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Eric Luis Uhlmann
Researcher at INSEAD
Publications - 117
Citations - 8707
Eric Luis Uhlmann is an academic researcher from INSEAD. The author has contributed to research in topics: Moral character & Moral disengagement. The author has an hindex of 35, co-authored 113 publications receiving 7327 citations. Previous affiliations of Eric Luis Uhlmann include HEC Paris & Northwestern University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Understanding and using the Implicit Association Test: III. Meta-analysis of predictive validity.
TL;DR: A review of 122 research reports (184 independent samples, 14,900 subjects) found average r =.274 for prediction of behavioral, judgment, and physiological measures by Implicit Association Test (IAT) measures as mentioned in this paper.
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Can an Angry Woman Get Ahead? Status Conferral, Gender, and Expression of Emotion in the Workplace
TL;DR: Providing an external attribution for the target person's anger eliminated the gender bias and theoretical implications and practical applications are discussed.
Journal ArticleDOI
Many analysts, one dataset: Making transparent how variations in analytical choices affect results
Raphael Silberzahn,Eric Luis Uhlmann,D. P. Martin,Pasquale Anselmi,Frederik Aust,Eli Awtrey,Štěpán Bahník,Feng Bai,Colin Bannard,Evelina Bonnier,Rickard Carlsson,Felix Cheung,G. Christensen,Russ Clay,M. A. Craig,A. Dalla Rosa,Lammertjan Dam,Mathew H. Evans,I. Flores Cervantes,Nathan M. Fong,Monica Gamez-Djokic,A. Glenz,S. Gordon-McKeon,Timothy J Heaton,Karin Hederos,Moritz Heene,A. J. Hofelich Mohr,Fabia Högden,K. Hui,Magnus Johannesson,Jonathan Kalodimos,Erikson Kaszubowski,Deanna M. Kennedy,R. Lei,T. A. Lindsay,Silvia Liverani,Christopher R. Madan,Daniel C. Molden,Eric Molleman,Richard D. Morey,Laetitia B. Mulder,B. R. Nijstad,Nolan G. Pope,Bryson R. Pope,Jason M. Prenoveau,Floor Rink,E. Robusto,H. Roderique,Anna Sandberg,E. Schlüter,Felix D. Schönbrodt,Martin F. Sherman,S. A. Sommer,Kristin Lee Sotak,Seth M. Spain,Christoph Spörlein,Tom Stafford,L. Stefanutti,Susanne Täuber,J. Ullrich,Michelangelo Vianello,Eric-Jan Wagenmakers,M. Witkowiak,S. Yoon,Brian A. Nosek,Brian A. Nosek +65 more
TL;DR: In this paper, 29 teams involving 61 analysts used the same data set to address the same research question: whether soccer referees are more likely to give red cards to dark-skin-toned players than to light-skinned-players.
Journal ArticleDOI
Constructed Criteria Redefining Merit to Justify Discrimination
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors present an account of job discrimination according to which people redefine merit in a manner congenial to the idiosyncratic credentials of individual applicants from desired groups.
Journal Article
Moral heuristics. Commentaries. Author's reply
Cass R. Sunstein,Matthew D. Adler,Christopher J. Anderson,Elizabeth Anderson,Jonathan Baron,Karen Bartsch,Jennifer Cole Wright,William D. Casebeer,Pablo Fernández-Berrocal,Natalio Extremera,Barbara H. Fried,Richard J. Gerrig,Michael E. Gorman,Ulrike Hahn,John-Mark Frost,Greg Maio,Jonathan Haidt,Marc D. Hauser,Harold Herzog,Gordon M. Burghardt,Robert A. Hinde,Jonathan J. Koehler,Andrew D. Gershoff,John Mikhail,David A. Pizarro,Eric Luis Uhlmann,Liana Ritov,Peter Singer,Edward Stein,Philip E. Tetlock,Elke U. Weber,Jessica S. Ancker +31 more
TL;DR: The idea of error-prone heuristics is especially controversial in the moral domain, where agreement on the correct answer may be hard to elicit; but in many contexts, they are at work and they do real damage.