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2026-03
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The Ambivalent Role of Perceived Low Cultural Distance in Acculturation—A Case of Ukrainian Migrants in Poland: A Qualitative Study

Boczkowska, Marta
Hamer, Katarzyna
Górecka, Maria
Grzymała - Moszczyńska, Halina
This study examines the role of perceived low cultural distance in the acculturation process of Ukrainian women (aged 22–31) who voluntarily migrated to Poland prior to 2019. Through qualitative analysis of 17 in-depth interviews, we explored how perceived cultural similarity between Poland and Ukraine is associated with the experiences of these migrants. Using reflexive thematic analysis, we found that while a perceived low cultural distance is associated with a sense of familiarity that may ease certain aspects of acculturation, it does not fully mitigate sociocultural challenges and acculturative stress these women experience. A notable and novel finding is the identification of the phenomenon we propose to call the “Minimization trap,” a theme suggesting that cultural and linguistic differences may be downplayed, potentially complicating sociocultural adaptation and psychological adjustment. Despite perceived similarity, significant cultural differences were reported, highlighting the need for targeted interventions such as intercultural training and language acquisition support. Our findings stress the importance of culturally sensitive policies that recognize both the opportunities and challenges associated with low cultural distance in the acculturation process.
Pozostałe osiągnięcia naukoweArtykuły (zamknięty dostęp)Journal article
2026-04-16Springer Cham
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Morality and Vaccination

This chapter examines attitudes toward vaccination through the lens of moral psychology, focusing on how moral convictions shape vaccine acceptance or resistance. While vaccines are a proven tool for preventing disease, hesitancy remains widespread and increasingly moralized. Drawing on theories of moral conviction, the chapter explains how individuals perceive vaccination not just as a personal choice but as a moral issue—seen as objective, universal, and independent of authority. Three studies conducted in Poland (N > 3,700) reveal that moralized attitudes toward vaccination reinforce both support and opposition, increase distrust or trust in institutions, and predict greater acceptance of coercive measures in line with one’s stance. The chapter also evaluates the effectiveness of moral reframing—presenting pro-vaccine messages in a way that aligns with the audience’s moral values (e.g., purity, care, social norms). Results show that reframing is effective, particularly among individuals who do not strongly moralize their views. However, strong moral convictions can render individuals resistant to persuasion. The chapter concludes with practical recommendations for crafting public health messages that appeal to diverse moral foundations, highlighting the importance of matching message content to audience values for greater communication effectiveness.
Otwarty dostępMonografieMonograph Chapter
2026-02-12
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At the Speed of a Verb: Grammatical Class of Stimuli Affects Response Time in Surveys and Syntactic Classification Tasks

Suitner, Caterina
Dołżycka, Joanna
Roessel, Janin
Maass, Anne
Verbs, as the conventional linguistic category for expressing action and motion, possess meta-semantic associations specifically with action-orientation—associations not typically found in other grammatical classes (e.g., nouns). The central aim of this research was to examine whether the proposed association between verbs and action manifests in shorter response times for verbs compared to other grammatical forms. In Studies 1a and 1b (N1a = 136, N1b = 323), we examined the impact of exposure to verbs versus nouns on overall completion time for a complex questionnaire survey. In Studies 2a and 2b (N2a = 92, N2b = 96), we employed a syntactic classification task to investigate behavioral responses to verbs and nouns, using a pseudoword paradigm in which carefully constructed lexical stimuli were devoid of semantic meaning but clearly conveyed grammatical class through suffixes. Across all four experiments, we consistently observed shorter response times for verbs and pseudoverbs compared to nouns and pseudonouns, suggesting that grammatical class exerts meta-semantic effects on behavior.
Otwarty dostępArtykułyJournal article
2026-04-16
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Effects of Psychological Distance on Mental Abstraction: A Registered Report of Four Tests of Construal-Level Theory

Calderon, Sofia
Giolla, Eric Mac
Ask, Karl
Adler, Susanne Jana
Agerström, Jens
Akpınar, Burcu
Albayrak, Nihan
Alparone, Francesca Romana
Amin, Shahrazad
Aquino, Antonio
Bachet, Melissa
Baisile, Baisile
Bausenhart, Karin M.
Beylat, Magali
Bloomfield, Eliana C.
Boecker, Lea
Bonora, Matteo
Brady, Shannon T.
Branch, Jared G.
Brandy, Nicole E.
Bui, Kelley T.
Bustos-Ortega, Mariela
Caballero, Amparo
Cai, Andi
Cárdenas, Stephanie A.
Carrera, Pilar
Chang, Jung-Tzu
Chao, Hsuan-Fu
Christy, Andrew G.
Cook, Jennifer A.
Dang, Junhua
Danielson, Scott
Davis, William E.
de Boer, Cara
de Groot, Elise
Derrick, Jaye L.
Dittmar, Sarah
Döring, Tim
Douilliez, Celine
Egger, Martin
Escher, Yannik A.
Evans, Thomas Rhys
Fabiani, Sofia
Feldman, Gilad
Fernandez, Nicole
Fischer, Julia
Friese, Malte
Fuglestad, Paul T.
Gaboriaud, Aurore
Gale, Jessica
Gamrát, Richard
Genschow, Oliver
Ghasemi, Omid
Giacomantonio, Mauro
Gieseler, Karolin
Greijdanus, Hedy
Griffin, Siobhan Mary
Gül, Doga
Gunaydin, Gul
Haasova, Simona
Halkias, Georgios
Hawk, Christopher E.
Helfers, Anna
Hernandez, Cindy L.
Hess, Yanine D.
Horgos, Petr J.
Hrymchak, Yehor
Huff, Markus
Ildırım, Ezgi
Jokić, Biljana
Julliard, Yoann
Kacˇmár, Pavol
Kaup, Barbara
Kim, Hyunji
Kim, Kyungm
Kingstone, Alan
Koç, Kenan
Koppel, Lina
Körner, Anita
Kovácˇová Holevová, Bibiana
Labor, Paul Danielle
Laforet, Bronwyn D.
Lalot, Fanny
Lamm, Leonie
Laurent, Sean M.
Sean T. H. Lee
Lee, Yi-Chen
Lemay, Edward P. Jr
Lin, Zhicheng
Lin, Yun-Kai
Long, Jia-Xi
Loschelder, David D.
Makri, Katerina
Manley, Harry
Maugeri, Nicolo
McCarthy, Randy J.
McHugh, Cillian
Milyavskaya, Marina
Morvinski, Coby
Muchová, Michaela
Muftareviç, Sumeyye
Muller, Dominique
Nave, Gideon
Newell, Ben R.
Nurra, Cécile
Ouellet, Marc
Özdoğru, Asil Ali
Pagnani, Mia
Paolini, Daniele
Papenmeier, Frank
Petrowsky, Hannes M.
Pfattheicher, Stefan
Picado, Jean C.
Pickering, Ryan M.
Purić, Danka
Quiamzade, Alain
Ramsay, Jonathan E.
Renaud, Tristan Nicholas
Romero-Sánchez, Monica
Ross, Robert M.
Sánchez-Rodríguez, Angel
Santiago, Julio
Sarstedt, Marko
Scally, Luke
Scandola, Michele
Schachtner, Judith P. M.
Schindler, Simon
Segerberg, Andreas
Selcuk, Emre
Sevillano, Veronica
Shalev, Edith
Shao, Xiaoyi
Shaw, Steven D.
Shi, Keyi
Siem, Birte
Solana, Pablo
Soliman, Meikel
Solmazer, Gaye
Sonmez, Fatih
Stanley, Samantha K.
Steinmetz, Janina
Stivers, Adam W.
Tagand, Maude
Tan, Yan Zhen
Terzi, Hilal
Tian, Miaomiao
Tinghög, Gustav
Tran, Ulrich S.
Urschler, David F.
VanHorn, Daniel R.
Västfjäll, Daniel
Verschuere, Bruno
Verschueren, Amelie
Vlad, Anna Laura
Voracek, Martin
Wang, Xiaotian
Wang, Deming
Warmelink, Lara
Kah Jjin Wee, Adam
Wichman, Aaron Lee
Wiechert, Sera
Woltin, Karl-Andrew
Wong, Hoo Keat
Xu, Jiawen
Yao, Zai-Fu
Yeung, Siu Kit
Yogeeswaran, Kumar
Žeželj, Iris
Zhang, Qing
Ziegler, Rene
Luke, Timithy J.
Construal-level theory (CLT) proposes that psychological distance influences the level of abstraction at which something is mentally construed: Things perceived as less probable (likelihood) or further away from the here (spatial distance), now (temporal distance), or self (social distance) are thought about more abstractly. In this international multilab study, we tested four basic hypotheses derived from core assumptions of CLT and explore potential moderators and boundary conditions of the effects. Participants (N = 11,775) from 27 countries and regions were randomly assigned to one of four experimental protocols focused on different types of psychological distance (temporal, spatial, social, or likelihood), and each experiment manipulated psychological distance (close vs. distant). The protocols for temporal distance (n = 2,941) and spatial distance (n = 2,973) were direct replications of Liberman and Trope (Study 1) and Fujita et al. (Study 1), respectively. The remaining two protocols were paradigmatic replications, applying to social distance (n = 2,926) and likelihood (n = 2,936). The effects of psychological distance on construal level for the four present studies were as follows (positive effects are consistent with hypotheses): temporal, d = 0.08, 95% confidence interval [CI] = [0.003, 0.16] (effect in original study: d = 0.92); spatial, d = 0.04, 95% CI = [−0.03, 0.11] (effect in original study: d = 0.55); social, d = −0.27, 95% CI = [−0.34, −0.19]; and likelihood, d = 0.03, 95% CI = [−0.05, 0.11]. Pretests indicated that valence and abstraction were confounded in response options on the outcome measure. Controlling for this confound eliminated the hypothesis-inconsistent effect of social distance, d = 0.006, 95% CI = [−0.05, 0.07]. These findings provide limited evidence for the predictions of the theory and present a critical challenge for CLT.
Otwarty dostępArtykułyJournal article
2026-04-01
closedaccess

Investigating the replicability of the social and behavioural sciences

Tyner, Andrew H.
Abatayo, Anna Lou
Daley, Mason
Field, Samuel
Fox, Nicholas
Haber, Noah A.
Hahn, Krystal M.
Struhl, Melissa Kline
Mawhinney, Brinna
Miske, Olivia
Silverstein, Priya
Soderberg, Courtney K.
Stankov, Theresa
Abbasi, Ahmed
Aberson, Christopher L.
Aczel, Balazs
Adamkovič, Matúš
Albayrak, Nihan
Allen, Peter J.
Andreychik, Michael
Awtrey, Eli
Axxe, Erick
Azevedo, Flavio
Bader, Miles D.
Bago, Bence
Bailey, James
Bakker, Marjan
Banik, Gabriel
Banks, George C.
Baskin, Ernest
Batruch, Anatolia
Beatteay, Annika
Behr, Sophie M.
Berente, Nicholas
Berry, Zachariah
Białkowski, Jędrzej
Bodroža, Bojana
Boeschoten, Laura
Bognar, Miklos
Bokhove, Christian
Bonfiglio, Diane
Bouwman, Robin
Brady, Timothy F.
Braithwaite, Scott R.
Briceño, Gabriel Jiménez
Brick, Cameron
Bricka, Traci
Briker, Roman
Brown, Annette N.
Brown, Gordon D. A.
van Aert, Robbie C. M.
Caldwell, Kathryn
Capitan, Sara
Capitán, Tabaré
Chandler, Jesse
Charles, Tessa
Chartier, Christopher R.
Chawdhary, Rahul
Cheng, Kent Jason
Chopik, William J.
Clark, Bruce
Colvin, Victoria E.
Comer, C. Cozette
Costantini, Giulio
Coupé, Tom
Cummins, Jamie
Czernatowicz-Kukuczka, Aneta
de Leeuw, Joshua
Dobolyi, David
Druckman, James N.
Duan, Jianhua
Dujmović, Marin
Dunleavy, Daniel J.
Durkee, Patrick K.
Emery, Cécile
Esterling, Kevin M.
Evans, Thomas R.
Fedor, Anna
Fernández-Castilla, Belén
Fiala, Nathan
Field, James G.
Fong, Nathan
Fonseca, Miguel A.
Freeman, Alexandra L. J.
Freese, Jeremy
Geiger, Sandra J.
Geng, Jing
Getz, Laura M.
Geven, Linda Marjoleine
Gleibs, Ilka Helene
Gonzales, Donna Pamella
Gooty, Janaki
Gourdon-Kanhukamwe, Amélie
Greculescu, Cristina
Griffin, Siobhán M.
Grigoryan, Lusine
Grunow, Martina
Gunby, Nicholas
Hall, Braeden
Hanel, Paul H. P.
Hannon, Erin E.
Harper, Sam
Held, Marco Jürgen
Hickman, Louis
Higgins, Nathan C.
Hippel, Svenja
Hoeppner, Sven
Hong, Sanghyun
Hostler, Thomas J.
Inzlicht, Michael
Jaeger, Bastian
Jankowsky, Kristin
Jarke-Neuert, Johannes
Jensen, Matthew
Jokić, Biljana
Jolles, Daniel
Jolly, Phillip
Jones, Angela M.
Juanchich, Marie
Kačmár, Pavol
Kapoor, Hansika
Keljanovic, Andjela
Koirala, Samjhana
Kołczyńska, Marta
Kouroupaki, Dimitra
Kühnen, Ulrich
Landgrave, Michelangelo
Larson, Michael J.
Laulié, Lyonel
Lawrence, Alice C. E.
Le Forestier, Joel M.
Leahy, Katelin E.
Lee, Sungmok
Leslie, Jared
Lewis, Savannah C.
Limnios, Christopher
Lin, Hause
Liu, An-Chiao
Lloyd, John Wills
Ludvig, Elliot A.
Lynott, Dermot
MacDonald, Jordan
Mallik, Peter
Mallinson, Daniel J.
Marinazzo, Daniele
Martarelli, Corinna S.
Matacotta, Joshua
McBride, Andrew
McHugh, Cillian
McMillan, Gail
Méndez, Esteban
Metzger, Mitchell
Michaelides, Michalis P.
Michalak, Johannes
Micheli, Leticia
Miller, Jeremy K.
Milyavskaya, Marina
Molden, Daniel C.
Monjaras, Ambar G.
Moreau, David
Morrow, Audrey
Moya, Cristóbal
Mudrik, Liad
Mulder, Laetitia B.
Munt, Katie A.
Nandi, Arijit
Nason, Kathryn
Nast, Carolin
Nave, Gideon
Nax, Heinrich H.
Neubauer, Florian
Nguyen, Phuong Linh L.
Nichols, Austin Lee
Nilsonne, Gustav
O’Boyle, Ernest
Oettinghaus, Jule
Oh, Jeewon
Oshana, Adoril
Ostermann, Thomas
Ostrowski, Rachel P.
Oyebanjo, Abiola
Panczak, Radoslaw
Patrianakos, Jamie
Pavez, Ignacio
Pavlov, Yuri G.
Persson, Sofia
Perugini, Marco
Peters, Kim
Pieters, Constant
Ponizovskiy, Vladimir
Porter, Nathaniel D.
Prenoveau, Jason M.
Purić, Danka
Purol, Mariah F.
Puthillam, Arathy
Quinn, Kimberly A.
Ramljak, Marco
Reed, W. Robert
Ritchie, Michaela
Ritzau, Margaret
Roche, Sean Patrick
Rodela, Romina
Röer, Jan Philipp
Ropovik, Ivan
Rothschild, Jacob
Saal, Justine
Safadi, Hani
Samaha, Jason
Sanchez, Mary
Sankaran, Soorya
Santos, David
Sargent, Amanda C.
Sauter, Marian
Schmidt, Kathleen
Schnabel, Landon
Schroeder, Amber N.
Schuetz, Sebastian W.
Schuetze, Brendan A.
Schulte-Mecklenbeck, Michael
Schütz, Astrid
Sevigny, Eric L.
Shackleton, Ellie
Shafranek, Richard M.
Shaki, Samuel
Shakya, Shishir
Sirota, Miroslav
Sisco, Matthew Ryan
Sitnikov, Maksim M.
Slevc, L. Robert
Smalarz, Laura
Smith, Colin Tucker
Snyder, Joel S.
Sommet, Nicolas
Sonmez, Fatih
Spellman, Barbara A.
Stanulewicz-Buckley, Natalia
Stock, George
Street, Chris N. H.
Strømland, Eirik
Sundelin, Tina
Syed, Moin
Szabelska, Anna
Szaszi, Barnabas
Szumowska, Ewa
Tagat, Anirudh
Täuber, Susanne
Tay, Louis
Thapa, Stuti
Thatcher, Jason
Tsaklakidou, Domna
Tummers, Lars
Turkovich, Elise
Tutor, Melba Verra
Urbanska, Karolina
van’t Veer, Anna Elisabeth
van Assen, Marcel
van de Ven, Niels
van den Goorbergh, Ruben
Vargo, Elisabeth Julie
Vaughn, Leigh Ann
Vazire, Simine
Vermeulen, Jentien M.
Vo, Diem Thi Hong
Volkman, Victor
Wagenmakers, Eric-Jan
Wagner, Deliah
Walasek, Lukasz
Walter, Frank
Warmelink, Lara
Wei, Liuqing
Weißflog, Marie Isabelle
Weller, Nicholas
Wichman, Aaron L.
Wilbiks, Jonathan
Williams, Jamal R.
Wolfe, Kelly
Wort, Finnian
Wright, Ryan
Wulff, Jesper N.
Xue, Xindong
Yan, Veronica X.
Yang, Yuzhi
Yoon, Sangsuk
Žeželj, Iris
Zhang, Yinxian
Ziano, Ignazio
Zogmaister, Cristina
Zupan, Zorana
Zwaan, Rolf A.
Nosek Brian A.
Errington, Timothy M.
Pursuing replicability — independent evidence for previous claims — is important for creating generalizable knowledge. Here we attempted replications of 274 claims of positive results from 164 quantitative papers published from 2009 to 2018 in 54 journals in the social and behavioural sciences. Replications were high powered on average to detect the original effect size (median of 99.6%), used original materials when relevant and available, and were peer reviewed in advance through a standardized internal protocol. Replications showed statistically significant results in the original pattern for 151 of 274 claims (55.1% (95% confidence interval (CI) 49.2–60.9%)) and for 80.8 of 164 papers (49.3% (95% CI 43.8–54.7%)), weighed for replicating multiple claims per paper. We observed modest variation in replication rates across disciplines (42.5–63.1%), although some estimates had high uncertainty. The median Pearson’s r effect size was 0.25 (95% CI 0.21–0.27) for original studies and 0.10 (95% CI 0.09–0.13) for replication studies, an 82.4% (95% CI 67.8–88.2%) reduction in shared variance. Thirteen methods for evaluating replication success provided estimates ranging from 28.6% to 74.8% (median of 49.3%). Some decline in effect size and significance is expected based on power to detect original effects and regression to the mean because we replicated only positive results. We observe that challenges for replicability extend across social–behavioural sciences, illustrating the importance of identifying conditions that promote or inhibit replicability.
Pozostałe osiągnięcia naukoweArtykuły (zamknięty dostęp)Journal article