Z
Zhansheng Chen
Researcher at University of Hong Kong
Publications - 72
Citations - 1728
Zhansheng Chen is an academic researcher from University of Hong Kong. The author has contributed to research in topics: Ostracism & Objectification. The author has an hindex of 21, co-authored 58 publications receiving 1217 citations. Previous affiliations of Zhansheng Chen include Purdue University.
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Ostracism increases social susceptibility
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors tested whether ostracized individuals are more socially susceptible to a subsequent influence attempt, and they found that ostracism increased compliance across all request types.
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When Hurt Will Not Heal Exploring the Capacity to Relive Social and Physical Pain
TL;DR: An important distinction between social and physical pain is examined: Individuals can relive and reexperience social pain more easily and more intensely than physical pain.
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Feeling Entitled to More Ostracism Increases Dishonest Behavior
TL;DR: Findings highlight the significance of entitlement in explaining when and why ostracism increases dishonest behavior and how to weaken this relationship.
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A Multilab Replication of the Ego Depletion Effect.
Junhua Dang,Paul Barker,Anna Baumert,Margriet Bentvelzen,Elliot T. Berkman,Nita Buchholz,Jacek Buczny,Zhansheng Chen,Valeria De Cristofaro,Lianne P. de Vries,Siegfried Dewitte,Mauro Giacomantonio,Ran Gong,Maaike D. Homan,Roland Imhoff,Ismaharif Ismail,Lile Jia,Thomas Kubiak,Florian Lange,Dan Yang Li,Jordan L. Livingston,Rita M. Ludwig,Angelo Panno,Joshua Pearman,Niklas Rassi,Helgi B. Schiöth,Helgi B. Schiöth,Manfred Schmitt,A. Timur Sevincer,Jiaxin Shi,Angelos Stamos,Yia Chin Tan,Mario Wenzel,Oulmann Zerhouni,Li Wei Zhang,Yi Jia Zhang,Axel Zinkernagel +36 more
TL;DR: A preregistered multilab replication of a recent preregistered experiment with the Stroop task as the depleting task and the antisaccadetask as the outcome task revealed a small and significant ego depletion effect.
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The world in black and white: Ostracism enhances the categorical perception of social information ☆
TL;DR: This article found that ostracized individuals showed more pronounced categorical perception of inclusion-and exclusion-related stimuli, which made the world appear more 'black-and-white' than it might otherwise.