Piotr Winkielman - Selected Publications#
5 highly cited (1,000+) publications:
Reber, R., Schwarz, N., & Winkielman, P. (2004). Processing fluency and aesthetic pleasure: Is beauty in the perceiver's processing experience? Personality and Social Psychology Review, 8, 364-382.
Niedenthal, P. M., Barsalou, L. W., Winkielman, P., Krauth-Gruber, S., & Ric, F. (2005). Embodiment in attitudes, social perception, and emotion. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 9(3), 184-211.
Reber, R., Winkielman, P., & Schwarz, N. (1998). Effects of perceptual fluency on affective judgments. Psychological Science, 9(1), 45-48.
Winkielman, P., & Cacioppo, J. T. (2001). Mind at ease puts a smile on the face: psychophysiological evidence that processing facilitation elicits positive affect. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 81(6), 989-1000.
Vul, E., Harris, C., Winkielman, P., & Pashler, H. (2009). Puzzlingly High Correlations in fMRI Studies of Emotion, Personality, and Social Cognition. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 4(3), 274–290.
Important publications in the last 5 years
Nowak, A., Biesaga, M., Ziembowicz, K., Baran, T, & Winkielman, P. (2023). Subjective consistency increases trust. Scientific Reports. 13: 5657.
Jiang, Y., Marcowski, P., Ryazanov. A., & Winkielman, P. (2023). People conform to social norms when gambling with lives or money. Scientific Reports, 13:853.
von Hecker, U., Hanel, P.H.P., Jin, Z., & Winkielman, P. (2023). Self-generated cognitive fluency: Consequences on evaluative judgments. Cognition and Emotion, 37:2, 254-270.
Davis, J., Coulson, S., Blaison, C., Hess, U., & Winkielman, P. (2022). Mimicry of partially occluded emotional faces: Do we mimic what we see or what we know? Cognition and Emotion, 36:8, 1555-1575.
Winkielman, P., & Nowak, A. (2022). Beyond the features: The role of consistency in impressions of trust. Social Psychological Bulletin, 17, 1-20.
Winkielman, P., Trujillo, J. T., Bornemann, B., Knutson, B., & Paulus, M. P. (2022). Taking gambles at face value: Effects of emotional expressions on risky decisions. Frontiers in Psychology, 13:958918.
Wołoszyn, K., Hohol, M., Kuniecki, M., & Winkielman, P. (2022). Restricting movements of lower face leaves recognition of emotional vocalizations intact but introduces a valence positivity bias. Scientific Reports, 12:16101.
Arnold, A. J., Winkielman, P. (2021). Smile (but only deliberately) though your heart is aching: Loneliness is associated with impaired spontaneous smile mimicry. Social Neuroscience, 16:1, 26-38
Vogel, T., Ingendahl, M., & Winkielman, P. (2021). The architecture of prototype preferences: Typicality, fluency, and valence. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 150, 187-194.
Nitschke, J. P., Sunahara, C.S., Carr, E.W., Winkielman, P., Pruessner, J.C. & Bartz, J. A. (2020). Stressed connections: Cortisol levels following acute psychosocial stress disrupt affiliative mimicry in humans. Proceedings of the Royal Society B, 287: 20192941.
Ryali, C. K., Goffin, S., Winkielman, P., & Yu, A. J. (2020). From likely to likable: The role of statistical typicality in human social assessment of faces. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, 117, 29371–29380.
Winkielman, P., Coulson, S., & Niedenthal, P. (2018). Dynamic grounding of emotion concepts. Phil. Trans. R. Soc. B 373: 20170127.