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Publications //

Journal Artic​les and Working Papers:

(Available for academic use upon request).

 

Cameron, C.D., Lindquist, K.A., & Gray, K. (in preparation). Fuzzy boundaries and global correspondences: Deconstructing the relationship between morality and emotions.

 

​Cameron, C.D., Payne, B.K., & Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (in preparation). Automatic and controlled moral judgments: A process dissociation approach.



Cameron, C.D., Harris, L.T., & Payne, B.K. (in preparation). Emotional exhaustion and the dehumanization of stigmatized groups.



​Cameron, C.D., & Fredrickson, B.L. (under review). Emotions and helping take two: Present-focused attention and non-judgmental acceptance predict the likelihood and emotional quality of helping others.



Cameron, C.D., Payne, B.K., & Doris, J.M. (2013). Morality in high definition: Emotion differentiation calibrates the influence of incidental disgust on moral judgments. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 49, 719-725. 



Payne, B.K., Brown-Iannuzzi, J., Burkley, M., Arbuckle, N., Cooley, E., Cameron, C.D., & Lundberg, K.B. (2013). Intention invention and the affect misattribution procedure: Reply to Bar-Anan and Nosek (2012). Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 39, 375-386. 



Cameron, C.D., Brown-Iannuzzi, J., & Payne, B.K. (2012). Sequential priming measures of implicit social cognition: A meta-analysis of associations with behaviors and explicit attitudes. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 16, 330-350. 



Cameron, C.D., & Payne, B.K. (2012). The cost of callousness: Regulating compassion influences the moral self-concept. Psychological Science, 23, 225-229. 



Cameron, C.D., & Payne, B.K. (2011). Escaping affect: How motivated emotion regulation creates insensitivity to mass suffering. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 100, 1-15. 



Payne, B.K., Hall, D., Cameron, C.D., & Bishara, A. (2010). ​A process model of affect misattribution. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 36, 1397-1408. 



Cameron, C.D., Payne, B.K., & Knobe, J. (2010). Do theories of implicit race bias change moral judgments? Social Justice Research, 23, 272-289. *Winner of the International Society for Justice Research 2010 Morton Deutsch Award 



Shean, G., Bell, E., & Cameron, C.D. (2007). Recognition of nonverbal affect and schizotypy. Journal of Psychology: Interdisciplinary and Applied, 141, 281-292. 

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Book Chapters:

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Caldwell, B., Cameron, C.D., Strohminger, N., Schaich-Borg, J., & Sinnott-Armstrong, W. (in press). Implicit moral attitudes. In H. Rusch, Christoph Lutge, & Matthias Uhl (Eds.), Experimental ethics.

 

Payne, B.K., & Cameron, C.D. (in press). Free will worth having and the intentional control of behavior. In W. Sinnott-Armstrong (Ed.), Moral psychology, Vol. 4: Freedom and responsibility. 

Payne, B.K., & Cameron, C.D. (in press). Dual process theory from a process dissociation perspective. In J. Sherman, B. Gawronski, & Y. Trope (Eds.), Dual process theories of the social mind. 



Payne, B.K., & Cameron, C.D. (2012). Implicit social cognition and mental representation. In D. Carlston (Ed.), Oxford handbook of social cognition. Oxford University Press. 

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Payne, B.K., & Cameron, C.D. (2010). Divided minds, divided morals: How implicit social cognition underpins and undermines our sense of social justice. In B. Gawronski & B.K. Payne (Eds.), Handbook of implicit social cognition: Measurement, theory, and applications. Guilford Press.

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