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Dive into the research topics where Lisa A. Williams is active.

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Featured researches published by Lisa A. Williams.


Journal of Personality and Social Psychology | 2008

Pride and Perseverance: The Motivational Role of Pride

Lisa A. Williams; David DeSteno

Perseverance toward goals that carry short-term costs is an important component of adaptive functioning. The present experiments examine the role that the emotion pride may play in mediating such perseverance. Across 2 studies, pride led to greater perseverance on an effortful and hedonically negative task believed to be related to the initial source of pride. In addition, the causal efficacy of pride was further demonstrated through dissociating its effects from related alternative mechanisms. Study 1 differentiated the effects of pride from self-efficacy. Study 2 differentiated the effects of pride from general positive affect. Taken together, these findings provide support for the proposed motivational function of pride in which this emotion serves as an incentive to persevere on a task despite initial costs.


Hydrological Processes | 1998

The effect of wildfire on runoff and erosion in native Eucalyptus forest

Ian P. Prosser; Lisa A. Williams

Wildfires raise concerns over the risk of accelerated erosion as a result of increased overland flow and decreased protection of the soil by litter and ground vegetation cover. We investigated these issues following the 1994 fires that burnt large areas of native Eucalyptus forest surrounding Sydney, Australia. A review of previous studies identifies the fire and rainfall conditions that are likely to lead to increased runoff and accelerated erosion. We then compare runoff and erosion between burnt and unburnt sites for 10 months after the 1994 fires. At the scale of hillslope plots, the 1994 fire increased runoff by enhancing soil hydrophobicity, and greatly increased sediment transport, mainly through the reduced ground cover, which lowered substantially the threshold for initial sediment movement. However, both runoff and sediment transport were very localized, resulting in little runoff or sediment yield after the fire at the hillslope catchment scale. We identify that after moderately intense fires, rainfall events of greater than one year recurrence interval are required to generate substantial runoff and sediment yield. Such events did not occur during the monitoring period. Past work shows that mild burns have little effect on erosion, and it is only after the most extreme fires that erosion is produced from small, frequent storms.


Psychological Science | 2009

Pride Adaptive Social Emotion or Seventh Sin

Lisa A. Williams; David DeSteno

This experiment examined the ability of pride to serve as an adaptive emotion within the context of social interaction. After an in vivo induction of pride or a neutral state, participants engaged in a group problem-solving task. In contrast to a conventional view that pride is often associated with negative interpersonal outcomes, results confirmed that proud individuals not only took on a dominant role within the group problem-solving task, but also were perceived as the most likeable interaction partners. These findings suggest that pride, when representing an appropriate response to actual performance (as opposed to overgeneralized hubris), constitutes a functional social emotion with important implications for leadership and the building of social capital.This experiment examined the ability of pride to serve as an adaptive emotion within the context of social interaction. After an in vivo induction of pride or a neutral state, participants engaged in a group problem-solving task. In contrast to a conventional view that pride is often associated with negative interpersonal outcomes, results confirmed that proud individuals not only took on a dominant role within the group problem-solving task, but also were perceived as the most likeable interaction partners. These findings suggest that pride, when representing an appropriate response to actual performance (as opposed to overgeneralized hubris), constitutes a functional social emotion with important implications for leadership and the building of social capital.


Emotion | 2009

Fanning the flames of prejudice: the influence of specific incidental emotions on implicit prejudice.

Nilanjana Dasgupta; David DeSteno; Lisa A. Williams; Matthew Hunsinger

Three experiments examined the impact of incidental emotions on implicit intergroup evaluations. Experiment 1 demonstrated that for unknown social groups, two negative emotions that are broadly applicable to intergroup conflict (anger and disgust) both created implicit bias where none had existed before. However, for known groups about which perceivers had prior knowledge, emotions increased implicit prejudice only if the induced emotion was applicable to the outgroup stereotype. Disgust increased bias against disgust-relevant groups (e.g., homosexuals) but anger did not (Experiment 2); anger increased bias against anger-relevant groups (e.g., Arabs) but disgust did not (Experiment 3). Consistent with functional theories of emotion, these findings suggest that negative intergroup emotions signal specific types of threat. If the emotion-specific threat is applicable to prior expectations of a group, the emotion ratchets up implicit prejudice toward that group. However, if the emotion-specific threat is not applicable to the target group, evaluations remain unchanged.


Emotion | 2010

Gratitude as moral sentiment: emotion-guided cooperation in economic exchange.

David DeSteno; Monica Y. Bartlett; Jolie Baumann; Lisa A. Williams; Leah Dickens

Economic exchange often pits options for selfish and cooperative benefit against one another. Decisions favoring communal profit at the expense of self-interest have traditionally been thought to stem from strategic control aimed at tamping down emotional responses centered on immediate resource acquisition. In the present article, evidence is provided to argue against this limited view of the role played by emotion in shaping prosociality. Findings demonstrate that the social emotion gratitude functions to engender cooperative economic exchange even at the expense of greater individual financial gains. Using real-time inductions, increased gratitude is shown to directly mediate increased monetary giving within the context of an economic game, even where such giving increases communal profit at the expense of individual gains. Moreover, increased giving occurred regardless of whether the beneficiary was a known individual or complete stranger, thereby removing the possibility that it stemmed from simple awareness of reciprocity constraints.


Journal of Cellular Biochemistry | 2009

The role of BMP‐7 in chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells in vitro

Bojiang Shen; Aiqun Wei; Shane Whittaker; Lisa A. Williams; Helen Tao; David Ma; Ashish D. Diwan

This study addresses the role of bone morphogenetic protein‐7 (BMP‐7) in chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of human bone marrow multipotent mesenchymal stromal cells (BM MSCs) in vitro. BM MSCs were expanded and differentiated in the presence or absence of BMP‐7 in monolayer and three‐dimensional cultures. After 3 days of stimulation, BMP‐7 significantly inhibited MSC growth in expansion cultures. When supplemented in commonly used induction media for 7–21 days, BMP‐7 facilitated both chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of MSCs. This was evident by specific gene and protein expression analyses using real‐time PCR, Western blot, histological, and immunohistochemical staining. BMP‐7 supplementation appeared to enhance upregulation of lineage‐specific markers, such as type II and type IX collagens (COL2A1, COL9A1) in chondrogenic and secreted phosphoprotein 1 (SPP1), osteocalcin (BGLAP), and osterix (SP7) in osteogenic differentiation. BMP‐7 in the presence of TGF‐β3 induced superior chondrocytic proteoglycan accumulation, type II collagen, and SOX9 protein expression in alginate and pellet cultures compared to either factor alone. BMP‐7 increased alkaline phosphatase activity and dose‐dependently accelerated calcium mineralization of osteogenic differentiated MSCs. The potential of BMP‐7 to promote adipogenesis of MSCs was restricted under osteogenic conditions, despite upregulation of adipocyte gene expression. These data suggest that BMP‐7 is not a singular lineage determinant, rather it promotes both chondrogenic and osteogenic differentiation of MSCs by co‐ordinating with initial lineage‐specific signals to accelerate cell fate determination. BMP‐7 may be a useful enhancer of in vitro differentiation of BM MSCs for cell‐based tissue repair. J. Cell. Biochem. 109: 406–416, 2010.


Emotion | 2015

Warm thanks: gratitude expression facilitates social affiliation in new relationships via perceived warmth.

Lisa A. Williams; Monica Y. Bartlett

Recent theorizing on the nature and function of gratitude (the find-remind-and-bind theory; Algoe, 2012) stipulates that expressing gratitude should serve to alert previously unacquainted peers to the potential for a high-quality social bond (i.e., a find function). Although the logic of this premise is supported by extant research, it has not, as yet, been tested empirically. In the current study, participants received a note from a previously unacquainted peer that contained an expression of gratitude (or did not) with regard to prior benefits provided by the participant. After providing ratings of the peer and ostensibly completing the study, participants were given an opportunity to spontaneously give their contact information to the peer, which served as a behavioral measure of affiliation. In line with the proposed find function of gratitude expressions, recipients of expressions of gratitude were more likely to extend the effort to continue the relationship with the novel peer by providing that peer with a means to contact them. This experiment also provided evidence that perceptions of interpersonal warmth (e.g., friendliness, thoughtfulness) serve as the mechanism via which gratitude expressions facilitate affiliation: insofar as gratitude expressions signaled interpersonal warmth of the expresser, they prompted investment in the burgeoning social bond. As such, these findings provide the first empirical evidence regarding 1 of the 3 central premises of the find-remind-and-bind theory of gratitude (Algoe, 2012) in the context of novel relationships.


Translational pediatrics | 2014

Mesenchymal stem cells: potential application in intervertebral disc regeneration

Aiqun Wei; Bojiang Shen; Lisa A. Williams; Ashish D. Diwan

Chronic low back pain is one of the leading public health problems in developed countries. Degeneration of the intervertebral disc (IVD) is a major pathological process implicated in low back pain, which is characterized by cellular apoptosis and senescence with reduced synthesis of extracellular matrix (ECM). Currently, there is no clinical therapy targeting the reversal of disc degeneration. Recent advances in cellular and molecular biology have provided an exciting approach to disc regeneration that focuses on the delivery of viable cells to the degenerative disc. Adult mesenchymal stem cells (MSCs) are multipotent stem cells with self-renewal capacities and are able to differentiate into diverse specialized cell types, including chondrocyte lineages. The potential of stem cell therapy in disc degeneration is to repopulate the disc with viable cells capable of producing the ECM and restoring damaged tissue. The present literature review summarizes recent advances in basic research and clinical trials of MSCs to provide an outline of the key roles of MSCs therapies in disc repair. The review also discusses the controversies, challenges and therapeutic concepts for the future.


Emotion Review | 2010

Pride in Parsimony

Lisa A. Williams; David DeSteno

Tracy, Shariff, and Cheng (2010) present a timely and eloquent review of the current research on the emotion pride in terms of a naturalist framework. The present commentary not only echoes arguments relating to pride’s adaptive function, but also highlights some points of theoretical clarification. Specifically, we question the necessity of the naturalist approach and the emphasis on two facets of pride.


Australian Journal of Psychology | 2017

Crowdsourcing participants for psychological research in Australia: A test of Microworkers

Damien L. Crone; Lisa A. Williams

Abstract Objective Australian researchers interested in studying psychological phenomena using Australian samples have a limited range of reliable sampling options, often limited to undergraduate participant pools and convenience samples subject to well‐known limitations. To expand the range of sampling options available, we attempted to validate the crowdsourcing platform, Microworkers, as a viable tool for collecting data from Australian participants. Method Across two studies, 122 Australian participants were recruited via Microworkers to complete a demographic survey (Studies 1 and 2), personality questionnaire (Study 2), and a standard decision‐making task designed to elicit a framing effect (Study 2). Results Providing a first indication of the viability of Microworkers as a recruitment platform for Australian participants by Australian researchers, we were successful in acquiring our desired sample size. Moreover, the recruited Microworkers samples were demographically diverse (in a similar fashion to Internet samples in general), and produced valid psychological data. Conclusion Overall, these results provide promising preliminary evidence for Microworkers as a viable platform for the recruitment of Australian participants for psychological research, and for Australian researchers interested in crowdsourced participants more generally.

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Ashish D. Diwan

University of New South Wales

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Aiqun Wei

University of New South Wales

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Bojiang Shen

University of New South Wales

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Divya Bhargav

University of New South Wales

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Nitika Garg

University of New South Wales

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Eliza Bliss-Moreau

California National Primate Research Center

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