Kristen Lindquist
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Kristen Lindquist

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Kristen Lindquist

Associate Professor of Psychology and Neuroscience | University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill

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Kristen Lindquist

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Journal Articles | Book Chapters

Other Publications

May 28, 2014

What Can the Brain Tell Us About Emotion? A Constructionist Approach to Emotion-Brain Correspondence→

May 28, 2014/ ScienceSites

- Emotion Researcher

December 2013

Read More
May 28, 2014/ ScienceSites/ Comment /Source
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Kristen Lindquist

Recent Articles

  • Incorporating the social context into neuro-cognitive models of adolescent decision-making. A neuroimaging meta-analysis

    J. van Hoorn, H. Shablack, K.A. Lindquist & E.H. Telzer (in press). Neuroscience and Biobehavioral Reviews.

  • Hanger: When hunger is conceptualized as emotion

    J. MacCormack & K.A. Lindquist (in press). Emotion.

  • Constructing bias: Conceptualization breaks the link between implicit bias and fear of Black Americans

    K. Lee, K.A. Lindquist, & B.K. Payne (2018). Emotion, 18,855-871.

  • An indirect measure of discrete emotion

    K.M. Lee, K.A. Lindquist, N.L. Arbuckle, S.M. Mower & B.K. Payne (in press). Emotion .

  • Situation selection is an effective emotion regulation strategy, especially for people who need help regulating their emotions

    T.L. Webb, K.A. Lindquist, C. Jones, A. Avishai-Yitshak & P. Sheeran (2018). Cognition and Emotion, 32, 231-248.

In The News

  • Do kids feel stronger emotions than adults?

    — Gizmodo

  • Here's why you get hangry, according to science

    — Time

  • Why do we get hangry?

    — Newsweek

  • How Hunger Pangs Can Make Nice People 'Hangry'

    — National Public Radio

  • Situation selection can help regulate emotions

    — British Psychological Society

  • "Buzz Words" Language and emotion

    — New Scientist Magazine

Recommended Sites

  • The Society for Affective Science

  • UNC Social Psychology Graduate Program

  • The People’s Science

  • Emotion Pre-Conference

Emotion News Blog
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