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Featured researches published by Konrad Bocian.


Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin | 2014

Self-Interest Bias in Moral Judgments of Others’ Actions

Konrad Bocian; Bogdan Wojciszke

The automatic and affective nature of moral judgments leads to the expectation that these judgments are biased by an observer’s own interests. Although the idea of self-interest bias is old, it has never been directly tested with respect to the moral judgments of other individuals’ behaviors. The participants of three experiments observed other individuals’ counternormative behavior (breaking a rule or cheating for gain), which was judged as immoral. However, this judgment became much more lenient when the observers gained from the observed behavior. All three studies showed that the influence of self-interest on moral judgments was completely mediated by the observer’s increased liking for the perpetrator of the immoral acts but not by changes in mood. When the participants were induced to dislike the perpetrator (in a moderation-of-process design), the self-interest bias disappeared. Implications for the intuitionist approach to moral judgment are discussed.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Sizing Up Objects: The Effect of Diminutive Forms on Positive Mood, Value, and Size Judgments

Michal Parzuchowski; Konrad Bocian; Pascal Gygax

Language (e.g., structure, morphology, and wording) can direct our attention toward the specific properties of an object, in turn influencing the mental representation of that same object. In this paper, we examined this idea by focusing on a particular linguistic form of diminution used in many languages (e.g., in Polish, Spanish, and Portuguese) to refer to an object as being “smaller.” Interestingly, although objects are usually considered “better” when they are bigger in size, objects described with linguistic diminution can also refer to those that are emotionally positive. Across three experiments conducted in Polish, we examined this lexical ambiguity in terms of mood (Experiment 1), subjective quality and monetary value (Experiment 2), and choice selection (Experiment 3). Overall, we found that people evaluate objects differently depending on the linguistic form (i.e., with or without diminution) with which they are described, and that it was related to the perceptual representation of these objects, and not their affective status. Objects described with diminution are evaluated as less satisfying and of lesser value and this effect is attributed to the way participants represent the objects (i.e., encoded and memorized). The generalizability of these effects is discussed.


Social Psychology | 2014

Investigating Variation in Replicability A ''Many Labs'' Replication Project

Richard A. Klein; Kate A. Ratliff; Michelangelo Vianello; Reginald B. Adams; Štěpán Bahník; Michael J. Bernstein; Konrad Bocian; Mark Brandt; Beach Brooks; Claudia Chloe Brumbaugh; Zeynep Cemalcilar; Jesse Chandler; Winnee Cheong; William E. Davis; Thierry Devos; Matthew Eisner; Natalia Frankowska; David Furrow; Elisa Maria Galliani; Fred Hasselman; Joshua A. Hicks; James Hovermale; S. Jane Hunt; Jeffrey R. Huntsinger; Hans IJzerman; Melissa-Sue John; Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba; Heather Barry Kappes; Lacy E. Krueger; Jaime L. Kurtz


Social Psychology | 2014

Commentaries and Rejoinder on Klein et al. (2014)

Benoît Monin; Daniel M. Oppenheimer; Melissa J. Ferguson; Travis J. Carter; Ran R. Hassin; Richard J. Crisp; Eleanor Miles; Shenel Husnu; Norbert Schwarz; Fritz Strack; Richard A. Klein; Kate A. Ratliff; Michelangelo Vianello; Reginald B. Adams; Štěpán Bahník; Michael J. Bernstein; Konrad Bocian; Mark Brandt; Beach Brooks; Claudia Chloe Brumbaugh; Zeynep Cemalcilar; Jesse Chandler; Winnee Cheong; William E. Davis; Thierry Devos; Matthew Eisner; Natalia Frankowska; David Furrow; Elisa Maria Galliani; Fred Hasselman


Journal of Open Psychology Data | 2014

Data from Investigating Variation in Replicability: A “Many Labs” Replication Project

Richard A. Klein; Kate A. Ratliff; Michelangelo Vianello; Reginald B. Adams; Štěpán; Michael J. Bernstein; Konrad Bocian; Mark Brandt; Beach Brooks


Polish Psychological Bulletin | 2014

Unawareness of Self-interest Bias in Moral Judgments of Others’ Behavior

Konrad Bocian; Bogdan Wojciszke


Social Psychology | 2014

Theory building through replication response to commentaries on the "Many labs" replication project

Richard A. Klein; Kate A. Ratliff; Michelangelo Vianello; R.B. Adams; Štěpán Bahník; Michael J. Bernstein; Konrad Bocian; Mark Brandt; Beach Brooks; Claudia Chloe Brumbaugh; Zeynep Cemalcilar; Jesse Chandler; Winnee Cheong; William E. Davis; Thierry Devos; Matthew Eisner; Natalia Frankowska; David Furrow; Elisa Maria Galliani; Fred Hasselman; Joshua A. Hicks; James Hovermale; S.J. Hunt; Jeffrey R. Huntsinger; Hans IJzerman; John; Jennifer A. Joy-Gaba; Heather Barry Kappes; Lacy E. Krueger; Jaime L. Kurtz


Current opinion in psychology | 2015

Moral judgments and impressions

Bogdan Wojciszke; Michal Parzuchowski; Konrad Bocian


Polish Psychological Bulletin | 2016

When Dishonesty Leads to Trust: Moral Judgments Biased by Self-interest are Truly Believed

Konrad Bocian; Wieslaw Baryla; Bogdan Wojciszke


Social Psychological Bulletin | 2018

Bad Methods Drive out Good: The Curse of Imagination in Social Psychology Research

Bogdan Wojciszke; Konrad Bocian

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Bogdan Wojciszke

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

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Michael J. Bernstein

Pennsylvania State University

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Michal Parzuchowski

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

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Natalia Frankowska

University of Social Sciences and Humanities

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