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Kristjen B. Lundberg

Researcher at University of Richmond

Publications -  19
Citations -  901

Kristjen B. Lundberg is an academic researcher from University of Richmond. The author has contributed to research in topics: Socioeconomic status & Economic inequality. The author has an hindex of 11, co-authored 19 publications receiving 656 citations. Previous affiliations of Kristjen B. Lundberg include University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.

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The Bias of Crowds: How Implicit Bias Bridges Personal and Systemic Prejudice

TL;DR: As public awareness of implicit bias has grown in recent years, studies have raised important new questions about the nature of implicit biases effects as discussed by the authors, and they have shown that implicit biases are widespread and robu...
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Subjective Status Shapes Political Preferences

TL;DR: In four studies, correlation and experimental evidence is found that subjective status motivates shifts in support for redistributive policies along with the ideological principles that justify them.
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The Affect Misattribution Procedure: Ten Years of Evidence on Reliability, Validity, and Mechanisms

TL;DR: The AMP is one of the most widely used implicit attitude measures, and evidence regarding its reliability and validity has grown rapidly as mentioned in this paper, and the AMP can be used effectively for a wide variety of research purposes.
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Intention Invention and the Affect Misattribution Procedure Reply to Bar-Anan and Nosek (2012)

TL;DR: There was no evidence that validity in the AMP depends on intentionally rating primes, and experimental manipulations, rather than retrospective self-reports, suggested that participants make post hoc confabulations to explain their responses.
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Being present and enjoying it: Dispositional mindfulness and savoring the moment are distinct, interactive predictors of positive emotions and psychological health.

TL;DR: Preliminary evidence is provided that dispositional mindfulness and perceived ability to savor the moment may serve unique and synergistic roles in predicting benefits for and through positive emotions.