5 found
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Marco Brambilla [4]Marcos Aurélio Brambilla [1]
  1.  20
    Looking into your eyes: observed pupil size influences approach-avoidance responses.Marco Brambilla, Marco Biella & Mariska E. Kret - 2018 - Cognition and Emotion 33 (3):616-622.
    ABSTRACTThe eyes reveal important social messages, such as emotions and whether a person is aroused and interested or bored and fatigued. A growing body of research has also shown that individuals with large pupils are generally evaluated positively by observers, while those with small pupils are perceived negatively. Here, we examined whether observed pupil size influences approach-avoidance tendencies. Participants performed an Approach-Avoidance Task using faces with large and small pupil sizes. Results showed that pupil size influences the accuracy of arm (...)
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  2.  21
    Análise da eficiência do objetivo de desenvolvimento sustentável (ODS 15).Marcos Aurélio Brambilla & Thaise Moser Teixeira - 2023 - Prometeica - Revista De Filosofía Y Ciencias 28:201-220.
    Os Objetivos de Desenvolvimento Sustentável (ODS) abrangem diversas questões socioambientais e são aplicáveis a todos os países. O ODS 15, Vida Terrestre, visa proteger os ecossistemas terrestres, conservar a biodiversidade e reduzir a perda de biodiversidade, e o estado do Paraná é um dos estados com uma das maiores proporções de área de remanescentes florestais do Brasil e conta com uma política de preservação ambiental. Em vista disso, o estudo tem como objetivo analisar a eficiência dos municípios paranaenses no atendimento (...)
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  3.  3
    Untrusted under threat: on the superior bond between trustworthiness and threat in face-context integration.Simone Mattavelli, Matteo Masi & Marco Brambilla - 2022 - Cognition and Emotion 36 (7):1273-1286.
    The face is a powerful source to make inferences about one’s trustworthiness. Recent studies demonstrated that facial trustworthiness is influenced by the level of threat conveyed by the visual scene in which faces are embedded: untrustworthy-looking faces are more likely judged as untrustworthy when shown in threatening scenes. Here, we explore whether this face-context congruency effect is specific to the negative pole of the threat-trust domain. Experiment 1 (N = 89) focused on the differential impact of positive vs. negative face-context (...)
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  4.  9
    Bringing Us Closer Together: The Influence of National Identity and Political Orientation on COVID-19-Related Behavioral Intentions.Andrej Simić, Simona Sacchi, Stefano Pagliaro, Maria Giuseppina Pacilli & Marco Brambilla - 2022 - Frontiers in Psychology 13.
    A growing body of work has highlighted the importance of political beliefs and attitudes in predicting endorsement and engagement in prosocial behavior. Individuals with right-wing political orientation are less likely to behave prosocially than their left-wing counterparts due to high levels of Right-wing authoritarianism. Here, we aimed to extend prior work by testing how political values relate to COVID-19 discretionary behavioral intentions. Furthermore, we tested whether identification with the national group would influence the relationship between RWA and prosocial behavior. A (...)
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  5.  23
    Initial Impressions Determine Behaviours: Morality Predicts the Willingness to Help Newcomers. [REVIEW]Stefano Pagliaro, Marco Brambilla, Simona Sacchi, Manuela D’Angelo & Naomi Ellemers - 2013 - Journal of Business Ethics 117 (1):37-44.
    Prior research has demonstrated the impact of morality (vs. competence) information for impression formation. This study examines behavioral implications of people’s initial impressions based on information about their morality vs. competence in a workplace. School teachers and employees (N = 79) were asked to form an impression of a new school manager (i.e. a prospective boss), who was presented as High vs. Low in Morality and High vs. Low in Competence. Results showed that morality information rather than competence information determined (...)
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