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Scott A. Reid

Researcher at University of California, Santa Barbara

Publications -  40
Citations -  2315

Scott A. Reid is an academic researcher from University of California, Santa Barbara. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social identity theory & Ingroups and outgroups. The author has an hindex of 18, co-authored 40 publications receiving 2091 citations. Previous affiliations of Scott A. Reid include University of Queensland & Victoria University of Wellington.

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A Social Identidy Model of Media Usage and Effects

TL;DR: A social identity model of media usage and effects is proposed that explains how the media might cultivate power arrangements and contribute to social change, and argues that current media theories are ill-equipped to meet both of these explanatory challenges.
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Gender, Language, and Social Influence: A Test of Expectation States, Role Congruity, and Self‐Categorization Theories

TL;DR: This article found that women were more influenced by an assertive than tentative speaker when the speaker was categorized as a college student than as a woman, and that men were less influenced by the tentative speaker than the college student.
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A Critical Test of Self‐Enhancement, Exposure, and Self‐Categorization Explanations for First‐ and Third‐Person Perceptions

TL;DR: For example, this paper found that women perceived an average woman to be more repulsed and offended by pornography than themselves, and men perceived a man more aroused and excited than themselves (i.e., large third-person perceptions).
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The “Deliberative Digital Divide:” Opinion Leadership and Integrative Complexity in the U.S. Political Blogosphere

TL;DR: The authors examined the association between political ideology and linguistic indicators of integrative complexity and opinion leadership in U.S. political blog posts and found that the posts of conservative bloggers were more integratively simple than those of liberal bloggers.
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Parasite primes make foreign-accented English sound more distant to people who are disgusted by pathogens (but not by sex or morality)

TL;DR: This article found that the perception of linguistic similarity to ingroup speakers and dissimilarity from outgroup speakers would increase with individual differences in pathogen disgust, and that this association would be most apparent when threat of disease was salient.