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Katharine H. Greenaway

Katharine H. Greenaway

D-Index & Metrics

Psychology

D-Index
33
Citations
5824
World Ranking
10442
National Ranking
597

Overview

Katharine H. Greenaway is affiliated with the University of Melbourne in Australia and has a research focus primarily in the field of Psychology, with 48 publications contributing to this area. Their work spans several subfields, including Experimental and Cognitive Psychology, Sociology and Political Science, Social Psychology, Cognitive Neuroscience, and Applied Psychology.

Their research topics cover a range of themes such as Social and Intergroup Psychology, Mental Health Research Topics, Psychology of Moral and Emotional Judgment, Behavioral Health and Interventions, Cultural Differences and Values, Anxiety, Depression, Psychometrics, Treatment, Cognitive Processes, and Evolutionary Psychology and Human Behavior.

Greenaway has contributed to numerous articles published in notable venues, frequently appearing in the following journals:

  • Emotion
  • Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
  • British Journal of Social Psychology
  • Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
  • Body Image

Their recent papers include:

  • A social identity perspective on COVID-19: Health risk is affected by shared group membership (2020, British Journal of Social Psychology)
  • Emotion regulation in everyday life: Mapping global self-reports to daily processes (2022, Emotion)
  • When trust goes wrong: A social identity model of risk taking (2020, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology)
  • The social functions of positive emotions (2021, Current Opinion in Behavioral Sciences)
  • Differences in weight stigma between gay, bisexual, and heterosexual men (2020, Body Image)

Greenaway often collaborates with a group of frequent co-authors, including:

  • Elise K. Kalokerinos (19 coauthored papers)
  • Peter Koval (7 coauthored papers)
  • Anh Tran (5 coauthored papers)
  • Michael L. Slepian (5 coauthored papers)
  • Ella K. Moeck (5 coauthored papers)

Best Publications

  • From “we” to “me”: Group identification enhances perceived personal control with consequences for health and well-being.

    Katharine H. Greenaway;S. Alexander Haslam;Tegan Cruwys;Nyla R. Branscombe

  • Advancing the social identity approach to health and well-being: Progressing the social cure research agenda

    Jolanda Jetten;S. Alexander Haslam;Tegan Cruwys;Katharine H. Greenaway

  • Collective efficacy increases pro-environmental intentions through increasing self-efficacy

    Philipp Jugert;Katharine H. Greenaway;Markus Barth;Ronja Büchner;Ronja Büchner

  • Congruent or conflicted? The impact of injunctive and descriptive norms on environmental intentions

    Joanne R. Smith;Winnifred R. Louis;Deborah J. Terry;Katharine H. Greenaway

  • Social identities promote well‐being because they satisfy global psychological needs

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Tegan Cruwys;S. Alexander Haslam;Jolanda Jetten

  • The Path to Glory Is Paved With Hierarchy: When Hierarchical Differentiation Increases Group Effectiveness

    Richard Ronay;Katharine H Greenaway;Eric M Anicich;Adam D Galinsky

  • Social Identity Reduces Depression by Fostering Positive Attributions

    Tegan Cruwys;Erica I. South;Katharine H. Greenaway;S. Alexander Haslam

  • Context is Everything (in Emotion Research)

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Elise K. Kalokerinos;Lisa A. Williams

  • Shared Identity Is Key to Effective Communication

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Ruth G. Wright;Joanne Willingham;Katherine J. Reynolds

  • Reappraisal but Not Suppression Downregulates the Experience of Positive and Negative Emotion

    Elise K. Kalokerinos;Katharine H. Greenaway;Thomas F. Denson

  • Don’t grin when you win: The social costs of positive emotion expression in performance situations.

    Elise K. Kalokerinos;Katharine H. Greenaway;David J. Pedder;Elise A. Margetts

  • Feeling Hopeful Inspires Support for Social Change

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Aleksandra Cichocka;Ruth van Veelen;Tiina Likki

  • A leak in the academic pipeline: identity and health among postdoctoral women

    Renate Ysseldyk;Katharine H. Greenaway;Elena Hassinger;Elena Hassinger;Sarah Zutrauen

  • Evidence for motivated control: Understanding the paradoxical link between threat and efficacy beliefs about climate change

    Matthew J. Hornsey;Kelly S. Fielding;Ryan McStay;Joseph P. Reser

  • Appealing to common humanity increases forgiveness but reduces collective action among victims of historical atrocities

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Emerald A. Quinn;Winnifred R. Louis

  • Loss of Control Increases Belief in Precognition and Belief in Precognition Increases Control

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Winnifred R. Louis;Matthew J. Hornsey

  • Emotion regulation in everyday life: Mapping global self-reports to daily processes.

    Unknown

  • Loss of control stimulates approach motivation

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Katherine R. Storrs;Michael C. Philipp;Winnifred R. Louis

  • Perceived control qualifies the effects of threat on prejudice

    Katharine H. Greenaway;Winnifred R. Louis;Matthew J. Hornsey;Janelle M. Jones

  • A social identity perspective on COVID-19: Health risk is affected by shared group membership.

    Tegan Cruwys;Mark Stevens;Katharine H. Greenaway

  • When Trust Goes Wrong: A Social Identity Model of Risk Taking

    Tegan Cruwys;Katharine H Greenaway;Laura J Ferris;Joanne A Rathbone

Frequent Co-Authors

S. Alexander Haslam
S. Alexander Haslam University of Queensland
Winnifred R. Louis
Winnifred R. Louis University of Queensland
Tegan Cruwys
Tegan Cruwys Australian National University
Matthew J. Hornsey
Matthew J. Hornsey University of Queensland
Katherine J. Reynolds
Katherine J. Reynolds Australian National University
Jolanda Jetten
Jolanda Jetten University of Queensland
Nyla R. Branscombe
Nyla R. Branscombe University of Kansas
Kathleen D. Vohs
Kathleen D. Vohs University of Minnesota
Brock Bastian
Brock Bastian University of Melbourne
Kelly S. Fielding
Kelly S. Fielding University of Queensland

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