Journals of Universitas Sangga Buana
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    A systematic review and Bayesian meta-analysis of co-offending characteristics

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    This review study provides a quantitative analysis of co-offending patterns. With a focus on synthesizing existing literature, the review explores the characteristics underlying criminal collaborations. By offering a comprehensive overview of the topic, this systematic review not only adds to the existing literature but also serves as a valuable resource for researchers, practitioners, and policymakers working towards an understanding of criminal networks

    Downsides of empathy in interpersonal relationships (Study2)

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    This study aims to test a prediction that low empathy occurs in interpersonal interactions when people see the empathic opportunity as personal cost or distressful. In such a situation, people may find it challenging to empathize with an intimate other and use the strategy to avoid the cost of empathizing, hence showing low empathy. In Study 2, we aim to replicate the findings from Study 1 and extend on the first study by investigating the effects of empathy cost on self-other merging

    Does why we drink matter? Exploring the role of drinking motives in the consumption of no- and low-alcohol across the sociodemographic spectrum

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    The study aims to determine the degree to which age, sex, and socioeconomic status are directly associated with the consumption of no and low-alcohol (NoLo) drinks. The UK government specifies these drinks as being below <1.2% ABV (Department for Health and Social Care, 2018). It will further contribute to the scientific literature on NoLo by exploring whether these sociodemographic characteristics also indirectly influence consumption of NoLo via their association with drinking motives. The methods include building a structural equation model to explore whether the reasons people drink alcohol (drinking motives) provide indirect pathways which partially mediate relationships between sociodemographic characteristics (socioeconomic status, age, and gender) and NoLo consumption. The drinking motives explored in the study are based on Cooper’s (1994) and Grant et al’s (2007) work, capturing drinking for the following reasons: social, conformity, enhancement, coping-depression, coping-anxiety

    Advantaged group's response to joint collective action

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    1. In the manuscript, we used different variable labels for a more coherent interpretation of the results: Joint collective action vs. disadvantaged group's collective action vs. inaction → mixed-gender protest vs. women-only protest vs. control. Support for concessions → support for institutional change. Solidarity-based collective action → solidarity-based engagement. 2. For the perception of legitimacy measure: Our questionnaire was administered in Chinese. In Chinese, "legitimate" and "reasonable" can be translated into the same word. However, we realised that "reasonable" should be a better translation than "legitimate" in the context

    Red attractiveness and products.

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    This is the project page of a paper which started out as a thesis project for Joanne Costello and Lotte Groeneboo

    Alcohol's effects during uncertain and uncontrollable stressors in the laboratory

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    Alcohol’s effects on reactivity to stressors depend on the nature of the stressor and the reactivity being assessed. Research identifying characteristics of stressors that modulate reactivity and clarifies the neurobehavioral, cognitive, and affective components of this reactivity may help prevent, reduce or treat the negative impacts of acute and chronic alcohol use with implications for other psychopathology involving maladaptive reactivity to stressors. We used a novel, multi-measure, cued electric shock stressor paradigm in a greater university community sample of adult recreational drinkers to test how alcohol (N=64), compared to No-alcohol (N=64), affects reactivity to stressors that vary in both their perceived certainty and controllability. Preregistered analyses suggested alcohol significantly dampened subjective anxiety (self-report) and defensive reactivity (startle potentiation) more during uncertain than during certain stressors regardless of controllability, suggesting that stressor uncertainty —but not uncontrollability— may be sufficient to enhance alcohol’s stress reactivity dampening and thus negative reinforcement potential

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