Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile
Elif Gozde Ikizer

@elifgozdeikizer

Social psychologist, assistant professor at the University of Wisconsin, Green Bay

ID: 1334991900

linkhttp://elifikizer.com calendar_today07-04-2013 20:19:03

162 Tweet

105 Takipçi

328 Takip Edilen

Yaşar Adanalı (@ysrdnl) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Dear European colleagues, “Our deadline at 10:00 am” means absolutely nothing to me at the moment especially if its reminded without any sympathy for the earthquake in Turkey. Let’s just stay human. At least connect the dots: Check my surname & the names of those affected cities

Deniz (@denizbozkurtp) 's Twitter Profile Photo

To summarize the extent of grief and despair in Turkey: TR's population lays somewhere around 85M. The area impacted is home to 13,5M people. Roughly every 7th person in TR is directly impacted by the earthquakes. That is, practically everyone else in the country knows 1/6

Ryan Martin (@angerprofessor) 's Twitter Profile Photo

I usually keep my TikToks on TikTok, but this one is different. Please listen to Elif and do what you can to help. #TikTok tiktok.com/t/ZTRte7T32/

EASP (@easpinfo) 's Twitter Profile Photo

The EASP Executive Committee express our sorrow and compassion for the Turkish and Syrian people who are experiencing extreme loss and suffering due to the earthquake last week. Please see below for suggestions of how our community can show support. easp.eu/news/itm/earth…

April Bailey (@ahbailey04) 's Twitter Profile Photo

Now in press at JEP:Gen! With psychologists Elif Gozde Ikizer Andrei Cimpian and philosophers Daniel Wodak and Robin Dembroff We asked English and Turkish speakers whether languages should have gender pronouns? race pronouns? totally neutral pronouns? osf.io/preprints/psya…

April Bailey (@ahbailey04) 's Twitter Profile Photo

This paper on beliefs about identity and pronouns in two language contexts is now out here -->> psycnet.apa.org/record/2024-76…

Society for Personality and Social Psychology (@spspnews) 's Twitter Profile Photo

"people tended to support the existence of gender pronouns more when they held stronger beliefs that gender is binary and that men and women are different 'deep down.'" - April Bailey, Robin Demobroff, Daniel Wodak, Elif Gozde Ikizer, & Andrei Cimpian ow.ly/nGkW50SuG4t

"people tended to support the existence of gender pronouns more when they held stronger beliefs that gender is binary and that men and women are different 'deep down.'" - <a href="/ahbailey04/">April Bailey</a>, Robin Demobroff, Daniel Wodak, <a href="/ElifGozdeIkizer/">Elif Gozde Ikizer</a>, &amp; <a href="/AndreiCimpian/">Andrei Cimpian</a> ow.ly/nGkW50SuG4t
Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

1/7 Out in PSPB, with Ron Fischer, Jonas R. Kunst (@kunstjonas.bsky.social), and John Dovidio journals.sagepub.com/doi/10.1177/01…  Using World Values Survey from 174,325 participants across 80 countries, we examined stigma from a multilevel perspective.

Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

2/7 We looked at how country-level normative tightness-looseness and individual-level non-normativeness relate to stigma toward racial and ethnic out-groups and groups deviating from social standards.

Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

4/7 Individuals higher in non-normativeness demonstrated a greater level of stigma toward members of immigrant, racial, or ethnic out- groups.

Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

5/7 In contrast, individuals higher in non-normativeness showed a lower level of stigma toward groups deviating from social standards.

Elif Gozde Ikizer (@elifgozdeikizer) 's Twitter Profile Photo

6/7 Our work shows that country-level factors, individual-level factors, and types of stigmas interact and jointly affect stigma, highlighting the importance of multilevel approaches.