Margaret Clark
John M. Musser Professor of PsychologyCards
About
Research
Publications
2025
Impartial Beneficence Predicts Greater and More Uniform Concern for Others Across Social Relationships.
Earp B, McLoughlin K, Caraccio M, Calcott R, Rottman J, Clark M, Crockett M. Impartial Beneficence Predicts Greater and More Uniform Concern for Others Across Social Relationships. Personality And Social Psychology Bulletin 2025, 1461672251379518. PMID: 41384570, DOI: 10.1177/01461672251379518.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMore real together: conversation predicts realness through shared reality
Rossignac-Milon M, Boothby E, Clark M, Pinelli F, Higgins E. More real together: conversation predicts realness through shared reality. Self And Identity 2025, ahead-of-print: 1-20. DOI: 10.1080/15298868.2025.2597803.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchWhether Emotions are Engaging or Disengaging Depends on Relationship Functions
Chughtai M, Gendron M, Clark M. Whether Emotions are Engaging or Disengaging Depends on Relationship Functions. Affective Science 2025, 1-14. DOI: 10.1007/s42761-025-00327-8.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchPerceiving and responding to another’s interest in initiating friendship: The role of attachment insecurity
Beck L, Aragón O, Clark M. Perceiving and responding to another’s interest in initiating friendship: The role of attachment insecurity. Journal Of Social And Personal Relationships 2025, 42: 1756-1777. DOI: 10.1177/02654075251331796.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchAttachment insecurityFriendship initiationUnacquainted participantsStudy 1Study 2Reciprocating othersResponse to interestInitiate friendshipsPotential friendsAssociate with othersFriendshipFriends’ interestsIndividualsParticipantsOthersAttachmentPerceptionHostilityConfederateDisinterestFearInsecurity
2024
Author Correction: How social relationships shape moral wrongness judgments
Earp B, McLoughlin K, Monrad J, Clark M, Crockett M. Author Correction: How social relationships shape moral wrongness judgments. Nature Communications 2024, 15: 7906. PMID: 39256421, PMCID: PMC11387412, DOI: 10.1038/s41467-024-52274-w.Peer-Reviewed Original Research