A Seriously Psychological Page

Some praise at morning what they blame at night,
But always think the last opinion right.
-- Alexander Pope

Mind and world in short have evolved together, and in consequence are something of a mutual fit.
-- William James

Resources


Social Psychology

Resource Pages:

Organizations:

[Note: You can find a more comprehensive set of links at the sites given above.]

Related (Sub)Disciplines:

Social Psychology Journals: Other Applied Journals:


If all our acts are conditioned behaviour, then so are our theories:
yet your behaviourist claims his is objectively true.
-- W. H. Auden


General Psychology

Resource Pages:

Journals:

Other links

Or: A slowly progressing attempt to organize my bookmarks and put them online

  1. Critical Skills
  2. Some of my Social Psych Links
  3. Neat Stats links
  4. Teaching in General


Knowing artists, you think you know all about Prima Donnas:
boy!, just wait till you hear scientists get up and sing.
-- W. H. Auden


Renaissance Woman by Night, Soc Psych Crusader by Day...

Research Interests

My academic interests are in the area of intergroup relations, identity and the self, and decision-making. I look at how groups interact with each other in various social systems, and how people's group membership influences their behaviours in the context of conflict.

I was granted a PhD in 2001, from McGill University in Canada. During my doctorate, I studied identity and decisions in conflict by looking at English/French relations in Québec, under the aegis of Donald M. Taylor. My research explored the way Anglophone and Francophone Québecers’ identity influenced their attitudes, intentions and behaviours. I focused on two processes: first, the way that identity changes “rational” cost-benefit analyses by creating contingencies of group- and individual-level costs and benefits; second, the way that group norms structure choices in conflict by influencing the evaluation of behavioural alternatives on dimensions of subjective expectancy and value. In my thesis work, I developed a model of agentic normative influence focusing on individuals’ deliberative engagement with both ingroup and outgroup norms for intergroup behaviours.

At this point, in 2002, I have an SSHRC post-doctoral research fellowship, which I have taken up at the Centre for Research on Group Processes, a research unit of the School of Psychology at the University of Queensland in Australia. Working with Debbie Terry, I have continued to study normative influence and identity processes in deliberative decision-making in conflict, contrasting this agentic model of norms and expectancy-value processes with the Referent Informational Influence model of norm-attitude-behaviour relationships developed by Terry and Hogg (e.g., 1996). Some of the studies I have recently conducted at UQ are described in working papers online here.

In addition to maintaining this brilliant program of ongoing basic research, I am interested in, and committed to, the translation of laboratory research into field studies and applied social psychological research. I have engaged the sociology and political science of collective action (e.g., social movement theories) in my own research program. I have been fortunate, in addition, to participate in several interdisciplinary field projects, concerning: (1) bilingualism for minority groups in Arctic Québec (Inuit children's second language learning and its impact on heritage language retention); (2) intergroup attitudes and immigration, in two projects at McGill (South African citizens’ attitudes to immigrants, migrant workers, and refugees) and the University of Queensland (a longitudinal survey of Queenslanders’ attitudes to asylum seekers); and (3) collective action, specifically attitudes and intentions with respect to political protest among anti-globalization demonstrators in Australia. I look forward to continuing this professionally interesting and personally satisfying engagement with applied topics, for example by studying real political, organizational or community groups and conflicts in the field.

Selected Refereed Journal Publications:

For further information about my academic career, please contact me here.

You are probably the only person who has ever accessed this web page, while I myself have logged on Counter times since October 2001.

Back to Winnifred's Home Page!

Last officially modified October 2001. I created this page in August 1996, with help from the NCSA's Beginner's Guide to HTML.

© 1996-2003 Winnifred Louis. I also have a guestbook, which you are welcome to view or sign.