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Emily Balcetis
Assistant
Professor of Psychology
Ph.D. (2006)
Cornell University, Ithaca, NY
Research Area:
Social Judgment &
Behavioral Decision Making
Specializations:
Motivation, Self
and Social Judgment, Visual and Social Perception, Social Cognition, Automaticity
Contact Information:
- Office: 227 Porter Hall
- Phone: (740) 593-1064
- E-mail: balcetis@ohio.edu
Laboratories
(website):
- Social
Perception Action and Motivation (SPAM) Lab
Research Interests:
I
am interested in the conscious and nonconscious ways people fundamentally
orient to the world. In particular, I focus on how the motivations,
emotions, needs, and goals people hold impact the basic ways people
perceive, interpret, and ultimately react to information around them.
For instance, when hoping for a passing grade, does the student see
the squiggle at the top of the exam as a B or 13%? I advocate for an
interactive cognitive system where psychological states constrain the
basic manner in which we perceive and react to our worlds. In doing
so, my research represents an intersection among social psychology,
judgment and decision-making, social cognition, and perception.
MOTIVATED
PERCEPTION
People
assume perceptions of the world are veridical representations of reality.
Much research, however, questions this supposition and instead suggests
the vantage is cloudy at best. The way people perceive their environment
is both selective and malleable. I argue that perception is dependent
on a broader context one established by such social psychological factors
as motivations, individual differences, and goals.
STATES
and GOALS GUIDE ATTENTION and PREDICT BEHAVIOR
The
ways we act within our social world are dependent upon how we interpret
it but also the goals we hold within that world. Social goals, such
as the desire to engage in successful social interactions, can change
the way we perceive members of our social worlds but also the ways in
which we interact with them. I am investigating the functional value
and strategic yet nonconscious use of verbal mimicry within dyadic communication
to repair troublesome interactions while the possibility for repair
still exists with that partner.
PERCEPTION
of and ACTION in THE SOCIAL WORLD
I
am also interested in more traditional social cognitive concerns, such
as biases in social perception and judgment. In particular, I focus
on the biased views we come to hold of others and ourselves in addition
to looking at the consequences of such errors. In addition, I am examining
cross-cultural differences in the accuracy of perceptions of the self
and others.
Recent Publications:
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Balcetis,
E., & Dale, R. (in press). Conceptual set as a top-down constraint
on visual object identification. Perception. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2006). See what you want to see: Motivational
influences on visual perception. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 91, 612-625. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2005). Judging for two: Some connectionist
proposals for how the self informs and constrains social judgment.
Invited chapter for M. Alicke, D. Dunning, & J. Krueger (Eds.),
Self and social judgment. New York: Psychology Press. |
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Balcetis,
E. & Dale, R. (2005). An exploration of social modulation of
syntactic priming. In Proceedings of the 27th Annual Meeting
of the Cognitive Science Society. (pp. 184-189). Mahwah, NJ:
Lawrence Erlbaum. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dale, R. (2003). The eye is not naked: Context clothes
visual perception. In Proceedings of the 26th Annual Meeting
of the Cognitive Science Society. (pp. 109-114), Erlbaum: Mahwah,
NJ. |
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Recent Presentations:
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2006, May). Losing track of time: Dissonance
induced arousal biases time perception. Poster presented at
the American Psychological Society, New York City. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2006, January). Motivated perception:
Cognitive dissonance reduction influences visual processing.
Paper presented (as symposium chair) at the Society for Personality
and Social Psychology Conference, Palm Springs. |
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Dunning,
D., & Balcetis, E. (2005, October). Motivational influences
on vision. Paper presented at the Society for Experimental
Social Psychology, San Diego, CA. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dale, R. (2005, July). An exploration of social modulation
of syntactic priming. Poster presented at Cognitive Science
Society, Stresa, Italy. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2005, May). What naked eye?: Motivated
perception in visual object identification. Paper presented
at the Midwestern Psychological Association Conference, Chicago,
IL. |
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Balcetis,
E., & Dunning, D. (2005, January). The eye of the beholder:
The influence of motivational states on visual object identification.
Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology
Conference, New Orleans, LA. |
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Courses Taught:
Undergraduate:
Introduction to
Psychology
Graduate:
Automaticity
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