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Curriculum Vitae BERTRAM GAWRONSKI Department of Psychology University of Texas at Austin 108 E Dean Keeton A8000 Austin, TX, 78712-1043 USA Phone: +1 (512) 471-7520 Email: [email protected] EDUCATION AND DEGREES 2001 Doctor Rerum Naturalium (equivalent to Ph.D.), Psychology Humboldt University Berlin, Germany 1998 Magister Artium (equivalent to M.A.), Philosophy (Major), Psychology, Sociology Free University Berlin, Germany 1995 Zwischenprüfung (equivalent to B.A.), Philosophy (Major), Psychology, Sociology University of Würzburg, Germany PROFESSIONAL APPOINTMENTS 2014-present Professor Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, USA 2010-2013 Professor Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, Canada 2008-2010 Associate Professor Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, Canada 2004-2008 Assistant Professor Department of Psychology, University of Western Ontario, Canada 2002-2004 Post-Doctoral Fellow Department of Psychology, Northwestern University, USA 2001-2002 Post-Doctoral Fellow Department of Psychology, University of Würzburg, Germany 1998-2000 Project Manager ARTOP Research Institute, Humboldt University Berlin, Germany HONORS AND AWARDS 2021 Carol and Ed Diener Award in Social Psychology Society for Personality and Social Psychology 2015 David Wechsler Regents Chair in Psychology (2015-2020) University of Texas at Austin 2014 Daniel M. Wegner Theoretical Innovation Prize Society for Personality and Social Psychology 2014 Best Social Cognition Paper Award International Social Cognition Network 2013 Career Trajectory Award Society of Experimental Social Psychology Page 1 / 37 2013 Elected Fellow in Recognition of Outstanding Contributions to Personality and Social Psychology Society for Personality and Social Psychology 2011 Elected Fellow in Recognition of Sustained and Outstanding Contributions to Psychological Science Association for Psychological Science 2011 Recognized Author of One of the 1% Most Frequently Cited Papers in Psychology Worldwide 2000-2008 Council of Canadian Academies 2011 Elected Fellow in Recognition of Significant Contributions to the Science of Psychology Midwestern Psychological Association 2010 Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology (Renewal for 2010-2015) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada 2009 Faculty Scholar Award in Recognition of Outstanding Contributions in Research, Teaching, and Service University of Western Ontario 2008 Charlotte-and-Karl-Bühler Prize Deutsche Gesellschaft für Psychologie 2007 Early Researcher Award Ontario Ministry of Research and Innovation 2007 Early Career Award International Social Cognition Network 2006 Elected Fellow in Recognition of Substantial Contributions to Social Psychology Society of Experimental Social Psychology 2006 Theoretical Innovation Prize Society for Personality and Social Psychology 2005 Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology (2005-2010) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada 2004 Early Career Award for the Best Article in the European Journal of Social Psychology European Association of Experimental Social Psychology 2003 Tiburtius Dissertation Prize State Conference of Rectors and Presidents of Berlin Universities GRANTS AND FUNDING 2021-2024 Research Grant: A Signal Detection Approach to Understanding Susceptibility to Misinformation National Science Foundation, USA Total Value: US-$ 423,866 (Principal Investigator) 2020-2023 Research Grant: Disentangling Implicit and Explicit Bias from Responses to Exemplars and Categories National Science Foundation, USA Total Value: US-$ 377,164 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigators: A. Ledgerwood, P. Eastwick) 2019 Research Grant: Intercultural Morality: Resolving Conflicting Evidence Using the CNI Model Social Cognition Center Cologne, Germany Total Value: € 1,860 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigators: A Fleischmann, F. Speckmann) 2018-2021 Research Grant: Evaluative Learning: Do All Roads Lead to Rome? Australian Research Council, Australia Total Value: AUS-$ 405,151 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: O. Lipp) 2018 Travel Grant: Development of an Extended Moral Dilemma Battery for the CNI Model Deutscher Akademischer Auslandsdienst, Germany Total Value: € 5,600 (Principal Investigator) 2017-2022 Research Grant: Associative and Propositional Processes in Evaluative Conditioning National Science Foundation, USA Total Value: US-$ 302,541 (Principal Investigator) Page 2 / 37 2017-2018 Pre-Registered Research Grant: Effects of Testosterone on Moral Dilemma Judgments European Association of Social Psychology Total Value: € 1,000 (Principal Investigator) 2015-2019 Research Grant: A Multinomial Process Model of Moral Judgment National Science Foundation, USA Total Value: US-$ 335,062 (Principal Investigator) 2013-2018 Research Grant: Associative and Propositional Processes in Human Evaluative Conditioning Natural Sciences and Engineering Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 145,000 (Principal Investigator) 2013-2016 Research Grant: Morality as the Core Dimension of Social Relationships Italian Ministry of Education, Italy Total Value: € 909,536 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: L. Carraro) 2012-2015 Research Grant: The Role of Associative and Propositional Processes in Evaluative Conditioning Narodowe Centrum Nauki, Poland Total Value: PLN 336,000 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: R. Balas) 2011-2014 Research Grant: Generalization versus Contextualization in Attitude Formation and Change Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 108,434 (Principal Investigator) 2011-2012 Travel Grant: Special Research Fund for Foreign Visiting Researchers Ghent University, Belgium Total Value: € 6,400 (Principal Investigator) 2010-2015 Research Award: Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology (Tier II - Renewal) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 500,000 (Principal Investigator) 2010-2011 Research Grant: The Role of Evaluative Processes in Reducing the Stigma of Mental Illness Academic Development Fund, University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 34,310 (Principal Investigator with R. Norman, E. Hampson, R. Sorrentino) 2009-2011 Research Award: Faculty Scholar Award University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 14,000 (Principal Investigator) 2009-2011 Research Grant: Associative and Propositional Processes in the Formation and Change of Attitudes Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany Total Value: € 119,500 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: E. Walther) 2008-2011 Research Grant: Self-Representation: Causes and Consequences Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 97,719 (Principal Investigator) 2008-2009 Small Group Meeting Grant: Cognitive Consistency as an Integrative Concept in Social Cognition European Association of Social Psychology Total Value: € 4,000 (Principal Investigator with F. Strack) 2008 Travel Award: 15th Meeting of the European Association of Social Psychology, Opatija, Croatia University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 1,594 (Principal Investigator) 2007-2012 Research Award: Mechanisms Underlying Automatic and Deliberate Evaluative Responses Ontario Ministry for Research and Innovation, Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 190,000 (Principal Investigator) 2006-2009 Research Grant: Cognitive Consistency and the Processing of Social Information TransCoop Program, Alexander-von-Humboldt Foundation, Germany Total Value: € 44,856 (Principal Investigator with F. Strack) Page 3 / 37 2006-2008 Research Grant: Cognitive Balance: The Role of Associative and Propositional Processes Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany Total Value: € 54,480 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: E. Walther) 2006-2007 Research Grant: Mathematical Modeling of Self-Regulation Processes Academic Development Fund, University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 46,478 (Principal Investigator with S. Köhler, J. B. Morton) 2005-2010 Research Award: Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology (Tier II) Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 500,000 (Principal Investigator) 2005-2008 Research Grant: Attitude Formation and Change Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada Total Value: CAN-$ 113,388 (Principal Investigator) 2005-2006 Equipment Grant: Social Cognition Laboratory Canada Foundation for Innovation and Ontario Research Fund Total Value: CAN-$ 134,799 (Principal Investigator) 2005-2006 Research Grant: Attitude Formation and Change Academic Development Fund, University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 17,776 (Principal Investigator) 2005 Travel Award: 14th Meeting of the European Association of Social Psychology, Würzburg, Germany University of Western Ontario Total Value: CAN-$ 2,435 (Principal Investigator) 2002-2004 Postdoctoral Fellowship: Associations and Beliefs Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany Total Value: € 64,870 (Principal Investigator) 2001 Travel Award: 2nd Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX, USA Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Germany Total Value: € 840 (Principal Investigator) 2000-2001 Research Grant: Category-Based and Individuating Impression Formation Deutsche Forschungsgemeinschaft, Germany Total Value: € 37,500 (Co-Investigator; Principal Investigator: R. Banse) 1999-2001 Doctoral Fellowship: Implicational Schemata and the Correspondence Bias Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung, Germany Total Value: € 24,000 (Principal Investigator) RESEARCH INTERESTS My research aims
Recommended publications
  • IMPLICIT MEASURES Procedures, Use, and Interpretation
    2 IMPLICIT MEASURES Procedures, Use, and Interpretation Bertram Gawronski and Adam Hahn There is no doubt that self-report measures have provided invaluable insights for a wide range of psychological questions (see Jaccard and Blanton, Chapter 1, this volume). After all, a straightforward way to find out what is on a person’s mind is to directly ask the person about his or her thoughts and feelings. Yet, self-report measures have been criticized for their inability to capture mental contents that people are either unwilling or unable to report. First, self-report measures are known to be susceptible to self-presentation and socially desirable responding (Crowne & Marlowe, 1960). Second, self-report measures are not well-suited to capture thoughts and feelings that are outside of conscious aware- ness (Greenwald & Banaji, 1995). To overcome these limitations, psychologists have developed performance-based instruments that (a) limit participants’ abil- ity to strategically control their responses, and (b) do not rely on introspection for the measurement of thoughts and feelings. Based on their indirect approach in the assessment of mental contents, these performance-based instruments are often referred to as implicit measures, whereas traditional self-report measures are described as explicit measures. Despite the popularity of implicit measures as a tool to overcome the two well-known problems of explicit measures, an accumulating body of research suggests that the relation between implicit and explicit measures involves a much more complex set of factors that cannot be reduced to motivational distortions and lack of introspective access. In a nutshell, the available evidence indicates that (a) strategic control is just one among several factors that can lead to dissocia- tions between implicit and explicit measures and (b) the thoughts and feelings captured by implicit measures are consciously accessible (see Gawronski, LeBel, & Peters, 2007).
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  • Back to the Future of Dissonance Theory: Cognitive Consistency As a Core Motive
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  • Bertram Gawronski
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  • Temporal Stability of Implicit and Explicit Measures
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  • Full Text PDF 2.84 MB
    This article was downloaded by: [the Bodleian Libraries of the University of Oxford] On: 07 February 2014, At: 03:30 Publisher: Routledge Informa Ltd Registered in England and Wales Registered Number: 1072954 Registered office: Mortimer House, 37-41 Mortimer Street, London W1T 3JH, UK International Journal of Psychology Publication details, including instructions for authors and subscription information: http://www.tandfonline.com/loi/pijp20 Invited Address, IUPsyS Invited Symposium, Invited Symposium, Symposium, Paper Session, Poster Session Published online: 02 Nov 2010. To cite this article: (2008) Invited Address, IUPsyS Invited Symposium, Invited Symposium, Symposium, Paper Session, Poster Session, International Journal of Psychology, 43:3-4, 348-527, DOI: 10.1080/00207594.2008.10108485 To link to this article: http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00207594.2008.10108485 PLEASE SCROLL DOWN FOR ARTICLE Taylor & Francis makes every effort to ensure the accuracy of all the information (the “Content”) contained in the publications on our platform. However, Taylor & Francis, our agents, and our licensors make no representations or warranties whatsoever as to the accuracy, completeness, or suitability for any purpose of the Content. Any opinions and views expressed in this publication are the opinions and views of the authors, and are not the views of or endorsed by Taylor & Francis. The accuracy of the Content should not be relied upon and should be independently verified with primary sources of information. Taylor and Francis shall not be liable for any losses, actions, claims, proceedings, demands, costs, expenses, damages, and other liabilities whatsoever or howsoever caused arising directly or indirectly in connection with, in relation to or arising out of the use of the Content.
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  • On the Propositional Nature of Cognitive Consistency: Dissonance Changes Explicit, but Not Implicit Attitudesq
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  • Moral Dilemma Judgments: Disentangling Deontological Inclinations, Utilitarian
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