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Patrick J. Morse

Researcher at University of California, Riverside

Publications -  8
Citations -  382

Patrick J. Morse is an academic researcher from University of California, Riverside. The author has contributed to research in topics: Personality & Extraversion and introversion. The author has an hindex of 6, co-authored 8 publications receiving 310 citations. Previous affiliations of Patrick J. Morse include Belmont University.

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Many Labs 3: Evaluating participant pool quality across the academic semester via replication

Charles R. Ebersole, +63 more
TL;DR: This paper examined time of semester variation in 10 known effects, 10 individual differences, and 3 data quality indicators over the course of the academic semester in 20 participant pools and with an online sample.
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Lay Conceptions of Volitional Personality Change: From Strategies Pursued to Stories Told

TL;DR: Lay conceptions of this volitional personality change process suggest that individuals hold a diverse range of desired changes and strategies, and different categories of events are recognized as catalysts of desires for (and previous) changes.
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Renovating Situation Taxonomies: Exploring the Construction and Content of Fundamental Motive Situation Types

TL;DR: This study illustrates how relations between situations and behavior can be illuminated through the use of theoretically derived templates, and demonstrates a method for constructing theoretically based situational classifications and exploring their behavioral implications.
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Relationships among Personality, Situational Construal and Social Outcomes:

TL;DR: In this paper, a novel way of exploring the relationship between personality and social outcomes by examining an understudied intermediate step, situational construal, is presented, which is defined as the "construal" step.
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From desire to development? A multi-sample, idiographic examination of volitional personality change

TL;DR: This article assessed individuals' ability to change their personality traits without therapeutic or experimental involvement using an idiographic-nomothetic methodology, using participants from internet and college populations completed trait measures and reported current personality change desires.