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Samuel Wilson
Researcher at Georgia Southern University
Publications - 92
Citations - 981
Samuel Wilson is an academic researcher from Georgia Southern University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Medicine & Balance (ability). The author has an hindex of 12, co-authored 83 publications receiving 780 citations. Previous affiliations of Samuel Wilson include National University of Singapore & University of Southern Mississippi.
Papers
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What makes an article influential? Predicting impact in social and personality psychology
Nick Haslam,Lauren Ban,Leah M. Kaufmann,Stephen Loughnan,Kim Peters,Jennifer Whelan,Samuel Wilson +6 more
TL;DR: Multivariate analyses demonstrated several strong predictors of impact, including first author eminence, having a more senior later author, journal prestige, article length, and number and recency of references.
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Blaming, praising, and protecting our humanity: the implications of everyday dehumanization for judgments of moral status.
TL;DR: It is demonstrated that everyday judgments ofmoral status are influenced by perceptions of humanness, and it is shown that distinct human characteristics are linked to specific judgments of moral status.
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Separating Adaptive Maintenance (Resilience) and Transformative Capacity of Social-Ecological Systems
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated two rural towns in Australia using a combination of quantitative methods and focus groups to interrogate community social networks, capitals (human, natural, built, and social) and future scenarios.
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The acquisition of perceived descriptive norms as social category learning in social networks
TL;DR: It is postulate that acquisition of descriptive norms can be construed as social category learning in social networks, where people learn social information relevant about community descriptive norms from others with whom they are associated through social network ties.
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Dehumanization: A New Perspective
TL;DR: The authors discuss the ways in which these two forms of dehumanization are manifest in perceptions of individuals and groups, and speculate on the cognitive and motivational processes involved, and discuss how these two different senses of humanness are manifested in perceptions.