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Haotian Zhou

Researcher at ShanghaiTech University

Publications -  14
Citations -  570

Haotian Zhou is an academic researcher from ShanghaiTech University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social distance & Human multitasking. The author has an hindex of 7, co-authored 13 publications receiving 459 citations. Previous affiliations of Haotian Zhou include University of Chicago & Chinese Academy of Sciences.

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Journal ArticleDOI

The pitfall of experimenting on the web: How unattended selective attrition leads to surprising (yet false) research conclusions.

TL;DR: The authors find that experimental studies using online samples (e.g., MTurk) often violate the assumption of random assignment, because participant attrition-quitting a study before completing it and getting paid-is not only prevalent, but also varies systemically across experimental conditions.
Journal ArticleDOI

You are in sync with me: neural correlates of interpersonal synchrony with a partner.

TL;DR: Behavioral results showed that the referent of a synchrony task expressed greater perceived synchrony and greater social affiliation toward a synchronous partner than with an asynchronous partner (i.e., one displaying low mean asynchrony and/or a narrow as synchrony range).
Proceedings ArticleDOI

A Deeper Look at Gender Difference in Multitasking: Gender-Specific Mechanism of Cognitive Control

TL;DR: Though the present study does not speak directly to whether women do possess superior multitasking ability over men, the empirical data presented here is in alignment with the evolutionary speculation about this gender gap derived from the Hunter-Gatherer Hypothesis and point to a new venue for further research on this issue.
Journal ArticleDOI

Inferring Perspective Versus Getting Perspective: Underestimating the Value of Being in Another Person's Shoes

TL;DR: A strong tendency for people to underestimate the value of simulation is demonstrated, and people seem to underappreciate a useful strategy for understanding the minds of others, even after they gain firsthand experience with both strategies.
Book ChapterDOI

The reliability and validity of the chinese version of abbreviated PAD emotion scales

TL;DR: The results showed that the Chinese version of Abbreviated PAD Emotion Scales displayed satisfying reliability and validity on P (pleasure-displeasure), only moderate reliability andvalidity on D (dominance-submissiveness), but quite low reliability and reliability on A (arousal-nonarousedal).