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Rinaldo Kühne

Researcher at University of Amsterdam

Publications -  62
Citations -  900

Rinaldo Kühne is an academic researcher from University of Amsterdam. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social robot & Cognition. The author has an hindex of 13, co-authored 59 publications receiving 621 citations. Previous affiliations of Rinaldo Kühne include University of Zurich.

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Facebook and self-perception: Individual susceptibility to negative social comparison on facebook.

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the indirect relationship between Facebook use and self-perceptions through negative social comparison and found that negative social comparisons are detrimental to perceptions about the self.
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The Emotional Effects of News Frames on Information Processing and Opinion Formation

TL;DR: This work investigated the emotional effects of two news frames—an “anger” frame and a “sadness’ frame—on information processing and opinion formation and found that the two frames produced different levels of anger and sadness.
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Child–robot relationship formation: A narrative review of empirical research

TL;DR: This narrative review aimed to elucidate which robot-related characteristics predict relationship formation between typically-developing children and social robots in terms of closeness and trust, and to what extent relationship formation can be explained by children’s experiential and cognitive states during interaction with a robot.
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Affective Priming in Political Campaigns: How Campaign-Induced Emotions Prime Political Opinions

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigate the impact of campaign-induced emotions on opinion formation and argue that emotions may activate cognitive content which may in turn influence political judgments, and support the hypothesis that political campaigns may influence public opinion not only through cognitive priming but also through affective priming.
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Beyond Cognitive Framing Processes: Anger Mediates the Effects of Responsibility Framing on the Preference for Punitive Measures

TL;DR: This article found that the high-responsibility frame increased the preference for punitive measures by increasing responsibility beliefs and eliciting anger, and that trait anger moderates the framing effect on anger and that responsibility beliefs are positively associated with anger intensity.