Graduating lab member Ezra Markowitz successfully defended his dissertation, Affective and moral roots of environmental stewardship: The role of obligation gratitude and compassion, to a packed crowd on August 8th. Ezra is currently finishing as a Scholar-in-Residence at American University, and will be starting a post-doc at Princeton University this fall.
Azim receives Margaret Gorman Early Career award from APA Division 36
At this August’s annual APA convention in Orlando, Azim received the APA Division 36 (Psychology of Religion and Spirituality)’s Margaret Gorman Early Career Award. The slides for his award address, titled Religion Evolved, are available in here: (keynote (best) powerpoint pdf).
Azim and Mijke’s paper now most read of the month on PLoS One
With over 17,000 views, Azim and Mijke’s recent paper on the Divergent Effects of Beliefs in Heaven and Hell on National Crime Rates is currently the most read paper of the last 30 days on PLoS One’s open-access website.
Great video explaining our new heaven, hell and crime study
There’s been a lot of (motivated?) misinterpretation of our new study on the different relationship that a nation’s level of belief in heaven and in hell have on its crime rates. These guys, on the other hand, nail it (kudos):
Our paper on how Heaven and Hell Beliefs Predict National Crime Rates now up at PLoS One
Our new paper with Mijke Rhemtulla on how nations’ rates of belief in Heaven and Hell oppositely predict crime rates has just been posted at PLoS One. Click here to see the paper (open-access to everyone), and here to see the University of Oregon press release. Abstract: Researchers have proposed that the emergence of religion…
Our new paper on how the belief in divine punishment reduces earthly punishment now up at ProcB
Our new paper with Kristin Laurin, Joe Henrich and Aaron Kay, Outsourcing punishment to god: Beliefs in divine control reduce earthly punishment, is now published online at the Proceedings of the Royal Academy B (Biological Sciences). You can download a pdf here.
Our paper on how pride expressions can swamp context in determining status now up at PSPB
Our new paper with Jessica Tracy and Jeff Markusoff, which shows the power of the pride expression in swaying people’s judgments of status, is now available on Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin’s website and here.
Priming religion helps us resist temptation
Check out Jonah Lehrer’s Wall Street Journal writeup of Kevin Rounding, Albert Lee and others’ awesome new paper in Psychological Science on how priming religion increases self-regulation and enables people to cope with temptation. Here’s the abstract of the paper: Researchers have proposed that the emergence of religion was a cultural adaptation necessary for promoting…
‘Analytical’ thinking undermines religious belief
Check out collaborators Will Gervais and Ara Norenzayan‘s great new paper in Science on how priming ‘analytical’ modes of thinking undermines religious belief. You can download the full paper here, but here’s the abstract: Scientific interest in the cognitive underpinnings of religious belief has grown in recent years. However, to date, little experimental research has…
Azim’s APS webinar now available online
(please excuse the technical difficulties)









