Welcome to the Social, Moral, and Political Psychology Lab!
We live in a time of social incivility, moral outrage, political sectarianism, science denialism, and class conflicts. These thorny problems pervade our daily life, be it through our social media feed and TV screen or in our community neighborhood. Our lab is committed to disentangling the most basic psychological ingredients and mechanisms of ideology, partisanship, polarization, morality, antiscience attitude, and social class. We are also trying to unpack the impact of digital technology, such as easy access to smart devices and artificial intelligence, on our desire and ability to think.
Our work is guided by two meta-theoretical principles. First, social situatedness. Cognitive, emotional, motivational, and behavioral processes are situated in social contexts. They are sensitive to situational demands and affordances. Second, physical groundedness. Mental activities are grounded in sensorimotor processes. These processes constitute the interface between the physical self and the physical environment. Our interactions with physical reality shape our reactions to social reality through multiple mechanisms. And our experiences of social reality, in turn, shape our sensorimotor and physiological processes. Dynamic loops flow 24/7 between mind, body, and environment.
Our lab uses a wide range of methods to provide multi-level empirical answers. Examples include meta-analysis with state-of-the-art bias correction techniques, computational analysis of early childhood language, psychophysical assessment, behavioral economic games, online experiment, psychophysiology, survey, dyadic interaction, longitudinal study, pan-cultural analysis, and large-scale text analysis. Our goal is to provide scientific answers to an overarching question in the philosophy of mind: How does the human mind accomplish abstract thinking? We are especially eager to understand how people process various abstract thoughts that matter in sociopolitical conflicts (e.g., antiscience attitudes), that are culturally enshrined (e.g., independence), that emerge early in human development (e.g., gender, morality), that are common in daily life (e.g., stress, love), or that have significant consequences in real-world contexts (e.g., decision making, economic behavior, fake news). For a sample of the research questions we're tackling these days, check out the Research tab.
We have been publishing our theoretical, empirical, and methodological work in high-impact journals such as Science, Behavioral and Brain Sciences, Nature Human Behaviour, Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, Psychological Bulletin, Psychological Science, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, and Behavior Research Methods. Our graduate and undergraduate students have been winning numerous awards and scholarships, and getting accepted at top-notch graduate programs around the world (e.g., Harvard, Chicago, Stanford, Berkeley, Oxford, Toronto). See examples in our Latest News below.
Want to get involved? Let us know!
Lab Philosophy
A lab is a community of human beings, each with their unique views, interests, values, feelings, personality, and background.
I've given a lot of thought to what I want in a lab. Here's my vision for our lab.
-
Be intellectually humble. Embrace diverse viewpoints.
-
Be curious. Be bold in theorizing.
-
Tackle big problems. Use rigorous methods.
-
We don't compete with each other. We help each other out.
-
I want to create a lab where I want to work.
-
Always, always be kind.
Latest News
Congrats to Zoha Sojoudi
Zoha won the 2024 University of Toronto Excellence Award (UTEA-SSH)
Congrats to Ali Hajian
Ali will be joining the PhD in Social Psychology program at the University of Massachusetts Amherst starting Fall 2024
Congrats to Jiessie Tie
Jiessie will be joining the Master in Computer Science program at the University of Toronto starting Fall 2024
Congrats to Ziqi Shu
Ziqi will be joining the Master of Science in Education Data Science program at Stanford University starting Fall 2024
Congrats to Janice Hou
Janice won the 2024 Jackman Scholars Award
Congrats to Nicole Velev
Nicole won both the Rex Lucas Award and Jackman Scholars Award
New paper in Psychological Bulletin
Spike, Kathleen, Cecilia, and Joe's meta-analytic review of psychological consequences and antecedents of physical cleansing is accepted at Psychological Bulletin
2023-2024 Lab Members
Welcome to our new students, and welcome back to our returning ones. Looking forward to a productive school year together.
Congrats to Akil Huang
Akil won the Best Oral Presentation Award among 40 oral and poster presentations at the Summer Undergraduate Data Science (SUDS) Opportunities Program’s 2023 Showcase
Congrast to Spike Lee
Spike won the Applied Research on Intellectual Humility grant from the John Templeton Foundation to support his work on intellectual humility in the political domain
New paper in JPSP
Spike and Cecilia's paper showing that pain sensitivity predicts moral and political views is accepted at Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Congrats to Joy Wang
Joy won the 2023 Climate Positive Energy Undergraduate Summer Research Program Award
Congrats to Joe Hoang
Joe won the Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS) Doctoral Award from the SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council) to support his PhD studies in 2023-2025
Congrats to Noah Laskey
Noah won the Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS) Master's Award from the SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council) to start his PhD program in Social/Personality Psychology at the University of Toronto in Fall 2023
Congrats to Norman Zeng
Norman won the Canada Graduate Scholarship (CGS) Master's Award from the SSHRC (Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council) to start his PhD program in Developmental Psychology at the University of Toronto in Fall 2023
Congrats to Grace Yang
Grace has been admitted to the MD program at the School of Medicine, University of British Columbia starting Fall 2023