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- Academic – UNF – Master of Arts in General Psychology; social exclusion; ostracism; rejection; injustice; fairness (1)
- Academic – UNF – Psychology; Dissertations (1)
- Thesis; University of North Florida; UNF; Dissertations (1)
- Thesis; University of North Florida; UNF; Dissertations; Academic -- UNF -- Psychology; Dissertations; Academic -- UNF -- Master of Arts in General Psychology; women; sexual orientation; gender expression; ischemic pain (1)
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Full-Text Articles in Personality and Social Contexts
You Get What You Deserve : The Relationship Between Injustice And The Consequences Of Social Exclusion, Heather A. Pease
You Get What You Deserve : The Relationship Between Injustice And The Consequences Of Social Exclusion, Heather A. Pease
UNF Graduate Theses and Dissertations
In this current research I sought to answer two questions; 1) Do individuals have the capacity to recognize when they are being justly or unjustly socially excluded or conversely socially included? 2) Do the consequences of just and unjust social exclusion or social inclusion vary? In efforts to address these questions, I used perceptions of burden (i.e., participant’s overall contribution to a group task) to manipulate the perceived fairness of one’s inclusionary status to see how this affects the participants’ emotional and behavioral reactions.
In Study 1, participants engaged in an imaginary group interaction in which they were burdensome (performing …
Women’S Intrasexual Variability In Sexual Psychology And Pain Functioning, Charlotte M. Lutz
Women’S Intrasexual Variability In Sexual Psychology And Pain Functioning, Charlotte M. Lutz
UNF Graduate Theses and Dissertations
The purpose of this study was to examine the relationship between sexual orientation, self-described gender expression and preferred levels of gender expression in romantic partners with ischemic pain performance in healthy young women. It was hypothesized that lesbian and bisexual women would be less sensitive to pain than heterosexual women. It was also hypothesized that regardless of sexual orientation, women who endorse a preference for more feminine romantic partners and who describe themselves as more masculine would report higher pain thresholds, higher pain tolerance, and lower pain intensity levels than women who report attraction to more masculine romantic partners and …