McGill Intergroup Cognition Lab
Research Publications People News Media Resources Join Contact
ResearchPublicationsPeopleNewsMediaResourcesJoinContact
McGill Intergroup Cognition Lab
Jordan Axt | Director

Media


 
How can we better understand and manage unconscious bias?

- Brain for Business Podcast
October 6, 2022

Read More
media, 2019ScienceSitesOctober 6, 2022group-favoritism
How Cultural Messages May Shape Individual Attitudes

- Science Trends
January 2, 2019

Read More
media, 2019ScienceSitesOctober 8, 2019group-favoritism
Ingroup and Outgroup Favoritism in Implicit Attitudes

- SPSP Character & Context
November 19, 2018

Read More
media, 2018ScienceSitesOctober 7, 2019group-favoritism
How to Overcome Unconscious Bias

- MIND Guest Blog, Scientific American
January 19, 2017

Read More
media, 2017ScienceSitesOctober 4, 2019racial-associations
Living in the Most Walkable Cities Might Make You Healthier, But It Won’t Make You Happier

- Medical Daily
October 29, 2015

Read More
2015, mediaScienceSitesOctober 3, 2019walkability
New Study Suggests Walkable Cities Don’t Make People Happier

- Business Insider
October 27, 2015

Read More
media, 2015ScienceSitesOctober 3, 2019walkability
The Hidden Rules of Bigotry

- HuffPost
September 1, 2014

Read More
media, 2014ScienceSitesOctober 2, 2019implicit-evaluation
UVa Study: Implicit Bias Difficult to Overcome

- The Daily Progress
August 11, 2014

Read More
2014, mediaScienceSitesOctober 2, 2019implicit-evaluation
New UVa Study Takes a Look How Americans Favor Race, Religion and Age

- CBS19 News
August 11, 2014

Read More
2014, mediaScienceSitesOctober 2, 2019implicit-evaluation
The Idea of Racial Hierarchy Remains Entrenched in Americans’ Psyches

- Pacific Standard
August 1, 2014

Read More
media, 2014ScienceSitesOctober 1, 2019implicit-evaluation
ResourcesPublicationsResearchPeopleNewsMediaJoinContact
 
 

Department of Psychology
2001 McGill College, 7th floor
Montreal, QC H3A 1G1

© 2019 McGill Intergroup Cognition Lab | Designed and developed by ScienceSites