Landy, J. F., Jia., M., Ding, I. L., Viganola, D., Tierney, W., ... & Uhlmann, E. L. (2020).
Crowdsourcing hypothesis tests: Making transparent how design choices shap research results.
Psychological Bulletin, 146, 451-479.
[link]
[OSF]
Piazza, J. & Landy, J. F. (2020).
Folk beliefs about the relationships anger and disgust have with moral disapproval.
Cognition and Emotion, 34, 229-241.
[link]
[OSF]
Landy, J. F., & Piazza, J. (2019). Re-evaluating moral disgust:
Sensitivity to many affective states predicts extremity in many evaluative judgments.
Social Psychological and Personality Science, 10, 211-219.
[link]
[OSF]
Landy, J. F. & Bartels, D. M. (2018).
An empirically-derived taxonomy of moral concepts.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 147, 1748-1761.
[link]
[OSF]
Landy, J. F., Walco, D. K., & Bartels, D. M. (2017). What's wrong with using steroids?
Exploring whether and why people oppose the use of performance enhancing drugs.
Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 113, 377-392.
[link]
[SJDM 2017 Poster]
[OSF]
Caruso, E. M., Shapira, O., & Landy, J. F. (2017). Show me the money:
A systematic exploration of manipulations, moderators, and mechanisms of priming effects.
Psychological Science, 28, 1148-1159.
[link]
[OSF]
Landy, J. F. (2016). Representations of moral violations:
Category members and associated features.
Judgment and Decision Making, 11, 496-508.
[link]
Landy, J. F., Piazza, J. & Goodwin, G. P. (2016). When it's bad to be friendly and smart:
The desirability of sociability and competence depends on morality.
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 42, 1272-1290.
[link]
Landy, J. F. & Goodwin, G. P. (2015). Does incidental disgust amplify moral judgment?
A meta-analytic review of experimental evidence.
Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10, 518-536.
[link]
[OSF]
Royzman, E. B., Landy, J. F., & Leeman, R. F. (2015). Are thoughtful people more utilitarian?
CRT as a unique predictor of moral minimalism in the dilemmatic context.
Cognitive Science, 39, 325-352.
[link]
Royzman, E., Atanasov, P., Landy, J. F., Parks, A., & Gepty, A. (2014).
CAD or MAD? Anger (not disgust) as the predominant response to pathogen-free violations of the Divinity code.
Emotion, 14, 892-907.
[link]
Royzman, E. B., Landy, J. F., & Goodwin, G. P. (2014).
Are good reasoners more incest-friendly?
Trait cognitive reflection predicts selective moralization in a sample of American adults.
Judgment and Decision Making, 9, 175-190.
[link]
Goodwin, G. P. & Landy, J. F. (2014). Valuing different human lives.
Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 143, 778-803.
[link]
Piazza, J., Landy, J. F., & Goodwin, G. P. (2014).
Cruel nature:
Harmfulness as an important, overlooked dimension in judgments of moral standing.
Cognition, 131, 108-124.
[link]
Piazza, J. & Landy, J. F. (2013). "Lean not on your own understanding":
Belief that morality is founded on divine authority and non-utilitarian moral judgments.
Judgment and Decision Making, 8, 639-661.
[link]
Peer-Reviewed Journal Articles
Replies and Commentaries
Landy, J. F. (2019).
Cautiously optimistic rationalism may not be cautious enough.
Behavioral and Brain Sciences, 42, E159.
Landy, J. F., Piazza, J., & Goodwin, G. P. (2018). Morality traits still dominate in forming impressions of others. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of United States of America, 115(25) E5636. [link]
Landy, J. F. & Goodwin, G. P. (2015). Our conclusions were tentative, but appropriate: A reply to Schnall et al. (2015). Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10, 539-540. [link]
Landy, J. F., Piazza, J., & Goodwin, G. P. (2018). Morality traits still dominate in forming impressions of others. Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of United States of America, 115(25) E5636. [link]
Landy, J. F. & Goodwin, G. P. (2015). Our conclusions were tentative, but appropriate: A reply to Schnall et al. (2015). Perspectives on Psychological Science, 10, 539-540. [link]
Book Chapters
Piazza, J., Landy, J. F., Chakroff, A., Young, L., & Wasserman, E. W. (2018).
What disgust does and does not do for moral cognition.
In N. Strohmnger & V. Kumar (Eds.), The moral psychology of disgust (pp. 53-81).
New York, NY: Rowan & Littlefield.
Landy, J. F. & Royzman, E. B. (2018). The Moral Myopia Model: Why and how reasoning matters in moral judgment. In G. Pennycook (Ed.), The new reflectionism in cognitive psychology: Why reason matters (pp. 70-92). East Sussex, UK: Psychology Press.
Landy, J. F. & Uhlmann, E. L. (2018). Morality is personal. In J. Graham & K. Gray (Eds.), The atlas of moral psychology: Mapping good and evil in the mind (pp. 121-132). New York, NY: Guilford.
Landy, J. F. & Royzman, E. B. (2018). The Moral Myopia Model: Why and how reasoning matters in moral judgment. In G. Pennycook (Ed.), The new reflectionism in cognitive psychology: Why reason matters (pp. 70-92). East Sussex, UK: Psychology Press.
Landy, J. F. & Uhlmann, E. L. (2018). Morality is personal. In J. Graham & K. Gray (Eds.), The atlas of moral psychology: Mapping good and evil in the mind (pp. 121-132). New York, NY: Guilford.