Thanks so much for posting about this!!
Thanks so much for posting about this!!
I'm at SPSP and will be presenting at the Computational Psychology Preconference today at 4:25pm!
The title of the talk is "The Digital Authoritarian: Authoritarian Tendencies are Linked to Digital Records of Behavior Collected via Smarpthones."
Hope to see you there!
@spspnews.bsky.social
We're excited about the upcoming Computational Psychology preconference at @spspnews.bsky.social this Thursday. See our action-packed full day agenda below! Featuring 3 keynote talk themes with related early-career speakers, data blitz session, panel discussion. Don't miss it! #SPSP
This looks π₯π₯π₯
"we show that half of the research published in top journals has disclosable ties to industry in the form of prior funding, collaboration, or employment. However, the majority of these ties go undisclosed in the published research."
Three schematic diagrams. The first illustrates selective publishing of internal resection, the second selective causal focus, and the third selective access and funding for researchers.
1. We ( @jbakcoleman.bsky.social, @cailinmeister.bsky.social, @jevinwest.bsky.social, and I) have a new preprint up on the arXiv.
There we explore how social media companies and other online information technology firms are able to manipulate scientific research about the effects of their products.
My department at Imperial College London is hiring! We're looking for scholars who study "inclusivity," broadly defined. Applicants can be from any research area including OB, social psychology, sociology, and entrepreneurship. Deadline Sept 15.
www.imperial.ac.uk/jobs/search-...
www.psypost.org/trump-suppor... Trump supporters report higher levels of psychopathy, manipulativeness, callousness, and narcissism
"Platforms are calibrated to capture attention by amplifying moralized and emotional content. This can have benefits, such as raising awareness of injustices by propagating expressions of outrage," explains @stefanleach.bsky.social phys.org/news/2025-05...
50 years ago, film director John Cassavetes observed that lifestyle is a driver of social division. Our article suggests that this holds true today. However, we add that lifestyle divisions are not random but cluster (and are perceved to cluster) around political identities.
We find that liberals and conservatives behave differently in everyday life, but not as differently as people think. (Observers tended to overestimate lifestyle differences between liberals and conservatives in the same community).
We quantified the association between political identity and 61 social, movement, work, and leisure behaviors collected from smartphone sensors/logs and ecological momentary assessments in a sample of students on a college campus.
Now out in JPSP (open access paper):
"Lifestyle Polarization on a College Campus: Do Liberals and Conservatives Behave Differently in Everyday Life?"
psycnet.apa.org/fulltext/202...
w/ @dianamejordan.bsky.social, Sam Gosling, and Gabriella Harari
π¨π¨ Iβm looking for a postdoctoral fellow to join my lab at Harvard's Psychology Department starting Fall 2025 π¨π£
Please share widely and spread the word to interested candidates! π§΅
π Application review begins April 30
Apply here: rb.gy/k7q9kf (1/2)
This work suggests that to understand authoritarian movements upending the economic, social, and political fabric of countries around the world, researchers have much to learn from the inherently quotidianβthe stuff of everyday life.
Regarding the most important individual behaviors for predicting authoritarianism, Facebook app use was king. It comprised 5 out of the 10 most important behaviors overall. It was also the most important type of app use, and app use was the most important type of sensor modality.
AGGRESSION & EMOTIONALITY: Authoritarians used positive and negative emotion words more often and with more variability, and they used anger- and death-related words more. The exception was anxiety! Those LOW on authoritarianism used more anxiety words.
AUTHORITY & HIERARCHY (2): Gender-related hierarchy seemed to play a particularly important role here. Individuals high on authoritarianism used more male references (e.g., he, him, man), suggesting a more male-dominated social circle and/or a focus on men and masculinity.
AUTHORITY & HIERARCHY (1): Authoritariansβ language revealed a preoccupation with status (e.g., using more clout-related words) and a tenuous relationship with submission (e.g., greater variability in assent-related words).
[In the beeswarm plots on the right, positive SHAP values indicate the behavior predicts higher authoritarianism; negative SHAP values indicate the behavior predicts lower authoritarianism].
LIMITED EXPOSURE: Authoritarians have an active but constrained social circle (e.g., receiving more text messages from fewer numbers), an interest in familiar pop culture (e.g., listening to Europop music), and a focus on intergroup dynamics (e.g., βtheyβ-related language).
Behavioral patterns reflecting limited exposure to unknown people/places/cultures were most important for predicting individuals' authoritarianism, followed by preference for simple information, respect for authority & hierarchy, and tendency towards aggression & emotionality.
Everyday behavioral patterns measured with smartphones predicted individualsβ authoritarianism twice as accurately as demographics (i.e., age, gender, education, nationality).
We used prior literature to derive theory-informed behaviors that a) reflect authoritariansβ key psychological attributes, and b) can be measured with smartphones sensors/logs (i.e., app usage, keyboard typing, music listening, unlocking/locking, calling/texting, GPS location).
π¨New Preprint (wish it were less timely)π¨
We map everyday behavioral patterns of authoritarians using smartphone data, providing an updated portrait of authoritarianism in the digital age. w/ Timo Koch, @clemensstachl.bsky.social, @dracek.bsky.social, Ramona Schoedel, et al
osf.io/preprints/ps...
This summer, UCL Computer Science and Imperial College Business School will host the Summer Institute in Computational Social Science (SICSS) β London from June 16β25, 2025!
Please apply! The summer school is free, and I'll be giving a talk! For details and application info: lnkd.in/ezurESRd
Sanaz Talaifar: smart phone passive sensing study: Liberals have less fun than conservatives (they are on social media lot...). Also, people vastly overestimate daily routine differences among lib vs conservatives
#spsp2025 #comppsych
Thanks for your questions! More details in the pre-print: osf.io/k4d5q_v1. We didn't measure wellbeing in our study, but liberals tended to engage in behaviors that prior research has found to be less beneficial for wellbeing, a finding we are following up on. The "fun" comment was meant as a joke.