ALEXANDRA
VAZQUEZ BOTANA
Profesor Titular Universidad
Carleton University
Ottawa, CanadáPublikationen in Zusammenarbeit mit Forschern von Carleton University (12)
2024
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Conceptual replication and extension of health behavior theories' predictions in the context of COVID-19: Evidence across countries and over time
Social and Personality Psychology Compass, Vol. 18, Núm. 2
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The Precarity of Progress: Implications of a Shifting Gendered Division of Labor for Relationships and Well-Being as a Function of Country-Level Gender Equality
Sex Roles, Vol. 90, Núm. 5, pp. 642-658
2023
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Identifying important individual- and country-level predictors of conspiracy theorizing: A machine learning analysis
European Journal of Social Psychology, Vol. 53, Núm. 6, pp. 1191-1203
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Intentions to be Vaccinated Against COVID-19: The Role of Prosociality and Conspiracy Beliefs across 20 Countries
Health Communication, Vol. 38, Núm. 8, pp. 1530-1539
2022
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COVID-19 stressors and health behaviors: A multilevel longitudinal study across 86 countries
Preventive Medicine Reports, Vol. 27
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Concern with COVID-19 pandemic threat and attitudes towards immigrants: The mediating effect of the desire for tightness
Current Research in Ecological and Social Psychology, Vol. 3
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Lockdown Lives: A Longitudinal Study of Inter-Relationships Among Feelings of Loneliness, Social Contacts, and Solidarity During the COVID-19 Lockdown in Early 2020
Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Vol. 48, Núm. 9, pp. 1315-1330
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Predictors of adherence to public health behaviors for fighting COVID-19 derived from longitudinal data
Scientific reports, Vol. 12, Núm. 1, pp. 3824
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Using machine learning to identify important predictors of COVID-19 infection prevention behaviors during the early phase of the pandemic
Patterns, Vol. 3, Núm. 4
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‘We are all in the same boat’: How societal discontent affects intention to help during the COVID-19 pandemic
Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, Vol. 32, Núm. 2, pp. 332-347
2021
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Politicization of COVID-19 health-protective behaviors in the United States: Longitudinal and cross-national evidence
PLoS ONE, Vol. 16, Núm. 10 October 2021
2018
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Many labs 2: Investigating variation in replicability across samples and settings
Advances in Methods and Practices in Psychological Science, Vol. 1, Núm. 4, pp. 443-490