0000000000282736

AUTHOR

Ignazio Ziano

The Psychological Science Accelerator’s COVID-19 rapid-response dataset

Funder: Amazon Web Services (AWS) Imagine Grant

research product

sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211015896 – Supplemental material for Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion

Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211015896 for Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion by Deming Wang, Ignazio Ziano, Martin S. Hagger and Nikos L. D. Chatzisarantis in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

research product

Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion.

We propose that perceptions of auditory loudness and interpersonal closeness are bidirectionally related. Across 12 experiments (total N = 2,219; 10 preregistered; with Singaporean, British, U.S. American, and Australian participants), we demonstrated that louder audio made people feel physically (Study 1a) and socially (Study 1b) closer to others, presumably because loudness activates interpersonal closeness-related concepts implicitly (Studies 1c and 1d). This loudness–interpersonal closeness effect was observed across diverse samples (Studies 2a, 3a, and S1), for longer listening intervals (Study 2b), and in natural settings (Studies 3a and 3b). Conversely, individuals made to feel soci…

research product

A multi-country test of brief reappraisal interventions on emotions during the COVID-19 pandemic

© The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Limited 2021, corrected publication 2022

research product

Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion

We propose that perceptions of auditory loudness and interpersonal closeness are bidirectionally related. Across 12 experiments (total N = 2,219; 10 preregistered; with Singaporean, British, U.S. American, and Australian participants), we demonstrated that louder audio made people feel physically (Study 1a) and socially (Study 1b) closer to others, presumably because loudness activates interpersonal closeness-related concepts implicitly (Studies 1c and 1d). This loudness–interpersonal closeness effect was observed across diverse samples (Studies 2a, 3a, and S1), for longer listening intervals (Study 2b), and in natural settings (Studies 3a and 3b). Conversely, individuals made to feel socia…

research product

sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211015896 – Supplemental material for Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion

Supplemental material, sj-docx-1-psp-10.1177_01461672211015896 for Loudness Perceptions Influence Feelings of Interpersonal Closeness and Protect Against Detrimental Psychological Effects of Social Exclusion by Deming Wang, Ignazio Ziano, Martin S. Hagger and Nikos L. D. Chatzisarantis in Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

research product