scispace - formally typeset
B

Benjamin A. Tabak

Researcher at Southern Methodist University

Publications -  39
Citations -  1507

Benjamin A. Tabak is an academic researcher from Southern Methodist University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social anxiety & Forgiveness. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 28 publications receiving 1248 citations. Previous affiliations of Benjamin A. Tabak include University of California, Los Angeles & University of Miami.

Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Cognitive systems for revenge and forgiveness.

TL;DR: A subsidiary computational system designed to restore particular relationships after cost-imposing interactions by inhibiting revenge and motivating behaviors that signal benevolence for the harmdoer is posited.
Journal ArticleDOI

Evaluation of enzyme immunoassay and radioimmunoassay methods for the measurement of plasma oxytocin

TL;DR: It is indicated that sample extraction is necessary to obtain valid assay results for plasma oxytocin measurement using a commercially available enzyme immunoassay (EIA) and radioimmunoASSay (RIA) to assess the immunospecificity of the assays.
Journal ArticleDOI

On the form and function of forgiving: modeling the time-forgiveness relationship and testing the valuable relationships hypothesis.

TL;DR: A logarithmic model outperformed linear, exponential, power, hyperbolic, and exponential-power models and revealed that forgiveness was uniquely associated with participants' perceptions that their relationships with their offenders retained value.
Journal ArticleDOI

Oxytocin indexes relational distress following interpersonal harms in women.

TL;DR: Elevated mean peripheral oxytocin reactivity was associated with increased post-conflict anxiety and decreased levels of forgiveness, corroborate previous research implicating oxytoc in as a neuroendocrine marker of relational distress, but not general stress, and demonstrate the utility of studying oxytocIn in response to naturally occurring relational events.