Bones, A. K. & Gosling, S. D. (2009). Do Social Psychologists cause priming research or does priming research cause Social Psychologists? Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL. [Note: The 2nd author’s contribution was extracted from his memory under sedation. Any protests that he did not contribute should be ignored.]
Bones, A. K. & Johnson, N. R. (2007). Measuring the immeasurable, or, “Could Abraham Lincoln Take the Implicit Association Test?” Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2, 406-411.
Bones, A. K., & Johnson, N.R. (2002). Phil Zimbardo is definitely an alien. American Psychologist, 57, 1135–1142.
Bones, A. K. (1996). Invaders need no facilitators: Merely exposing the alien “Zajonc”. American Psychologist, 51, 1231–1238.
(Some of these are fake; some seem to have been actually published.)
This was actually published, in Perspectives on Psychological Science.
Some other “publications” by “Arina Bones” [actually Brian Nosek]:
Bones, A. K. & Gosling, S. D. (2009). Do Social Psychologists cause priming research or does priming research cause Social Psychologists? Poster presented at the Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Tampa, FL. [Note: The 2nd author’s contribution was extracted from his memory under sedation. Any protests that he did not contribute should be ignored.]
Bones, A. K. & Johnson, N. R. (2007). Measuring the immeasurable, or, “Could Abraham Lincoln Take the Implicit Association Test?” Perspectives on Psychological Science, 2, 406-411.
Bones, A. K., & Johnson, N.R. (2002). Phil Zimbardo is definitely an alien. American Psychologist, 57, 1135–1142.
Bones, A. K. (1996). Invaders need no facilitators: Merely exposing the alien “Zajonc”. American Psychologist, 51, 1231–1238.
(Some of these are fake; some seem to have been actually published.)