Joined July 2020
24 Photos and videos
Leo Röhlke finds no evidence that early adolescents spend less time on enrichment, physical activity, or sleep after acquiring their first mobile phone. Read this open access article here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Work from Lea Becher, Guido Mehlkop, and Sebastian Sattler investigates the connection between status and aggression. This article is open access--read more here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Ariane Bertogg, @ppraeg and Klara Reiber show that caregiving improves cognitive functioning for both men and women in later life. Read this open access article here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Tibor Rutar and Marko Hočevar find that over-time increases in economic freedom predict decreases in relative poverty in developed, individualist societies. Open access here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Aniruddha Das examines subjective religiosity and perceived control in later life. sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Jon Overton and Gideon Cunningham examine political homogeneity and extremism in American politics. Read this open access article here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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In case you missed it, we're on BlueSky! Follow us @ssreditorial.bsky.social for new articles and journal updates.
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Dieuwke Zwier finds that schools with progressive learning concepts are less popular among lower-SES students, while higher-SES students are comparatively less likely to choose labor market-themed schools. This article is open access: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Micah H. Nelson examines whether survey items measure the same constructs equivalently when administered to Democrats and Republicans. sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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From Yuxin Zhang and colleagues, "Is political interest tracked in schools? Evidence from Germany" is open access and available here: sciencedirect.com/science/ar…...
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Big congrats to @MasoudMovahed, whose article titled "Intergenerational income mobility in the United States: A racial-spatial account" just won the ASA's Mathematical Sociology Section’s Outstanding Graduate Student Paper Award! doi.org/10.1016/j.ssresearch…
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Big congrats to @Tiffanysara as well. Sorry it took us to find your account. 😀
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SSR Editorial Office retweeted
Our paper is out in @SSReditorial! We conduct latent class analysis to illustrate the complex interplay between multiple dimensions of maternal empowerment and children’s gender beliefs in India. See full paper here: authors.elsevier.com/a/1kMGz…
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We know people with black-sounding names are discriminated against in the U.S. labor market. Was there such name-based discrimination in the early 20th century? See what this new study found! sciencedirect.com/science/ar…
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People are influenced by members of high-status groups & members of their ingroup. Are lower-status people more influenced by members of higher-status outgroups or by members of their lower-status ingroup? sciencedirect.com/science/ar…
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Results of online survey experiment show that on factual questions, less-educated people are more strongly influenced by highly-educated outgroup individuals than by less-educated ingroup individuals. On opinion questions, status orientation & ingroup orientation are about equal.
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The link between parental educational expectations & children’s educational outcomes is well-established in the literature. This study addresses how parental expectations respond to children’s academic performance. sciencedirect.com/science/ar… @ShenWensong
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Analysis of longitudinal data from China reveals a hidden form of education inequality: low-SES parents not only hold lower educ expectations but are more likely to decrease their expectations when child academic performance declines, which further reduces their educ involvement.
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Computational text analysis of parenting advice given by a nationally representative sample shows nuanced variations in parenting logics across two dimensions: assertive vs negotiated parenting & pedagogic vs pragmatic parenting. sciencedirect.com/science/ar…
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Here is the surprising part: nearly all parenting logics reflect some form of intensive parenting, & there is little systematic variation by race/ethnicity, education, & income, suggesting more similarity across groups &more variability within groups than commonly understood.
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