L
Larisa Heiphetz
Researcher at Columbia University
Publications - 41
Citations - 1444
Larisa Heiphetz is an academic researcher from Columbia University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social cognition & Prosocial behavior. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 35 publications receiving 1137 citations. Previous affiliations of Larisa Heiphetz include Boston College & Harvard University.
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Journal ArticleDOI
Reducing Implicit Racial Preferences: I. A Comparative Investigation of 17 Interventions
Calvin K. Lai,Maddalena Marini,Steven A. Lehr,Carlo Cerruti,Jiyun Elizabeth L. Shin,Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba,Arnold K. Ho,Arnold K. Ho,Bethany A. Teachman,Sean P. Wojcik,Spassena Koleva,Spassena Koleva,Spassena Koleva,Rebecca S. Frazier,Larisa Heiphetz,Eva E. Chen,Rhiannon Turner,Jonathan Haidt,Selin Kesebir,Carlee Beth Hawkins,Hillary S. Schaefer,Sandro Rubichi,Giuseppe Sartori,Christopher M. Dial,N. Sriram,Mahzarin R. Banaji,Brian A. Nosek +26 more
TL;DR: Eight of 17 interventions were effective at reducing implicit preferences for Whites compared with Blacks, particularly ones that provided experience with counterstereotypical exemplars, used evaluative conditioning methods, and provided strategies to override biases.
Journal ArticleDOI
Reducing implicit racial preferences: I. A comparative investigation of 17 interventions.
Calvin K. Lai,Maddalena Marini,Steven A. Lehr,Carlo Cerruti,Jiyun Elizabeth L. Shin,Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba,Arnold K. Ho,Bethany A. Teachman,Sean P. Wojcik,Spassena Koleva,Rebecca S. Frazier,Larisa Heiphetz,Eva E. Chen,Rhiannon Turner,Jonathan Haidt,Selin Kesebir,Carlee Beth Hawkins,Hillary S. Schaefer,Sandro Rubichi,Giuseppe Sartori,Christopher M. Dial,N. Sriram,Mahzarin R. Banaji,Brian A. Nosek +23 more
TL;DR: This paper conducted a research contest to compare interventions for reducing the expression of implicit racial prejudice and found that the most potent interventions were those that invoked high self-involvement or linked Black people with positivity and White people with negativity.
Journal ArticleDOI
Patterns of Implicit and Explicit Attitudes in Children and Adults: Tests in the Domain of Religion
TL;DR: The data suggest that the seeds of implicit religious preferences are sown early and that children's explicit preferences are influenced by the social distance between groups.
Journal ArticleDOI
How Children and Adults Represent God's Mind
TL;DR: It is shown that although adults explicitly discriminate supernatural minds from human minds, their implicit responses reveal far less discrimination, and it is demonstrated that children's religious cognition often matches adults' implicit responses, revealing anthropomorphic notions of God's mind.
Journal ArticleDOI
The Development of Reasoning about Beliefs: Fact, Preference, and Ideology.
TL;DR: Two experiments demonstrate that 5-10 year old children and adults similarly judged religious beliefs to be intermediate between factual beliefs (where two disagreeing people cannot both be right) and preferences (where they can).