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JEFFREY R. HUNTSINGER CURRICULUM VITA OFFICE ADDRESS: Jeffrey R. Huntsinger, Ph.D. Department of Psychology Loyola University Chicago 1046 Damen Hall 6525 N. Sheridan Road Chicago, IL 60626 Email:
[email protected] or
[email protected] EMPLOYMENT: Instructor, Loyola University Chicago (Fall 2007 – present) EDUCATION: Ph.D., University of Virginia, May 2007 (Social Psychology) Title: If it feels right, go with it: Mood regulates automatic processes Committee members: Stacey Sinclair (Chair), Jerry Clore, Brian Nosek, Steve Nock
M.A., University of Virginia, May 2003 (Social Psychology) Title: African Americans’ academic self-evaluations: How the perceived views of others shape the self. B.A., The Pennsylvania State University, 1999 (Psychology, Highest Honors, top 2%) HONORS AND AWARDS: Department of Psychology Travel Award (2002-2005) UNIVERSITY AND DEPARTMENT SERVICE: SPSS workshop (introduction to program and basic data analysis), First and second year social psychology students, Fall 2003. AMOS workshop (introduction to program and structural equation modeling), First and second year social psychology students, Fall 2004. Co-founder and organizer of the Stereotyping and Stigma Research Group, University of Virginia, Fall 2003-Spring 2004. Member of Social Area Graduate Student Journal Club (Fall 2000-Present) PUBLICATIONS:
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ARTICLES IN REFERREED JOURNALS & CHAPTERS IN EDITED VOLUMES: Huntsinger, J., & Smith, C. T. (accepted for publication, pending minor revisions). First thought, best thought: Positive mood maintains and negative mood disrupts implicitexplicit attitude correspondence. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin Clore, G., & Huntsinger, J. (in press). How the object of affect guides its impact. Emotion Review (target article) Clore, G., & Huntsinger, J. (in press). A reply to commentaries: How the object of affect guides its impact. Emotion Review (target article) Mallett, R., Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., & Swim, J. (in press). Seeing through their eyes: When Majority Group Members Take Collective Action on Behalf of an Outgroup. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations. Dunn, E., Huntsinger, J., Lun, J., & Sinclair, S. (in press). The gift of similarity: How good and bad gifts influence relationships. Social Cognition. Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. (under contract). Self-stereotyping. In J. Levine and M. Hogg (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, Sage: Thousands Oaks, CA. Clore, G., & Huntsinger, J. (2007). How emotions inform judgment and regulate thought. Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 9, 393-399. *10th most downloaded TICS Article OctoberDecember 2007 Sinclair, S., & Huntsinger, J. (2007). Self-stereotyping. In R. Baumeister and K. Vohs (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Social Psychology, Sage: Thousands Oaks, CA. Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. (in press). Intergroup relations: Conflict, contact, and impact on academic functioning. Chapter 1 in Sidanius, Levin, van Laar & Sears, The Class of 2000: The Dynamics of Intergroup Relations on the Modern American Campus. Sinclair, S., & Huntsinger, J. (2006). The interpersonal basis of self-stereotyping. In S. Levin and C. van Laar (Eds.), Claremont Symposium on Applied Social Psychology: Stigma and Group Inequality: Social Psychological Approaches. Sinclair, S., Huntsinger, J., Skorinko, J., & Hardin, C. D. (2005). Social tuning of the self: Consequences for the self-evaluations of stereotype targets. Journal of Personality & Social Psychology, 89, 160-175. Mallett, R., Sinclair, S. & Huntsinger, J. (2005). What intergroup relations research can tell us about coalition building. Washington & Lee Journal of Civil Rights and Social Justice, 12, 5 - 20. MANUSCRIPTS UNDER EDITORIAL REVIEW:
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Huntsinger, J. & Sinclair, S. (invited submission). If it feels right, go with it: Affective regulation of affiliative social tuning. Social Cognition (Special Issue: Social Sharing Processes). MANUSCRIPTS UNDER REVISION: Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., & Clore, G. Affective Regulation of Implicit Attitude: Automatic and Controlled Processes (under revision for invited resubmission). Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. You're not like the rest: Being seen as an exception to the rule and social tuning of self-views (under revision). Ashton-James, C., Huntsinger, J., Clore, G., & Greslick, A. Affective Regulation of Social Category Priming: Attitude and Behavior (under revision). Huntsinger, J., Lun, J., Sinclair, S., Clore, G. Anticipatory Mood Matching (under revision). Lun, J., Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., Clore, G. The interpersonal benefits of mood similarity. (under revision). Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., Dunn, E., Clore, G. Do happy people always stereotype more?: Accessibility of counter-stereotypic thoughts and egalitarian responses reverses the usual relation between mood and stereotyping (under revision). WORKING MANUSCRIPTS & MANUSCRIPTS IN PREPARATION: Huntsinger, J., Bar-Anon, Y., & Clore, G. Do happy people always focus on the trees?: Mood and global-local processing revisited. Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. The easy street to implicit prejudice reduction: Affiliative social tuning does not consume self-regulatory resources. Sinclair, S., Lun, J., Whitchurch, E., & Huntsinger, J. When thinking makes it so: Need for cognition regulates affiliative social tuning of automatic prejudice. Mallett, R., Huntsinger, J., & Swim, J. They saw an injustice: The role of perceived injustice in predicting social policy support. CURRENT PROJECTS: Huntsinger, J. Affective (in) coherence regulates activation of implicit attitudes and behavioral consequences of social category priming. CONFERENCE PRESENTATIONS: CHAIRED SYMPOSIA:
July 2008 Sinclair, S. & Huntsinger, J. (2008, February). Mechanisms of Prejudice and Stereotype Moderation. Symposium held at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Albuquerque, NM. Huntsinger, J. (2006, January). Recent Insights Concerning Mood and Emotional Influences on Implicit Social Cognition. Symposium held at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Palm Springs, CA. Huntsinger, J. & Lun, J. (2004, July). New Insights into the Interpersonal Basis of Stereotyping and Prejudice. Symposium held at the bi-annual meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, Washington, DC. Sinclair, S., & Huntsinger, J. (2004, January). You are Who You Know: New Perspectives on the Social Basis of the Self. Symposium held at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Austin TX. PAPERS PRESENTED AT MEETINGS: Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., & Clore, G. (2008). Mood governs activation of implicit attitudes. Talk given at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Albuquerque, NM. Clore, G., Huntsinger, J., & Ashton-James, C. (2007). The Affective Regulation of Social Category Priming: Attitude and Behavior. Talk given at the Annual meeting of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Chicago, IL. Mallett, R., Huntsinger, J., Sinclair, S., & Swim, J. (2006). Seeing through their eyes: Collective action on behalf of outgroups. Talk given at the bi-annual meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, Long Beach, CA. Huntsinger, J. (2006, January). If it feels good, just do it: Mood effects on the expression of implicit attitudes during interpersonal interaction. Talk given at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Palm Springs, CA. Huntsinger, J. & Sinclair, S. (2004, July). How social interaction structures the selfevaluations of stigmatized group members. Talk given at the bi-annual meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, Washington, DC. Sinclair, S., & Huntsinger, J. (2004, April). The interpersonal basis of self-stereotyping. Talk given at the 2004 Claremont Symposium on Applied Social Psychology: Stigma and Group Inequality: Social Psychological Approaches. Sinclair, S., & Huntsinger, J. (2004, January). Social tuning of the self: Consequences for stereotype targets. Talk given at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Austin TX. POSTERS PRESENTED AT MEETINGS:
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*Greslick, A., Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. (2007, May). The effect of mood on category priming. Poster presented at the L. Starling Reid Undergraduate Psychology Conference, Charlottesville, VA. *Recipient of the Outstanding Student Research Award (Poster). Gray, T., Mallett, R. & Huntsinger, J. (2007, May). Do people favor flip-floppers or dogmatists? Who and how you ask matters. Poster presented at the Association for Psychological Science 19th Annual Conference, Washington, DC. Huntsinger, J., Lun, J., Sinclair, S., Clore, G., & Ngo, T. D. (2005, January). Do you feel like I do?: How interpersonal interaction structures affective experience. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, New Orleans, LA. Skorinko, J., Huntsinger, J. R., & Sinclair, S. (2005, January). Keep away: The anti-tuning effect & its motives. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, New Orleans, LA. Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. (2004, January). Relational social tuning of women’s selfevaluations: When the sexist views of another social actor influence women’s selves. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Austin TX. Mallett, R., Huntsinger, J. & Swim, J. (2003, January). Social policy support and determinations of legitimacy. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Los Angeles CA. Huntsinger, J & Sinclair, S. (2003, January). Women’s self-evaluations: How the stereotypical views of others shape the self. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Los Angeles CA. Huntsinger, J. (2000, January). The effects of age and prejudice on group identification and collective self-esteem. Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Annual Conference, Nashville TN. INVITED TALKS: Huntsinger, J. (2007, October). If it feels right, go with it: Affective regulation of automatic processes. Loyola University Chicago (Social Psychology Area) Huntsinger, J., & Sinclair, S. (2003, March). Affiliative social tuning of women’s self-views: When the sexist views of another social actor influence women’s selves. The Pennsylvania State University PROFESSIONAL AFFILIATIONS: Society of Personality and Social Psychology (1999 - present) Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (2002 - present) Association for Psychological Science (2007-present)
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EDITORIAL EXPERIENCE: Ad hoc reviewer for: Political Psychology British Journal of Social Psychology Psychonomic Bulletin & Review RESEARCH INTERESTS: Implicit Social Cognition; Emotion and Cognition; Interpersonal Interaction; Motivation & Goal Pursuit; Stereotyping; Stigma; Intergroup Relations; Applied Social Psychology TEACHING INTERESTS: Social Stigma; Stereotyping & Prejudice; Emotion & Cognition; Political Psychology; the Self; Research Methods; Implicit Social Cognition; Psychology of Gender; Social Psychology TEACHING EXPERIENCE (SELECTED): Loyola University Chicago: Introduction to Social Psychology (Fall 2007) Gender & Sex: Differences and Similarities (Fall 2007; Spring 2008; Fall 2008) University of Virginia: Teaching Assistant: Social Psychology, Fall 2001, 2002 Head Teaching Assistant: Social Psychology, Fall 2003 Teaching Assistant: Research Methods and Data Analysis II, Spring 2004, Fall 2004, Spring 2005, Spring 2006, Spring 2007 DISTINGUISHED MAJOR'S THESES OVERSEEN (with Dr. Sinclair): David Powder 2000-2001 Tan Ngo, 2003-2004 Amanda Greslick, 2006-2007
July 2008 REFERENCES: Dr. Stacey Sinclair Department of Psychology P.O. Box 400400, 102 Gilmer Hall University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400 Phone: (434) 982-4733 Email:
[email protected] Dr. Gerald L. Clore Department of Psychology P.O. Box 400400, 102 Gilmer Hall University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400 Phone: (434) 982-0449 Email:
[email protected]
Dr. Brian Nosek Department of Psychology P.O. Box 400400, 102 GilmerHall University of Virginia Charlottesville, VA 22904-4400 Phone: (434) 924-0666 Email:
[email protected]
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