarian responding in the foreign language has been borne out by randomly assigning bilinguals to answer trolley dilemmas in their native or foreign language. |
Michelle Amazeen (COM, Director, Communication Research Center & CISS Affiliate) Perpetuating the Twenty-First Century Infodemic (The Routledge Companion to Advertising and Promotional Culture, 2023) In this article, Amazeen and colleagues address that new publishers are creating content mimicking the look and feel of their reporters’ own journalism while obscuring the content’s bias and one-sidedness casts native advertising within the realm of disinformation. |
Charles B. Chang (CAS, Linguistics & CISS Affiliate) Examining the Role of Phoneme Frequency in First Language Perceptual Attrition (Languages, 2023) In this paper, Chang and co-authors follow up on previous findings concerning first language (L1) perceptual attrition to examine the role of phoneme frequency in influencing variation across L1 contrasts. They also discuss the implications of the findings for future research examining frequency effects in L1 perceptual change. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Aging in America (University of California Press, February 2023) Population aging affects every aspect of life in the US and worldwide. This new book shows why the population is older than ever before, and the social policies needed to ensure that older adults enjoy good health and financial security. It also shows the vast diversity in older adults’ economic well-being, health, social relationships, and more. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Midlife Mental Health (Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology, Elsevier, 2023) This chapter identifies sources of midlife stress that may affect mental health, and highlights practices and policies to treat and maintain midlife mental health, including clinical interventions and public supports for family caregivers. |
Deborah Carr (CAS, Sociology & CISS Director) Death and Dying (Reference Module in Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Psychology, Elsevier, 2023) Carr and co-author Zachary Baker provide an overview of contemporary death and dying patterns, the psychological consequences of bereavement, and social policies to facilitate a “good death.” |
Nancy J. Smith-Hefner (CAS, Anthropology & CISS Affiliate) Waithood: Gender, Education, and Global Delays in Marriage and Childbearing (Berghahn Press, January 2023) Nancy J. Smith Hefner and Marcia C. Inhorn edit 15 chapters by authors who offer examples of waithood, which refers to the dramatic prolongation of the period of time between childhood and the beginning of socially-recognized adulthood, from different areas of the world. |
Neha Gondal (CAS, Sociology & CISS Affiliate) Health-Based Homophily in Public Housing Developments (BMC Public Health, February 2023) Neha Gondal and Brenda Heaton discover that social networks within public housing developments are homophilous across oral health, weight, and consumption of added sugar. Because of the effectiveness of behavior diffusion within homophilous communities, Gondal and Heaton suggest that interventions specifically designed for social networks could optimize the reduction of chronic disease in vulnerable communities. |
H. Denis Wu (COM & CISS Affiliate) Assessing China’s News Coverage and Soft Power in Latin America in the Wake of the Belt and Road Initiative (2013–2021) (International Communication Gazette, January 2023) Denis Wu and co-author Andrea Morante analyze the effect of China’s communication strategies with Latin America, finding Latin American sentiment toward the East Asian nation to have actually deteriorated since China its strategies. |
Jessica Silbey (LAW & CISS Affiliate) Foreword in “Copyright in the Street: An Oral History of Creative Processes in Street Art and Graffiti Subcultures” (Scholarly Commons at BU School of Law, February 2023) Silbey, author herself of intellectual property-focused books Against Progress and The Eureka Myth, contributes the foreword to author Enrico Bonadio’s new book, opining that the book inspirationally captures the outsider world of street and graffiti artists who often go against the grain traditional copyright system and its capitalistic supports. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Changes in Apathy, Depression, and Anxiety in Parkinson’s Disease From Before to During the COVID-19 Era (Brain Sciences, January 2023) In this publication, data was collected on apathy, depression, and anxiety in a large sample of persons with PD before the beginning of the COVID-19 era. Anxiety and depression, but not apathy, were correlated with the impact of COVID-19. |
Alice Cronin-Golomb (CAS, Psychological and Brain Sciences & CISS Affiliate) Memory for Semantically Related Objects Differentiates Cognitively Unimpaired Autosomal Dominant Mutation Carriers From Non-carrier Family Members (The Journal of Prevention of Alzheimer’s Disease, January 2023) In this article, Cronin-Golomb and co-authors used a computerized cognitive test developed by their group to evaluate if cognitively unimpaired carriers of an autosomal dominant AD (ADAD) mutation performed worse on this test than non-carrier family members. |
Kathleen Corriveau (SED, Applied Human Development & CISS Affiliate) The Impact of Visualizing the Group on Children’s Persistence in and Perceptions of Stem (Acta Psychologica, January 2023) Corriveau and co-authors investigate a perceptual mechanism that may contribute to the underrepresentation of women in STEM fields across the world, beginning in early childhood. |
Eugenio Menegon (CAS, History & CISS Affiliate) Catalogue of Chinese Documents in the “Propaganda Fide” Historical Archives (Urbaniana University Press, 2022) Eugene Menegon’s introductory essay gives a full explanation of the entire structure and contents of the Archives pertaining to the China missions, and sketches the activity of Propaganda Fide missionaries in China up to the early 19th century. |
Andrew Stokes (SPH, Global Health & CISS Affiliate) Differences Between Reported COVID-19 Deaths And Estimated Excess Deaths in Counties Across the United States, March 2020 to February 2022 (medRxiv – Preprint, January 2023) Estimates from this study can be used to inform targeting of resources to areas in which the true toll of the COVID-19 pandemic has been underestimated. |
Taylor Boas (CAS, Political Science & CISS Affiliate) Evangelical and Electoral Politics in Latin America: A Kingdom of This World (Cambridge University Press, January 2023) Focusing on evangelical Christians in Latin America, this book argues that religious minorities seek and gain electoral representation when they face significant threats to their material interests and worldview, and when their community is not internally divided by cross-cutting cleavages. |
Christopher Robertson (LAW, Health Law, Policy, and Management & CISS Affiliate) Pulse Oximeters and Violation of Federal Anti-Discrimination Law (JAMA, January 2023) Robertson and co-authors discuss how biased oximeters have remained in use for decades without legal or regulatory action and why a recently proposed rule by the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) may finally facilitate change. |
Rachel Brulé (GDP & CISS Affiliate) Climate Shocks and Gendered Political Transformation: How Crises Alter Women’s Political Representation (Politics & Gender, January 2023) Brulé argues not only can climate change induce migration, but, climate shocks—which she defines as discrete, unanticipated destruction due to weather such as floods, drought, or windstorms—can also destabilize gendered social systems. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) Autistic Discussion Forums: Insights into the Topics That Clinicians Don’t Know About (PsychArXIV, January 2023) Caldwell and co-authors review 342 posts primarily from Reddit and Quora, highlighting examples in which novel autism concepts were discussed prior to their inclusion in the DSM 5 text revision. Common forum themes are reviewed and the efficacy of using forums for research is emphasized. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) Adults with Autism Discuss Their Experience of Foreign Language Learning: An Exploration of the “Different Strategies” Hypothesis (PsychArXIV, January 2023) Caldwell and co-authors review forum posts from autistic and non-autistic individuals to determine how they differ in their learning. Among their findings are that autistic individuals found reading/writing more rewarding than speaking/listening, consistent with auditory, attentional, and social deficits present in autism. |
Catherine Caldwell-Harris (CAS, Psychology & CISS Affiliate) When Autistic Writing is Superior to Neurotypical Writing: the Case of Blogs (PsychArXIV, February 2023) Caldwell-Harris and co-author Solomon D. Posner analyze the differences between a sample of 30 neurotypical bloggers and and 30 self-identified autistic bloggers. The study finds that autistic bloggers tend to write significantly more often about abstract or scientific topics compared to neurotypical authors who were primarily concerned with daily life events. |
Michelle Amazeen (COM, Director, Communication Research Center & CISS Affiliate) Processing Vaccine Misinformation: Recall and Effects of Source Type on Claim Accuracy via Perceived Motivations and Credibility (International Journal of Communication, 2022) This study leverages the persuasion knowledge model (PKM) as a theoretical framework to examine how individuals process attempts at correcting measles, mumps, and rubella vaccine-related misinformation on Facebook. Amazeen concludes her study with a discussion of how the PKM could be reimagined as a model better suited for misinformation research. |
H. Denis Wu (COM & CISS Affiliate) Post-truth Public Diplomacy: A Detrimental Trend of Cross-National Communication and How Open Societies Address It (The Journal of International Communication, January 2023) In this article, H. Denis Wu divulges a new form of public diplomacy with post-truth content overseen by host countries to influence the cognitive and affective condition of publics in target countries. |
Hiroaki Kaido (CAS, Economics & CISS Affiliate) Nonparametric Identification of Random Coefficients in Aggregate Demand Models for Differentiated Products (The Econometrics Journal, January 2023) This paper studies nonparametric identification in market level demand models for differentiated products with heterogeneous consumers. |