Social Psychology and Personality Science (SPPS) presents the following articles – free* for a limited time– from the special issue on New Developments in Research Methods for Social/Personality Psychology.
Like what you're reading? Find more in Part I and Part II of this special issue. |
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Equivalence Tests: A Practical Primer for t Tests, Correlations, and Meta-Analyses by Daniël Lakens
Advancing Research on Cognitive Processes in Social and Personality Psychology: A Hierarchical Drift Diffusion Model Primer by David J. Johnson, Christopher J. Hopwood, Joseph Cesario, and Timothy J. Pleskac
Determining Power and Sample Size for Simple and Complex Mediation Models by Alexander M. Schoemann, Aaron J. Boulton, Stephen D. Short
An Introduction to Social Network Analysis for Personality and Social Psychologists by Allan Clifton and Gregory D. Webster
The GRIM Test: A Simple Technique Detects Numerous Anomalies in the Reporting of Results in Psychology by Nicholas J. L. Brown and James A. J. Heathers
A Hands-On Guide to Conducting Psychological Research on Twitter by Sean C. Murphy
Construct Validation in Social and Personality Research: Current Practice and Recommendations by Jessica K. Flake, Jolynn Pek, and Eric Hehman
Network Analysis on Attitudes A Brief Tutorial by Jonas Dalege, Denny Borsboom, Frenk van Harreveld, and Han L. J. van der Maas
Research Methods for Studying Narrative Identity: A Primer by Jonathan M. Adler, William L. Dunlop, Robyn Fivush, Jennifer P. Lilgendahl, Jennifer Lodi-Smith, Dan P. McAdams, Kate C. McLean, Monisha Pasupathi, and Moin Syed
An Evaluation of Students' Interest in and Compliance With Self-Tracking Methods: Recommendations for Incentives Based on Three Smartphone Sensing Studies by Gabriella M. Harari, Sandrine R. Müller, Varun Mishra, Rui Wang, Andrew T. Campbell, Peter J. Rentfrow, and Samuel D. Gosling
SPPS is a unique short reports journal in social and personality psychology. Its aim is to publish concise reports of empirical studies that provide meaningful contributions to our understanding of important issues in social and personality psychology. SPPS strives to publish innovative, rigorous, and impactful research. It is geared toward a speedy review and publication process to allow groundbreaking research.
*You may already have access to these articles through a library or other subscription. **Source: 2016 Journal Citation Reports® (Clarivate Analytics, 2017)
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Simine Vazire
University of California, Davis, USA
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