J
Jamil Zaki
Researcher at Stanford University
Publications - 120
Citations - 14411
Jamil Zaki is an academic researcher from Stanford University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Empathy & Prosocial behavior. The author has an hindex of 44, co-authored 111 publications receiving 10411 citations. Previous affiliations of Jamil Zaki include University of California, Riverside & Columbia University.
Papers
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI
Using social and behavioural science to support COVID-19 pandemic response.
Jay J. Van Bavel,Katherine Baicker,Paulo S. Boggio,Valerio Capraro,Aleksandra Cichocka,Aleksandra Cichocka,Mina Cikara,Molly J. Crockett,Alia J. Crum,Karen M. Douglas,James N. Druckman,John Drury,Oeindrila Dube,Naomi Ellemers,Eli J. Finkel,James H. Fowler,Michele J. Gelfand,Shihui Han,S. Alexander Haslam,Jolanda Jetten,Shinobu Kitayama,Dean Mobbs,Lucy E. Napper,Dominic J. Packer,Gordon Pennycook,Ellen Peters,Richard E. Petty,David G. Rand,Stephen Reicher,Simone Schnall,Azim F. Shariff,Linda J. Skitka,Sandra Susan Smith,Cass R. Sunstein,Nassim Tabri,Joshua A. Tucker,Sander van der Linden,Paul A. M. Van Lange,Kim A. Weeden,Michael J. A. Wohl,Jamil Zaki,Sean R. Zion,Robb Willer +42 more
TL;DR: Evidence from a selection of research topics relevant to pandemics is discussed, including work on navigating threats, social and cultural influences on behaviour, science communication, moral decision-making, leadership, and stress and coping.
Journal ArticleDOI
Social effects of oxytocin in humans: context and person matter.
TL;DR: It is proposed that this literature can be informed by an interactionist approach in which the effects of oxytocin are constrained by features of situations and/or individuals.
Journal ArticleDOI
The neuroscience of empathy: progress, pitfalls and promise
Jamil Zaki,Kevin N. Ochsner +1 more
TL;DR: This work takes stock of the notable progress made by early research in characterizing the neural systems supporting two empathic sub-processes: sharing others' internal states and explicitly considering those states and describes methodological and conceptual pitfalls into which this work has sometimes fallen.
Journal ArticleDOI
Interpersonal emotion regulation.
Jamil Zaki,W. Craig Williams +1 more
TL;DR: This work maps a "space" differentiating classes of interpersonal regulation according to whether an individual uses an interpersonal regulatory episode to alter their own or another person's emotion, and identifies 2 types of processes--response-dependent and response-independent--that could support interpersonal regulation.
Journal ArticleDOI
Empathy: a motivated account.
TL;DR: Interdisciplinary evidence highlights the motivated nature of empathy, and a motivated model holds wide-ranging implications for basic theory, models of psychiatric illness, and intervention efforts to maximize empathy.