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Takuya Sawaoka
Takuya Sawaoka
Verified email at alumni.stanford.edu
Title
Cited by
Cited by
Year
Why do we punish groups? High entitativity promotes moral suspicion
AK Newheiser, T Sawaoka, JF Dovidio
Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 48 (4), 931-936, 2012
862012
Social anxiety and self-consciousness in binge eating disorder: associations with eating disorder psychopathology
T Sawaoka, RD Barnes, KK Blomquist, RM Masheb, CM Grilo
Comprehensive psychiatry 53 (6), 740-745, 2012
712012
The paradox of viral outrage
T Sawaoka, B Monin
Psychological science 29 (10), 1665-1678, 2018
702018
Power heightens sensitivity to unfairness against the self
T Sawaoka, BL Hughes, N Ambady
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin 41 (8), 1023-1035, 2015
692015
Group-based biases in moral judgment: The role of shifting moral standards
T Sawaoka, AK Newheiser, JF Dovidio
Social Cognition 32 (4), 360-380, 2014
152014
Factor structure and clinical correlates of the Food Thought Suppression Inventory within treatment seeking obese women with binge eating disorder
RD Barnes, T Sawaoka, MA White, RM Masheb, CM Grilo
Eating behaviors 14 (1), 35-39, 2013
92013
Outraged but sympathetic: ambivalent emotions limit the influence of viral outrage
T Sawaoka, B Monin
Social Psychological and Personality Science 11 (4), 499-512, 2020
72020
Moral suspicion trickles down
T Sawaoka, B Monin
Social Psychological and Personality Science 6 (3), 334-342, 2015
72015
Why do we punish groups
AK Newheiser, T Sawaoka, JF Dovidio
High entitativity promotes, 2012
52012
Sawaoka to Vonnegut, November 9, 2005
T Sawaoka
Vonnegut Manuscripts, box 1 (03), 2005
22005
Viral Outrage: Victims and Villains of Our Contemporary Moral Discourse
T Sawaoka
Stanford University, 2019
2019
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Articles 1–11