1 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019

KERRI L. JOHNSON Departments of Communication and Psychology University of California, Los Angeles 2330 Rolfe Hall Los Angeles, CA 90095 [email protected] (310) 825-4199 http://www.sscnet.ucla.edu/comm/kjohnson/Lab/Home.html

EDUCATION

Cornell University (1999-2004) Ph.D., Personality and University of Central Oklahoma (1996-1998) M.A., Experimental Psychology (with Honors) University of Central Oklahoma (1991-1994) B.S., Education, 1994 (Summa Cum Laude)

PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS

University of California, Los Angeles, Departments of Communication and Psychology Department Chair, Communication (July, 2016 - present) Professor (July, 2017 – present) Associate Professor (2013 – 2017) Assistant Professor (2007 – 2013) New York University, Department of Psychology Research Scientist (2004 – 2007) Pre-Doctoral Research Fellow (2003 – 2004) Cornell University, Johnson School of Management Adjunct Faculty (Spring, 2003) University of Central Oklahoma, Department of Psychology Adjunct Faculty (Spring, 2001 & 2002)

EDITORIAL and ELECTED APPOINTMENTS

Executive Committee Member: Society of Experimental Social Psychology (2017 – 2020; 2018 Secretary/Treasurer, 2019 Vice President; 2020 President) Editorial Board: Social Psychology and Personality Science (2013 – present) Consulting Editor: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology IRGP (2014 – present) APS Fellow (2018 – present) SPSP Fellow (2018 – present) Associate Editor (2013 – 2016): Social Cogntion Guest Editor (2012/2013): special issue, Social Vision (with Reginald B. Adams, Jr.)

2 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 RESEARCH FUNDING

2015, July National Institutes of Health (R01-HD082844); Social Attention in Infancy (Co-PI with S.P. Johnson) $1,561,034 2014, August Placek Award (American Psychological Association; Test of Minority Stress Theory: Immediate Physiological Functioning and Physical Health Outcomes Among Lesbians and Gay Men Who Face Identity-Related Stigma (Co-PI with D.J. Lick and T. F. Robles) $15,000 2014, February Department of Homeland Security – The Effect of Variations in CMAS Message Content and Social Setting on Behavioral and Psychophysiological Responses Among Diverse Populations (Co-I with D.C. Glik, David Eisenman, and Michael Prelip) $964,111 2011, June Council on Research; Faculty Senate Grant UCLA; Social Categorization at the Intersection of Sex, Race, and Power $9,997 2011, January NSF Grant BCS-1052896 – Social Categorization at the Crossroads: The Mechanisms by Which Intersecting Social Categories Bias ; $50,000 2010, June Council for Research; Faculty Senate Grant UCLA; Communicating Identities via Body Motion, $6,000 2008, June UCLA Center for the Study of Women; Studies on the Social and Contextual Circumstances that Prompt Changes in the Expression of Gendered Cues, $3500 2005, April New York University, $80,000 Research Fellowship 2003, September New York University, $70,000 Research Fellowship 2003, March Cornell University Graduate Research Award, $800, for Anticipatory Reconstrual 2001, March Cornell University Graduate Research Award, $740, for When dread is good and giddiness is bad: The paradoxical costs and benefits of dread and anticipation. 1998, April University of Central Oklahoma Research Grant, $500

DEPARTMENTAL LEADERSHIP ACCOMPLISHMENTS

• Established Philanthropic Board of Visitors for the Department of Communication • Oversaw departmental name change: Department of Communication • Established Doctoral Program for the Department of Communication • Engaged alumni outreach, increasing philanthropic giving by over 400% • Secured gift to endow the Natalie Kahn Lecuture in Communication • Secured gift to endow the Mark Itkin Graduate Fellowship in Communication • Secured gift to endow the Richard S. Ross Award in Journalism • Secured gift to support the Barry Sanders Lecture in Communication and the Arts (2017 featuring Gustavo Dudamel; 2018 featuring Yuval Sharon) • Initiated Divisional Partnership with Disney Research

3 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 PUBLICATIONS

Note: Names of current and former trainees appear in italics.

JOURNAL ARTICLES AND CHAPTERS

67. Johnson, K. L., & Alt, N. P. (in press). Categorization by sex. In T. K. Shackelford, & V. A. Weekes-Shackelford (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Evolutionary Psychological Science, New York: Springer.

66. Alt, N. P., Goodale, B. M., Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (in press). Threat in the company of men: Ensemble perception and threat evaluations of groups varying in sex ratio. Social Psychological and Personality Science.

67. Tsang, T., Ogren, M., Peng, Y., Nguyen, B., Johnson, K. L., & Johnson, S. P. (2018). Infant perception of sex differences in biological motion displays. Journal of Experimetal Child Psychology, 173, 338 - 350.

64. Goodale, B. M., Alt, N. P., Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Groups at a glance: Perceivers infer social belonging in a group based on perceptual summaries of sex ratio. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 147, 1660 – 1676.

63. Pauker, K., Carpinella, C. M., Lick, D. J., Sanchez, D. T., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Malleability in biracial categorizations: The impact of geographic context and targets’ racial heritage. Social Cognition, 36, 461 – 480.

62. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Facial cues to race and gender interactively guide age judgments. Social Cognition, 36, 497 - 516.

61. Rule, N. O., Johnson, K. L., & Freeman, J. B. (2017). Evidence for the absence of stimulus quality differences in tests of the accuracy of sexual orientation judgments: A reply to Cox et al. (2016). Journal of Sex Research, 54, 813 – 819.

60. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). Straight until proven gay: A systematic bias toward straight categorizations in sexual orientation judgments. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 110, 801 – 817.

59. Lick, D. J. & Johnson, K. L. (2016). Perceptually mediated preferences and prejudices. Psychological Inquiry, 27, 335 – 340.

58. Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). Face value: Facial appearance and assessments of politicians. Politics: Oxford Research Encyclopedias. http://politics.oxfordre.com/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780190228637.001.0001/acrefore- 9780190228637-e-62.

57. Freeman, J. F., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). More than meets the eye: Split-second social perception. Trends in Cognitive Science, 20, 362 – 374.

56. Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). Visual political communication: The impact of facial cues from social constituences to personal pocketbooks. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 10, 281 – 297.

4 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 55. Carpinella, C. M., Hehman, E., Freeman, J. B., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). The gendered face of partisan politics: Consequences of facial sex-typicality for vote choice. Political Communication, 33, 21 – 38.

54. Lick, D. J., Cortland, C. I., & Johnson, K. L. (2016). The pupils are the windows to sexuality: Pupil dilation as a visual cue to others’ sexual interest. Evolution and Human Behavior, 37, 117 – 124.

53. Kim, H. I., Johnson, K. L., & Johnson, S. P. (2015). Gendered race: Are infants’ face preferences guided by intersectionality of sex and race? Frontiers in Psychology, 6, 1330. DOI: 10.3389/fpsyg.2015.01330.

52. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2015). Intersecting race and gender cues are associated with perceptions of gay men’s preferred sexual roles. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 44, 1471 – 1481.

51. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2015). The interpersonal consequences of processing ease: Fluency as a metacognitive foundation for prejudice. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 24, 143 – 148.

50. Carpinella, C. M., Chen, J., Hamilton, D., & Johnson, K. L. (2015). Gendered facial cues influence race categorizations. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 41, 405 - 419.

49. Lick, D. J., Johnson, K. L., & Rule, N. O. (2015). Disfluent processing of nonverbal cues helps to explain anti-bisexual prejudice. Journal of Nonverbal Behavior, 39, 275 – 288.

48. Lick, D. J., Johnson, K. L., Riskind, R. G. (2015). Haven’t I seen you before? Gender insecure men are vigilant to gender-atypical faces. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 18, 131 - 152.

47. Johnson, K. L., Lick, D. J., & Carpinella, C. M. (2015). Emergent research in Social Vision: An integrated approach to the determinants and consequences of social categorization. Social and Personality Psychology Compass, 9, 15 - 30.

46. Lick, D. J., Johnson, K. L., & Gill, S. V. (2014). Why do they have to flaunt it? Perceptions of communicative intent predict antigay prejudice based upon brief exposure to nonverbal cues. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 5, 927 - 935.

45. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). Perceptual roots of anti-gay prejudice: Negative evaluations of targets perceived to be lesbian/gay arise early in person perception on the basis of gender atypical visual cues. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 40, 1178 - 1192.

44. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). “You can’t tell just by looking!” Beliefs in the diagnosticity of visual cues explain response biases in social categorization. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 40, 1494 – 1506.

43. Hehman, E., Carpinella, C. M., Johnson, K. L., Leitner, J. B., & Freeman, J. B. (2014). Early processing of gendered facial cues predicts the electoral success of female politicians. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 5, 815 – 824.

5 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 42. Holbrook, C., Galperin, A., Fessler, D. M. T., Johnson, K. L., Bryant, G. A., & Haselton, M. G. (2014). If looks could kill: Anger judgments are intensified by affordances for doing harm. Emotion, 14, 455 - 461.

41. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). Recalibrating gender perception: Face aftereffects and the perceptual underpinnings of gender-related biases. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 143, 1259 - 1276.

40. Preciado, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). Perceived consequences of hypothetical identity-inconsistent sexual experiences: Effects of perceiver’s sex and sexual identity. Archives of Sexual Behavior, 43, 505 – 518.

39. Schlösser, T., Dunning, D., Johnson, K. L., & Kruger, J. (2013). How unaware are the unskilled? Empirical tests of the “signal extraction” counterexplanation for the Dunning- Kruger effect in self-evaluations of performance. Journal of Economic Psychology, 39, 85 – 100.

38. Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Politics of the Face: The Role of Sex- Typicality on Trait Assessments of Politicians. Social Cognition, 31, 770 - 779.

37. Galperin, A., Fessler, D. T., Johnson, K. L., & Haselton, M. G. (2013). Seeing storms behind the clouds: Biases in the attribution of anger. Evolution and Human Behavior, 34, 358 – 365.

36. Johnson, K. L., & Adams, R. B., Jr. (2013). Social vision: An introduction. Social Cognition, 31, 633 - 635.

35. Lick, D. J., Johnson, K. L., & Gill, S. V. (2013). Deliberate changes to gendered body motion influence basic social perceptions. Social Cognition, 31, 656 - 671.

34. Lick, D. J., Carpinella, C. M., Preciado, M. A., Spunt, R. P., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Reverse-correlating mental representations of sex-typed bodies: The effect of number of trials on image quality. Frontiers in Perception Science, doi: 10.3389/fpsyg.2013.00476.

33. Lick, D. J., Durso, L. E., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Minority stress and physical health in sexual minority communities. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 8, 521 – 548.

32. Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Fluency of visual processing explains prejudiced evaluations following categorization of concealable stigmas. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 419 – 425.

31. Preciado, M. A., Johnson, K. L., & Peplau, L. A. (2013). The impact of stigma and support on the expression of same-sex sexuality among heterosexual men and women. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 477 – 485.

30. Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Appearance-based politics: Sex-typed facial cues communicate political party affiliation. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 156 – 160.

29. Johnson, K. L., & Iida, M. (2013). Person (mis)perception: On the functional biases that derail construal of others. In K. L. Johnson & M. Shiffrar (Eds.) People Watching: Social, Perceptual, and Neurophysiological Studies of Body Perception (pp. 203 – 219). 6 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 New York: Oxford University Press.

28. Johnson, K. L., & Shiffrar, M. (2013). Making great strides: Advances in research on the perception of the human body. In K. L. Johnson & M. Shiffrar (Eds.) People Watching: Social, Perceptual, and Neurophysiological Studies of Body Perception (pp. 3 - 10). New York: Oxford University Press.

27. Johnson, K. L., Iida, M., & Tassinary, L. G. (2012). Person (mis)perception: Functionally biased sex categorization of bodies. Proceedings of the Royal Society, Biological Sciences, 279, 4982 – 4989.

26. Freeman, J. B., Johnson, K. L., Adams, R. B., Jr., & Ambady, N. (2012). The social- sensory interface: Category interactions in person perception. Frontiers in Integrative Neuroscience, 8 (81), 1 – 13. Doi: 10.3389/fnint.2012.00081.

25. Johnson, K. L., & Carpinella, C. (2012). Social categorization at the crossroads: Mechanisms by which intersecting social categories bias social perception. In J. Forgas, K. Fiedler, & C. Sedikides (Eds). Social Thinking and Interpersonal Behavior: Proceedings of the 14th Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology (pp. 201 – 220). New York: Psychology Press.

24. Johnson, K. L. (2012). A step forward: How utilizing motion capture technology can inform nonverbal communication research. In S. Jones (Ed.), Communication @ the Center (pp. 57 – 75). New York: Hampton Press.

23. Johnson, K. L., Freeman, J. B., & Pauker, K. (2012). Race is gendered: How covarying phenotypes and stereotypes bias sex categorization. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 102, 116 – 131.

22. Ghavami, N. & Johnson, K. L. (2011). Comparing sexual and ethnic minority perspectives on same-sex marriage. Journal of Social Issues, 67, 394 – 412.

21. Johnson, K. L., & Ghavami, N. (2011). At the crossroads of conspicuous and concealable: What race categories communicate about sexual orientation. PLoS One, 6, e18025, doi:10.1371/journalpone.0018025.

20. Johnson, K. L., McKay, L., & Pollick, F. E. (2011). Why “He throws like a girl” (but only when he’s sad): Emotion affects sex-decoding of biological motion displays. Cognition, 119, 265 – 280.

19. Freeman, J. B., Johnson, K. L., Ambady, N., Rule, N. (2010). Sexual orientation perception involves gendered facial cues. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 36, 1318 – 1331.

18. Johnson, K. L., Lurye, L. E., & Tassinary, L. G. (2010). Sex categorization among preschool children: Increasing sensitivity to sexually dimorphic cues. Child Development, 81, 1346 – 1355.

17. Johnson, K.L., & Freeman, J.B. (2010). A “New Look” at person construal: Seeing beyond dominance and discreteness. In E. Balcetis & D. Lassiter (Eds.) The Social Psychology of (pp. 253 – 272). New York: Psychology Press.

7 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 16. Johnson, K. L., Pollick, F. E., & McKay, L. (2010). Social constraints on the visual perception of biological motion. In R.B. Adams, N. Ambady, K. Nakayama, & S. Shimojo (Eds.) Social Vision (pp. 264 – 277). New York: Oxford University Press.

15. Johnson, K. L. (2010). Attractiveness. In E. B. Goldstein (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Perception (pp. 125 – 128). New York: Sage Publication.

14. Johnson, K. L. (2010). Motion perception: social. In E. B. Goldstein (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Perception (pp. 581 – 584). New York: Sage Publication.

13. Johnson, K. L. (2010). Social perception. In E. B. Goldstein (Ed.), Encyclopedia of Perception (pp. 894 – 898). New York: Sage Publication.

12. Freeman, J. B., Ambady, N., Rule, N. O., & Johnson, K.L (2008). Will a category cue attract you? Motor output reveals dynamic competition across person construal. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 137, 673 – 690.

11. Ehrlinger, J., Johnson, K. L., Banner, M., Dunning, D. A., & Kruger, J. (2008). Why the unskilled are unaware: Further explorations of (absent) self-insight among the incompetent. Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes, 105, 98 – 121.

10. Johnson, K. L., Lurye, L. E., & Freeman, J. (2008). Gender typicality and extremity in popular culture. In A. Brown & C. Logan. The Psychology of Superheroes (229 – 244). Dallas, TX: BenBella Books.

9. Johnson, K. L. (2007). Person perception. In R. Baumeister & K. D. Vohs (Eds.), Encyclopedia of Social Psychology (pp. 662 – 664). New York: Sage Publication.

8. Johnson, K. L., & Tassinary, L. G. (2007). The functional significance of the WHR in judgments of attractiveness. In V. Swami and A. Furnham (Eds.) Body Beautiful: Evolutionary and Socio-cultural Perspectives (pp. 159 – 184). New York: Palgrave Macmillian.

7. Johnson, K. L., Gill, S., Reichman, V., & Tassinary, L G. (2007). Swagger, sway, and sexuality: Judging Sexual Orientation from body motion and morphology. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 93, 321 – 334.

6. Johnson, K. L., & Tassinary, L. G. (2007). Compatibility of basic social perceptions determines perceived attractiveness. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America, 104, 5246 – 5251.

5. Johnson, K. L., & Tassinary, L. G. (2005). Perceiving sex directly and indirectly: Meaning in motion and morphology. Psychological Science, 16, 890 – 897.

4. Dunning, D. A., Johnson, K. L., Ehrlinger, J., & Kruger, J. (2003). Why people fail to recognize their own incompetence. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 3, 83- 87.

3. Johnson, S. P., Cohen, L., Marks, K., Johnson, K. L. (2003). Young infants’ perception of object unity in rotation displays. Infancy, 4, 285 - 295.

2. Johnson, S. P., & Johnson, K. L. (2000). Early perception-action coupling: Eye 8 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 movements and the development of object perception. Infant Behavior and Development, 23, 461-483.

1. Lawson, K. D. [now K. L. Johnson] (2000). Beyond corporeality: The virtual self in postmodern times. Journal of Psychological Practice, 6, 35-43.

BOOKS

2. Johnson, K. L., & Shiffrar, M. (Eds.). (2013). People Watching: Social, Perceptual, and Neurophysiological Studies of Body Perception. New York: Oxford University Press.

1. Johnson, K. L. (Ed.) (2011). Nonverbal Communication and Body Language. Cognella Academic Publishers. ISBN: 978-60927-932-5.

WHITE PAPER

Glik, D., Eisenman, D., Johnson, K. L., Prelip, M., Arevian, A., Martel, A., Alt, N., Shropshire, J., Kim, G., Pena, E., Panameno, M., Henderson, E. (2016). WEA Messages: Impact on Physiological, Emotional, Cognitive, and Behavioral Responses. Department of Homeland Security, Science and Technology Directorate, First Responders Group; Wireless Emergency Alerts (WEA) Research, Development, Test, and Evaluation Program.

MANUSCRIPTS UNDER REVIEW OR IN REVISION

Alt, N. P., Hunger, J., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). The intersection of body weight and other social categories: Interdependent associations and their evaluative implications.

Alt, N. P., Parkinson, C., Kleinbaum, A. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). The face of social networks: Naïve observers’ accurate assessment of others’ social network positions from faces. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Lick, D. J., Alt, N. P., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Gaydar revisited: Response biases in sexual orientation categorization result from motivated and altruistic reasoning. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Lick, D. J., Cortland, C. I., Shapiro, J. R., Stroessner, S. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). The role of behavioral inhibition in categorizations of ambiguous social identities. Revision in preparation.

Lick, D. J., Hunger, J. M., Tomiyama, A. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Idiosyncratic exposures: Biased visual attention curates exposure and determines prejudice. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Lick, D. J., Johnson, K. L., Rule, N. O., & Stroessner, S. J. (2018). Is he gay? It depends on where he’s from! The effect of social context information on sexual orientation categorizations. Manuscript submitted for publication.

9 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Ogren, M., Kaplan, B., Peng, Y., Johnson, K. L., & Johnson, S. P. (2019). Infant emotion discrimination from biological motion. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Stroessner, S. J., Benitez, J. Perez, M. A., Carpinella, C. M., Wyman, A. B., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). Social categorization processes in basic perception: Evidence of gender associations with triangles. Manuscript submitted for publication.

Stroessner, S. J., Benitez, J., Perez, M. A., Wyman, A. B., Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2018). What’s in a shape? Evidence of gender categorization of basic forms. Manuscript submitted for publication.

CURRENT RESEARCH

SOCIAL VISION AND PERCEPTION

Accuracy and Error in Social Perception: • Using Motion Analysis (Vicon) to Specify Nonverbal Motion That Affects Person Construal • Affective, Cognitive, and Perceptual Determinants of Social Categorization and Evaluation • Developmental Examination of Person Categorization • Cognitive and Affective Determinants of Person (Mis)Perception Social Perception when Identities Intersect: • Examination of Person Categorization • Face and Body Perception Resolving Social Ambiguity • How Stereotyped Actions (e.g., emotion and gender typicality) Guide Person Perception (and misperception) of Socially Ambiguous Targets

METHODOLOGICAL EXPERTISE

Corneal Reflection Eye-Tracking (Tobii and ASL) 3D Motion Capture (for measuring body motion; Vicon and Optotrak) Computer Mouse Tracking (measuring concurrent activation of social constructs/categories) Social Perception Experimental Techniques (computer animation of faces and bodies, face morphing – including identities and social categories) Psychphysiological Measurement (facial EMG, electrodermal activity, cardiovascular reactivity)

CURRENT COLLABORATORS

Jon Freeman, NYU Simone Gill, Boston University DJ Lick, Facebook Nick Rule, University of Toronto Steven Stroessner, Barnard College, Columbia University Louis G. Tassinary, Texas A&M University

10 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019

CURRENT GRADUATE STUDENT SUPERVISION

Nicholas Alt, UCLA Jessica Shropshire, UCLA Zachary Oxford, UCLA

FORMER GRADUATE STUDENT TRAINEES

Mariana Preciado (Data Analyst; Bill and Melinda Gates Foundation) Colleen Carpinella (Research Analyst, Kantar Health) DJ Lick (Research Scientist, Facebook) Brianna Goodale (Post-doctoral Fellow; University of Utah)

HONORS AND AWARDS

Finalist for APA, Placek Grant – Physiological and Behavioral Impacts of ‘It Gets Better’ Messages for Gay and Lesbian Viewers (September, 2012)

Nominee, Teaching Excellence Award, Department of Psychology, UCLA (May, 2011; 2012)

Elected fellow of the Psychonomic Society (Spring, 2012)

Elected member of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology (Fall, 2011)

Faculty Career Development Award; UCLA (May, 2011)

Nominee, J. Arthur Woodward Graduate Mentor Award, Department of Psychology, UCLA (May, 2009)

Recognition of Distinguished Teaching (Teaching Honor Roll, 2002 – 2003) Johnson School of Management – Negotiation

Nominee, John M. and Emily B. Clark Distinguished Teaching Award, Department of Psychology, Cornell University (April, 2002)

Tursky Award for Outstanding Graduate Student Research (Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research, Granada, Spain, October 1999)

PROFESSIONAL AND EDITORIAL ACTIVITIES

Executive Committee Member, Elected (2017 – present): Society for Experimental Social Psychology

11 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Consulting Editor (2014 – present): Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

Editorial Board (2013 – present) Social Psychology and Personality Science

Local Conference Organizer (2016): Meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology

Program Committee (2016): Meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology

Associate Editor (2013 - 2016): Social Cogntion

Guest Editor (2012/2013): Social Cognition special issue, Social Vision (with Reginald B. Adams, Jr.)

Chief Judge (Group C): May, 2011, National Science Foundation, Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Competition.

Proposition 8 Working Group: January, 2009; A working group to achieve a scientific understanding of the ramifications of same-sex marriage ballot initiatives in California and beyond. Loyola Marymount University; Los Angeles, CA.

Program Committee (2000): Meeting of the Society for Psychophysiological Research

Editorial Assistant to David Dunning; Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Attitudes and Social Cognition Section, 2002

Ad Hoc Reviewer: Science, Psychological Science; Journal of Personality and Social Psychology; Journal of Experimental Social Psychology; Social Cognition; Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin; Journal of Experimental Psychology: General; European Journal of Social Psychology; Human ; British Journal of Psychology; Evolution and Human Behavior; Journal of Nonverbal Behavior; Cognition; Cognition and Emotion; Health Psychology

PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS

INVITED PRESENTATIONS

Keynote address, Oklahoma Psychological Association (2019, March). Edmond, OK. INSEAD Women at Work Conference (2019, March). Singapore. Keynote address, Women’s Guild Cedars-Sinai Symposiam, Gender: Relationships and Power. (2019, February). Los Angeles, CA. INSEAD Women at Work Conference (2018, February). Fontainebleau, France. Cornell University, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2017, December). Ithaca, NY. Keynote address, UCLA Conference on Art, Neuroscience, and Psychiatry (2017, November). Los Angeles, CA. Duck Conference on Social Cognition (2017, June). Duck, NC. Duck Conference on Social Cognition (2016, June). Duck, NC. Miami University of Ohio, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2015, November). Oxford, OH. Duck Conference on Social Cognition (2015, June). Duck, NC. Gettysburgh College, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2015, April). Gettysburgh, 12 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 PA. Social Vision Conference (2014, August). Dartmouth College; Hanover, NH. Duck Conference on Social Cognition (2014, June). Duck, NC. Keynote address for Psychology Day (2014, April). California State University, Long Beach; Long Beach, CA. University of Southern California, Department of Psychology Brown Bag (2014, March). Los Angeles, CA. Columbia University, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2013, November). New York, NY. William Patterson University, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2013, November). Wayne, NJ. University of California, Los Angeles Marschak Colloquium, Division of Social Sciences (2013, November). Los Angeles, CA. University of California, Merced, Department of Cognitive Sciences Colloquium (2013, October). Merced, CA. Duck Conference on Social Cognition (2013, June). Duck, NC. Stanford University, Department of Communication Colloquium (2013, April). Palo Alto, CA. Person Memory Interest Group Preconference (2012, October). Austin, TX. Program on Negotiation, Women, and Public Policy; Harvard Kennedy School of Public Policy; Harvard University (2012, November). Cambridge, MA. University of California, Santa Barbara, Departments of Communication and Psychology (2012, May). Santa Barbara, CA. Stanford University, Virtual Human Interaction Lab (2012, April). Palo Alto, CA. Stanford University, Race Labs Research Group (2012, April). Palo Alto, CA. 14th Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology: Social Thinking and Interpersonal Behavior (2011, May). Sydney, Australia. Arizona State University, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2010, November). Tempe, AZ. University of California, Riverside, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2008, October). Riverside, CA. International Academy of Sex Research (2008, July). Lueven, Belgium. University of California, San Diego, Department of Psychology Brown Bag (2008, June). San Diego, CA. 6th Annual SPSP Evolutionary Psychology Preconference (2008, February). Albuquerque, NM. University of California, Los Angeles, Behavior, Evolution, and Culture Group (2007, November). Los Angeles, CA. University of Maryland, Department of Communication (2007, April). College Park, MD. Columbia University, Department of Psychology (2007, March). New York, NY. University of Maryland, Department of Psychology (2007, March). College Park, MD. University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Communication (2007, January). Los Angeles, CA. Bard College (2006, December). Annandale on Hudson, NY. Tufts University, Department of Psychology Brown Bag (2006, April). Boston, Massachusettss. University of California, Los Angeles, Department of Psychology, Social Brown Bag (2005, November). Los Angeles, CA. Stanford University, Department of Psychology, Social Brown Bag (2005, April). Palo Alto, CA. Yale University, Department of Psychology, Clinical Talk Series (2005, April). New Haven, Connecticut. 13 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 University of Connecticut, Department of Psychology (2005, February). Storrs, Connecticut. Rutgers University, Department of Psychology Colloquium (2004, September). Newark, NJ. Weill Medical College of Cornell University, Sackler Institute for Developmental Psychobiology Colloquium (2004, June). New York, NY. Roundtable Discussion on Human Movement, Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society (2003, November). Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. New York University, Department of Psychology, Cognition & Perception and Social Psychology Brown Bag (2003, October). New York, NY.

OTHER SELECTED PROFESSIONAL PRESENTATIONS

Johnson, K. L. (2019, February). Paper to be presented at the 15th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Austin, TX.

Johnson, K. L. (2017, September). People Perception: New Insights on the Perception of Groups. Paper presented at the Society for Experimental Social Psychology Annual Meeting. Boston, MA.

Johnson, K. L. (2015, October). Social Vision Insights to Understand the Combinatorial Social Perception of Sex and Race. Paper presented at the Society for Experimental Social Psychology Annual Meeting. Denver, CO.

Carpinella, C. M., Hehman, E., Freeman, J. B., & Johnson, K. L. (2015). Consequences of political context for vote choice. Poster presented at the 16th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Long Beach, CA.

Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). Consequences of intersecting partisan and gender stereotypes for perceptions of politicians’ policy competencies. Poster presented at the New Research on Gender in Political Psychology Conference. Wooster, OH.

Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). Appearance-based issue competency: Gendered appearance and party affiliation communicate party expertise. Paper presented at the New Research on Gender in Political Psychology Conference. Wooster, OH.

Carpinella, C. M., Chen, J., Hamilton, D., & Johnson, K. L. (2014). How gendered facial cues influence race categorizations. Poster presented at the 15th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Austin, TX.

Johnson, K. L. (2013, October). Cautious, Contemplative, and Consequential: Insights from the Visual Perception of Sexual Orientation. Paper presented at the Society for Experimental Social Psychology Annual Meeting. Berkeley, CA.

Carpinella, C. M., & Johnson, K. L. (2013). Politics at face value: The role of sex- typicality on trait assessments of candidates. Poster presented at the 14th Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. New Orleans, LA.

Lick, D. J., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, June). Essentialist beliefs about homosexuality predict sexual orientation categorizations. Paper to be presented at the Biennial Conference for the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. Charlotte, NC.

Poghosyan, A., Preciado, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, April). Evidence for globally 14 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 positive and negative evaluations among motivated perceivers. Paper presented at the 92nd Annual Convention of the Western Psychological Association. San Francisco, CA.

Sassoon, A., Preciado, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, April). Categorical and continuous judgments of sexual orientation: The roles of perceiver and target gender. Poster to be presented at the 92nd Annual Convention of the Western Psychological Association. San Francisco, CA.

Preciado, M. A., Peplau, L. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, January). The impact of stigma and support on the expression of same-sex sexuality among heterosexual men and women. Paper presented at the 13th Annual meeting of the Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. San Diego, CA.

Naya, C. H., Presciado, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, January). “Gaydar”gender bias: The effect of target gender on perceptions of sexual orientation. Poster presented at the 13th Annual meeting of the Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. San Diego, CA.

Carpinella, C., & Johnson, K. L. (2012, January). At face value: Gender typicality, political orientation, and perceptions of female politicians. Poster presented at the 13th Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. San Diego, CA.

Rieger, G., Johnson, K., & Savin-Williams, R. (2011, May). Gaze patterns are a strong and objective indicator of human sexual orientation. Paper presented at the 23rd Annual meeting of the Human Behavior and Evolution Society. Montpellier, France.

Carpinella, C., & Johnson, K. L. (2011, January). Perceiving politicians: Political attitudes influence visual scanning of liked and unliked politicians. Poster presented at the 12th Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. San Antonio, TX.

Preciado, M. A., Peplau, L. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2011, January). An experimental approach to exploring heterosexual same-sex sexuality: The influence of contextual stigma and support. Poster presented at the 12th Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. San Antonio, TX.

Gill, S., & Johnson, K. (2010, May). Personal characteristics and adaptation: How social constraints elicit adaptive motor responses. Paper presented at the annual convention of the American Psychological Society, Boston, MA.

Preciado, M. A., Peplau, L. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2010, April). The impact of social stigma on explicit and implicit expressions of same-sex sexuality. Paper presented at the 90th Annual WPA Convention, Cancun, Mexico.

Ghavami, N., Johnson, K., White, A., Tucker, C., & Payne, A. (2010). The role of naïve realism in the post-Prop 8 conflict. Poster to be presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Los Vegas, NV.

Preciado, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (May, 2009). Loving and looking: How visual processing helps maintain positive beliefs about a romantic partner. Poster presented at the 2009 Integrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship Principal Investigator Meeting, Alexandria, Virginia. *** Award Recipient for Distinguished Research. 15 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019

Johnson, K. L., & Adams, R. (conveners, 2009, February). Intersecting identities and expressions: On the combinatorial nature of social perception. Symposium presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL.

Johnson, K. L. (2009, February). Race is gendered: Overlapping stereotypes confound person construal. Paper presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL.

Preciado, M. A., Peplau, L. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2009, February). Sexual experience, sexual flexibility, and the space in-between: The role of stigma and political environment. Poster presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL.

Lurye, L. E., & Johnson, K. L. (2008, April). Sex categorization among preschool children: Increasing utilization of sexually dimorphic cues. Poster presented at the Gender Development Research Conference, San Francisco, CA.

Lurye, L. E., Johnson, K. L., Heilman, M., & Ruble, D. N. (2008, April). Children’s reactions to gender transgressions. Poster presented at the Gender Development Research Conference, San Francisco, CA.

Lurye, L. E., Polito, M. A., & Johnson, K. L. (2007, March). Hourglass is to female as tubular is to male: Children’s use of waist-to-hip ratio for sex category judgments. Poster presented at the biennial meeting of the Society for Research in Child Development, Boston, MA.

Johnson, K. L., & Ambady, N. (conveners, 2007, January). Perceiving others from head to toe: Accurate and erroneous person construal. Symposium presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis, TN.

Johnson, K. L., Gill-Alvarez, S., & Reichman, V. (2007, January). Swagger, sway, and sexuality: How the body conveys sexual orientation. Paper presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis, TN.

Desai, A., Reichman, V., Tassinary, L. G.,& Johnson, K. L. (2006, May). Self-perception of one’s own body differs for implicit and explicit judgments. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Psychological Science, New York, NY.

Goldstein, T., Iida, M., & Johnson, K. L. (2006, May). Stomp! How lay theories affect group creativity. Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Psychological Science, New York, NY.

Lamoureux, B. E., & Johnson, K. L. (2006, May). Coping approaches influence the hedonic benefit of anticipating uncontrollable aversive events. Poster to be presented at the Annual Meeting of the Association for Psychological Science, New York, NY.

Johnson, K. L., & Tassinary, L. G. (2006, January). Extreme comparisons: How caricatured social prototypes alter basic self-perception. Paper to be presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Palm Springs, CA.

Balcetis, E., & Johnson, K. L. (conveners; 2006, January). Take it from the top: How top- 16 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 down processes affect basic perception. Symposium presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Palm Springs, CA.

Reichman, V., & Johnson, K. L. (2006, January). Feminine = Flaunting? Why gender atypical body motion is more costly for men. Poster presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Palm Springs, CA.

Pollick, F. E., Johnson, K. L., & McKay, L. S. (2005, November). Recognizing gender from affective arm movements: How to throw like a man. Paper to be presented at the Annual Meeting of the Psychonomic Society, Toronto, Canada.

McKay, L. S., Pollick, F. E., Ma, Y. L., Bhuiyan, N., & Johnson, K. (2005, August). Throwing like a man: Recognizing gender from emotional actions. Poster to be presented at the European Conference on Visual Perception, A Coruña, Spain.

Johnson, K. L. (2005, May). How perceptions of body motion and morphology affect complex social judgments. Poster presented at the meeting of the Vision Sciences Society, Sarasota, Florida.

Johnson, K. L., & Lamoureux, B. (2005, February). Anticipating dreadful events softens their hedonic impact. Poster presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Reichman, V., & Johnson, K. L. (2005, February). How the body’s motion and morphology affect perceived sexual orientation. Poster presented at the meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, New Orleans, Louisiana.

Johnson, K. L. (2004, May). Interpersonal meaning in the body’s motion and morphology. Poster presented at the meeting of the Vision Sciences Society, Sarasota, Florida.

Johnson, K. (2004, February). Dreading one’s way to a better end: How anticipating events changes their hedonic value. Paper presented to the Social Brown Bag, New York University, New York, New York.

COMMUNITY OUTREACH

Johnson, K. L. (2019, February). Gender: Relationships and Power, Cedars-Sinai Women’s Guild Symposium, Judging by first impression.

Johnson, K. L. (2018, November). Girl Scouts of Greater Los Angeles, Gold Award Project Featured Speaker. Bringing your best self to life’s greatest challenges.

Johnson, K. L. (2018, May). UCLA Women in Philanthropy, Women in the workplace: A current perspective.

Johnson, K. L. (2016, December). UCLA Social Sciences, Conversations with the Dean Panelist, Election 2016: Where do we go from here?

Johnson, K. L. (2016, October). TEDx Women, Appearance based politics: Facial cues impact perceptions, elections, and success.

17 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Johnson, K. L. (2014, April). Guest speaker for Bruin Day, UCLA, Can you judge a book by its cover?

Johnson, K. L. (2013, November). Guest speaker for Write Girl, Los Angeles, Can you judge a book by its cover?

Johnson, K. L. (2013, November). Featured speaker for Parents’ Weekend, UCLA, Can you judge a book by its cover?

Johnson, K. L. (2013, April). Guest speaker for Bruin Day, UCLA, Can you judge a book by its cover?

Johnson, K.L. (2009, January). Featured scientist in Paul King (executive producer), The Naked Body. Documentary aired on the BBC.

Johnson, K.L. (2008, December). Featured scientist in James Younger (executive producer), The Science of Sex Appeal. Documentary aired on the Discovery Channel and TLC.

Johnson, K.L. (2008, April). Psychology night: The science, not they myth. Talk given to the Lincoln Middle School Science Club. Santa Monica, CA.

Johnson, K.L. (2007, December). What is a scientist?: Challenging young children’s stereotyped notions of science and scientists. Talk given to Franklin Elementary School, 1st Grade. Santa Monica, CA.

COURSES TAUGHT

Social Psychology Lab – 2016, 2017, 2019 University of California, Los Angeles Social Vision (Doctoral Seminar) – 2009, 2011, 2013; 2015; 2017; University of California, Los Angeles Nonverbal Communication and Body Language –2008-2019; University of California, Los Angeles Negotiation – 2008-2015; University of California, Los Angeles – Spring 2003; Johnson Graduate School of Management, Cornell University (adjunct faculty) Laboratory in Personality and Social Psychology – Spring 2004 – Spring 2007; New York University Proximal and Distal Determinants of Perception and Judgment – Fall 2002; Cornell University

*** Course evaluations for courses listed above are available upon request.

STUDENT SUPERVISION AND AWARDS

DOCTORAL STUDENT SUPERVISION

Primary Supervision:

Zachary Oxford – Doctoral Student in Psychology; University of California, Los Angeles. 18 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Projected graduation: Spring 2023.

Jessica Shropshire – Doctoral Student in Psychology; University of California, Los Angeles. Projected graduation: Spring 2020.

Nicholas Alt – Doctoral Student in Psychology; University of California, Los Angeles. Projected graduation: Spring 2019. - Advisor for award-winning doctoral fellowship, Department of Defense

Brianna Goodale – Ph.D., 2018; University of California, Los Angeles. - Recipient of graduate fellowship, National Science Foundation

David James Lick – Ph.D, 2015; University of California, Los Angeles. - Co-PI (with KL Johnson and T Robles), Placek Award. $15,000 - Advisor for award-winning Grant-In-Aid, Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. Physiological Stress Reactions Among Lesbian, Gay, and Bisexual Individuals Facing Prejudice. $2000 - Advisor for award-winning Janet Hyde Graduate Student Research Grant from the American Psychological Association. Recalibrating Gender Perception: Adaptation Aftereffects as a Method of Reducing Prejudice Against Gender Atypical Women. $500

Colleen Carpinella – (co-advisor with David Sears) Ph.D., 2014; University of California, Los Angeles. - Advisor on award-winning Summer Research Mentorship program, 2010. - Advisor for NSF Graduate Fellowship research, 2011.

Mariana Preciado – (dissertation co-chair) Ph.D., 2013; University of California, Los Angeles. - Primary Advisor on award-winning project: Loving and Looking: How Visual Processing Helps Maintain Positive Beliefs About a Romantic Partner. Inegrative Graduate Education and Research Traineeship. $3,000.

Other Student Supervision:

Courtney Haldreth (committee member) University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 2015.

Christina Larson – (project advisor and committee member); University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 2014. - Advisor on award-winning project: An Analysis of Women’s Nonverbal Body Movements Across the Ovulatory Cycle. International Society of Human Ethology; Owen F. Aldis Scholarship. $8,000.

Kelly Gildersleeve – (committee member); University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 2014.

Matthew Gervais – (committee member) Biological Antrhopology; University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 2013.

Andrew Galperin – (committee member) University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 2012.

Matthew Jackson – (committee member) University of California, Los Angeles, Ph.D., 19 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 2012.

Negin Ghavami – (project advisor), University of California, Los Angeles. Ph.D., 2011. - Primary Advisor on award-winning project: The Role of Naïve Realism in the Post- Proposition 8 Conflict. Funded by UCLA Institute for American Cultures Research Grant ($500); Society for the Psychological Studies of Social Issues Grants-In-Aid Program ($1500), and the UCLA Institute for Social Science Research ($3500).

Jonathan B. Freeman – (committee member; co-advisor), Tufts University; Ph.D., 2012. – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Student of Psychology, New York University, Spring, 2006 – Recipient of the Dean’s Undergraduate Research Fund, Supervisor of Project: How Does Multidimensional Gender Typicality Relate to Self-Perception and Affect? Award amount: $555. Recipient of Psychology Department Award for Outstanding Research.

Leah Lurye – (committee member; co-advisor with Diane Ruble), New York University; Ph.D., 2010.

UNDERGRADUATE AND MA STUDENT SUPERVISION

Shyamali Moujan – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Hononrs Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2016. Supervision of Honors Thesis.

Josh Hartwell – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Hononrs Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2016. Supervision of Honors Thesis.

Alisa Wyman – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2014. Supervision of Honors Thesis.

Alyssa Golay – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2013. Supervision of Honors Thesis. - Recipient of the 2012-2013 Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Undergraduate Research Scholars Award, $5,000.

Amy Wangsadipura – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2013. Supervision of Honors Thesis.

Catherine Maleki – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2013. Supervision of Honors Thesis. - Recipient of the 2012-2013 Arts, Humanities and Social Sciences Undergraduate Research Scholars Award, $5,000.

Jude Baldo – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2013. Supervision of Honors Thesis.

20 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Rojean Kashanchi – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, Universtiy of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2012. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Gender and Partisan Stereotype Content: Political Party Primes Influence Response Latency for Sex Categorization.

Devora Beck-Pancer – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2011. Supervision of Honors Thesis: The Effect of Power of the Perceiver on the Own Race Bias.

Matthew Saucedo – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2011. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Testosterone, body cues, and social perceptions: The Covariance of Male Hormones and Gendered Impressions.

Matthew Rilla – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2011. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Among Politicians, Republican Women Have the Most Gender-Typed Faces.

Nicolas Mohadjer– (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2011. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Brains and Brawn? How Racial Stereotypes in Football Affect an Athlete’s Recruitment Status.

Marina Visan – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2010. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Race and Gender Convey Sexual Orientation to Observers.

Midori Meyer – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Communication Studies, University of California, Los Angeles, Spring 2009. Supervision of Honors Thesis: Mind Over Matter: The Effects of Fear Induction on Sex Categorization. - Recipient of the UCLA Undergraduate Research Fellowship ($500).

Mary Yaranon – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Psychology, New York University, Spring 2007. Supervisor of Honors Thesis: Fluctuating Typicality: How Manipulations of Felt Gender-Typicality Affect Subjective Well-Being. Recipient of the Doris Aaronson Award for Outstanding Departmental Honors Thesis.

Casey Levine-Beard – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Student of Psychology, New York University; Spring 2007. Supervisor of Honors Thesis: Visual Attention and Person Construal Among Children: An Analysis of Eye-Movements. Invited speaker and Honorable Mention at the NYU Undergraduate Research Conference and recipient of the Press Book Award for Distinguised Honors Thesis.

Sapna Prasad – (committee member) at Rutgers University at Newark, Spring, 2006 – Committee Member for Doctoral Dissertation: Contributions to Self-Recognition in Adults.

Kristin Bellanca – (committee member) Masters Degree Candidate at Tufts University, Spring 2006 – Committee Member for Masters Thesis: Not So Black and White: The Influence of Categorical Processing on the Own-Race Bias.

Thalia Goldstein – (supervisor of record) Graduate Student of Psychology, Boston College, 21 CURRICULUM VITAE, KERRI L. JOHNSON JANUARY 2019 Fall 2005 – Spring 2008 Supervisor/collaborator of record for a 3-year Department of Homeland Security Doctoral Fellowship.

Vicky Reichman – (primary advisor) Undergraduate Honors Psychology Student, New York University, Spring 2005 – Supervisor of Honors Thesis: Perceiving Sexual Orientation from Physical Cues. – Recipient of the Doris Aaronson Award for Outstanding Departmental Honors Thesis.

Britt Lamoureux – (primary advisor) Masters Student of Psychology, New York University, Spring 2005 – Supervisor of Masters Thesis: Mapping the evaluative benefit of anticipation to chronic coping strategies.

Michelle Rodak – (primary advisor) Masters Student of Psychology, New York University, Spring 2005 – Supervisor of Masters Thesis: Can my body look like that? The impact of self-theories and social comparison on body image and dissatisfaction.

Natasha Bonnin – (primary advisor) Masters Student of Psychology, New York University, Spring 2005 – Supervisor of Masters Thesis: The effects of intra-individual comparisons on perceptual and affective body image.