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Featured researches published by Thijs Bouman.


Journal of School Psychology | 2012

Peer and self-reports of victimization and bullying: Their differential association with internalizing problems and social adjustment

Thijs Bouman; Matty van der Meulen; F.A. Goossens; Tjeert Olthof; Marjolijn Vermande; Elisabeth A. Aleva

Researchers typically employ either peer or self-reports to assess involvement in bullying. In this study, we examined the merits of each method for the identification of child characteristics related to victimization and bullying others. Accordingly, we investigated the difference between these two methods with regard to their relationship with social adjustment (i.e., perceived popularity, likeability, and self-perceived social acceptance) and internalizing problems (i.e., anxiety, depression, and self-worth) in 1192 Dutch school children, aged 9 to 12 years. Perceived popularity and likeability were more strongly correlated with peer reports than self-reports, for both victimization and for bullying others. Self-perceived social acceptance correlated equally strong with peer and self- reports of victimization. Furthermore, peer reports of bullying were also correlated with self-perceived social acceptance, whereas self-reports of bullying were not. All internalizing problems showed stronger relations with self-reports than peer reports; although only the relation between self-reported victimization and internalizing problems was of practical significance. Despite our findings indicating that using only one type of report could be efficient for examining the relation between bullying behaviors and separate child characteristics, both types of report are necessary for a complete understanding of the personal and social well-being of the children involved.


British Journal of Social Psychology | 2014

Threat by association: Do distant intergroup threats carry-over into local intolerance?

Thijs Bouman; Martijn van Zomeren; Sabine Otten

Individuals are often confronted with intergroup threats, yet many of these threats emanate from distant groups that most individuals are unlikely to encounter in their local environment. An important yet unanswered question is whether reactions to those threats, such as intolerance towards the threatening group, carry over to other groups that individuals actually do encounter in their local environment (e.g., immigrants). The main goal of our studies was to experimentally identify this carry-over effect of intergroup threat. Specifically, we hypothesized that (by definition relatively abstract) symbolic threats (e.g., threats to the ingroups worldview) have an especially strong carry-over potential because those threats can be easily attributed to other outgroups. We tested these predictions in one correlational and two experimental studies. The results of all three studies confirmed our hypothesis that particularly distant symbolic threats were predictive of intolerance towards local outgroups.


British Journal of Social Psychology | 2015

When threats foreign turn domestic: Two ways for distant realistic intergroup threats to carry over into local intolerance.

Thijs Bouman; Martijn van Zomeren; Sabine Otten

In times of economic downturn, perceived realistic intergroup threats (e.g., labour competition) often dominate political and media discourse. Although local outgroups (e.g., local immigrants) can be experienced as sources of realistic threats, we propose that such threats can also be perceived to be caused by distant outgroups (e.g., European Union members perceiving Greece to threaten their economies) and that such distant threats can carry over into local intolerance (e.g., increasing intolerance towards local immigrant groups). We predicted and found in two studies that perceived distant realistic threats carried over into local intolerance via two different pathways. First, direct reactions towards the distant outgroup can generalize to culturally similar local outgroups (the group-based association pathway). Secondly, Study 2 indicated that when the distant threat was attributed to stereotypical outgroup traits (e.g., being lazy), distant realistic threats activated local realistic threats, which subsequently influenced local intolerance (the threat-based association pathway). Taken together, our studies indicate that perceived realistic threats foreign can turn domestic, but in two different ways.


Frontiers in Psychology | 2018

Measuring Values in Environmental Research: A Test of an Environmental Portrait Value Questionnaire

Thijs Bouman; Linda Steg; Henk A. L. Kiers

Four human values are considered to underlie individuals’ environmental beliefs and behaviors: biospheric (i.e., concern for environment), altruistic (i.e., concern for others), egoistic (i.e., concern for personal resources) and hedonic values (i.e., concern for pleasure and comfort). These values are typically measured with an adapted and shortened version of the Schwartz Value Survey (SVS), to which we refer as the Environmental-SVS (E-SVS). Despite being well-validated, recent research has indicated some concerns about the SVS methodology (e.g., comprehensibility, self-presentation biases) and suggested an alternative method of measuring human values: The Portrait Value Questionnaire (PVQ). However, the PVQ has not yet been adapted and applied to measure values most relevant to understand environmental beliefs and behaviors. Therefore, we tested the Environmental-PVQ (E-PVQ) – a PVQ variant of E-SVS –and compared it with the E-SVS in two studies. Our findings provide strong support for the validity and reliability of both the E-SVS and E-PVQ. In addition, we find that respondents slightly preferred the E-PVQ over the E-SVS (Study 1). In general, both scales correlate similarly to environmental self-identity (Study 1), energy behaviors (Studies 1 and 2), pro-environmental personal norms, climate change beliefs and policy support (Study 2). Accordingly, both methodologies show highly similar results and seem well-suited for measuring human values underlying environmental behaviors and beliefs.


The Ioannina meeting on applied economics & finance | 2018

Assessing energy supply security: Willingness-to-pay to avoid power outages, and to accept compensations for unplanned outages

Tilemahos Efthimiadis; Sergio Giaccaria; Alberto Longo; Thijs Bouman


International Congress of Applied Psychology | 2018

Group-based approaches to understand and promote individuals' environmental behaviors

Thijs Bouman; Lise Jans; Kelly S. Fielding; Winnifred R. Louis; Ash Gillis


International Congress of Applied Psychology | 2018

European perceptions of climate change: Linking values, concern, responsibility and action

Thijs Bouman; Linda Steg


International Congress of Applied Psychology | 2018

The value of group values

Thijs Bouman; Linda Steg; Steph Johnson-Zawadzki


IPCC Cities & Climate Change: IPCC Cities Conference | 2018

Strengthening and accelerating effective climate action in cities

Thijs Bouman


IEEE Power & Energy Magazine | 2018

A Part of the Energy \"In Crowd\": Changing People's Energy Behavior via Group-Based Approaches

Lise Jans; Thijs Bouman; Kelly S. Fielding

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Sabine Otten

University of Groningen

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Linda Steg

University of Groningen

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Lise Jans

University of Groningen

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