Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Norbert Maliszewski is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Norbert Maliszewski.


Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America | 2009

National differences in gender–science stereotypes predict national sex differences in science and math achievement

Brian A. Nosek; Frederick L. Smyth; N. Sriram; Nicole M. Lindner; Thierry Devos; Alfonso Ayala; Yoav Bar-Anan; Robin Bergh; Huajian Cai; Karen Gonsalkorale; Selin Kesebir; Norbert Maliszewski; Félix Neto; Eero Olli; Jaihyun Park; Konrad Schnabel; Kimihiro Shiomura; Bogdan Tudor Tulbure; Reinout W. Wiers; Mónika Somogyi; Nazar Akrami; Bo Ekehammar; Michelangelo Vianello; Mahzarin R. Banaji; Anthony G. Greenwald

About 70% of more than half a million Implicit Association Tests completed by citizens of 34 countries revealed expected implicit stereotypes associating science with males more than with females. We discovered that nation-level implicit stereotypes predicted nation-level sex differences in 8th-grade science and mathematics achievement. Self-reported stereotypes did not provide additional predictive validity of the achievement gap. We suggest that implicit stereotypes and sex differences in science participation and performance are mutually reinforcing, contributing to the persistent gender gap in science engagement.


PLOS ONE | 2013

Overweight People Have Low Levels of Implicit Weight Bias, but Overweight Nations Have High Levels of Implicit Weight Bias

Maddalena Marini; N. Sriram; Konrad Schnabel; Norbert Maliszewski; Thierry Devos; Bo Ekehammar; Reinout W. Wiers; Cai Huajian; Mónika Somogyi; Kimihiro Shiomura; Simone Schnall; Félix Neto; Yoav Bar-Anan; Michelangelo Vianello; Alfonso Ayala; Gabriel Dorantes; Jaihyun Park; Selin Kesebir; Antonio Pereira; Bogdan Tudor Tulbure; Tuulia M. Ortner; Irena Stepanikova; Anthony G. Greenwald; Brian A. Nosek

Although a greater degree of personal obesity is associated with weaker negativity toward overweight people on both explicit (i.e., self-report) and implicit (i.e., indirect behavioral) measures, overweight people still prefer thin people on average. We investigated whether the national and cultural context – particularly the national prevalence of obesity – predicts attitudes toward overweight people independent of personal identity and weight status. Data were collected from a total sample of 338,121 citizens from 71 nations in 22 different languages on the Project Implicit website (https://implicit.harvard.edu/) between May 2006 and October 2010. We investigated the relationship of the explicit and implicit weight bias with the obesity both at the individual (i.e., across individuals) and national (i.e., across nations) level. Explicit weight bias was assessed with self-reported preference between overweight and thin people; implicit weight bias was measured with the Implicit Association Test (IAT). The national estimates of explicit and implicit weight bias were obtained by averaging the individual scores for each nation. Obesity at the individual level was defined as Body Mass Index (BMI) scores, whereas obesity at the national level was defined as three national weight indicators (national BMI, national percentage of overweight and underweight people) obtained from publicly available databases. Across individuals, greater degree of obesity was associated with weaker implicit negativity toward overweight people compared to thin people. Across nations, in contrast, a greater degree of national obesity was associated with stronger implicit negativity toward overweight people compared to thin people. This result indicates a different relationship between obesity and implicit weight bias at the individual and national levels.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2016

Worse but Ours, or "Better but Theirs?" - The Role of Implicit Consumer Ethnocentrism (ICE) in Product Preference

Dominika Maison; Norbert Maliszewski

The goal of this project was to investigate whether consumer ethnocentrism is purely conscious mechanism based on ideology, as suggested by Shimp and Sharma (1987), or rather is an automatic, unconscious process. The aim of the project was an introduction of the Implicit Consumer Ethnocentrism (ICE) concept, measured by the Implicit Association Test (IAT). The goal of the four studies conducted was to investigate the following issues: (a) whether ICE – an automatic mechanism underlying the preference for local products over foreign – this could be observed next to the more ideologically based classic consumer ethnocentrism; (b) what happens when the consumer’s automatic preference for local products (ICE) is confronted by objective evidence of the superiority of foreign products or by the inferiority of local products. It was assumed that ICE could be reduced when foreign products were associated with a higher level of competence than local products, and this could explain the preference for foreign products over local often observed in less developed countries. In study 1 the ICE for different product categories of existing brands was tested, and in study 2 the ICE was measured in the context of non-existent brands. Both studies showed a strong in-group brand preference and confirmed the existence of new phenomena – ICE. The results of studies 3 and 4 again indicated a strong, automatic in-group brand favoritism effect as measured by IAT – participants preferred local brands over foreign. However, the inclusion of well-known foreign brands associated with high competence reduced the IAT effect (in-group preference).


Frontiers in Psychology | 2017

Spontaneous Movements of a Computer Mouse Reveal Egoism and In-group Favoritism

Norbert Maliszewski; Łukasz Wojciechowski; Hubert Suszek

The purpose of the project was to assess whether the first spontaneous movements of a computer mouse, when making an assessment on a scale presented on the screen, may express a respondent’s implicit attitudes. In Study 1, the altruistic behaviors of 66 students were assessed. The students were led to believe that the task they were performing was also being performed by another person and they were asked to distribute earnings between themselves and the partner. The participants performed the tasks under conditions with and without distractors. With the distractors, in the first few seconds spontaneous mouse movements on the scale expressed a selfish distribution of money, while later the movements gravitated toward more altruism. In Study 2, 77 Polish students evaluated a painting by a Polish/Jewish painter on a scale. They evaluated it under conditions of full or distracted cognitive abilities. Spontaneous movements of the mouse on the scale were analyzed. In addition, implicit attitudes toward both Poles and Jews were measured with the Implicit Association Test (IAT). A significant association between implicit attitudes (IAT) and spontaneous evaluation of images using a computer mouse was observed in the group with the distractor. The participants with strong implicit in-group favoritism of Poles revealed stronger preference for the Polish painter’s work in the first few seconds of mouse movement. Taken together, these results suggest that spontaneous mouse movements may reveal egoism (in-group favoritism), i.e., processes that were not observed in the participants’ final decisions (clicking on the scale).


Personality and Individual Differences | 2018

Implicit and explicit self-concept clarity and psychological adjustment

Hubert Suszek; Krzysztof Fronczyk; Maciej Kopera; Norbert Maliszewski


Polish Psychological Bulletin | 2014

The impact of explicit and implicit power motivation on educational choices

Norbert Maliszewski; Anna Olga Kuźmińska; Grażyna Wieczorkowska-Wierzbińska; Anna Werner-Maliszewska


Polish Psychological Bulletin | 2011

How Do People Resolve Conflict Between Implicit and Explicit Attitudes

Norbert Maliszewski


Current Issues in Personality Psychology | 2018

Psychometric properties of the Polish versionof the Self-Concept Clarity Scale (SCCS)

Hubert Suszek; Krzysztof Fronczyk; Maciej Kopera; Norbert Maliszewski; Ewa Agnieszka Łyś


MATEC Web of Conferences | 2017

Social attitudes towards roadside advertising

Anna Olejniczak-Serowiec; Norbert Maliszewski; Kinga Ziętek; K. Jamroz; J. Żukowska


Roczniki Psychologiczne/Annals of Psychology | 2015

Transference and its usefulness in psychotherapy in the light of empirical evidence

Hubert Suszek; Emilia Wegner; Norbert Maliszewski

Collaboration


Dive into the Norbert Maliszewski's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Maciej Kopera

Medical University of Warsaw

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Jaihyun Park

City University of New York

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

N. Sriram

University of Virginia

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Thierry Devos

San Diego State University

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Konrad Schnabel

Humboldt University of Berlin

View shared research outputs
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge