Publications by authors named "H H Over"

Article Synopsis
  • The manosphere is an online network promoting male dominance and antifeminist views, attracting a significant number of young men.
  • There is limited systematic research on the long-term effects of this content on young people's mental health, but preliminary findings indicate a rise in sexist attitudes and harmful messages that could worsen inequalities in schools.
  • The commentary calls for urgent interventions to address the negative influence of the manosphere on young men’s attitudes and its broader impact on the mental health of women and girls.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF

Previous work has reported that the extent to which participants dehumanized criminals by denying them uniquely human character traits such as refinement, rationality and morality predicted the severity of the punishment endorsed for them. We revisit this influential finding across six highly powered and pre-registered studies. First, we conceptually replicate the effect reported in previous work, demonstrating that our method is sensitive to detecting relationships between trait-based dehumanization and punishment should they occur.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

According to perceptual dehumanization theory (PDT), faces are only perceived as "truly human" when processed in a configural fashion. Consistent with this theory, previous research indicates that when faces are inverted, a manipulation hypothesized to disrupt configural processing, the individuals depicted are attributed fewer uniquely human qualities. In a seminal paper, Hugenberg et al.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF

We investigated the structural evolution of electrochemically fabricated Pd nanowiresby means of grazing-incidence transmission small- and wide-angle x-ray scattering (GTSAXS and GTWAXS), x-ray fluorescence (XRF) and two-dimensional surface optical reflectance (2D-SOR). This shows how electrodeposition and the hydrogen evolution reaction (HER) compete and interact during Pd electrodepositon. During the bottom-up growth of the nanowires, we show that-phase Pd hydride is formed.

View Article and Find Full Text PDF
Article Synopsis
  • Some people use animal-like insults in propaganda to make certain groups seem scary or disgusting.
  • In studies, it was found that when people read these insults, they were more likely to agree with harming the targeted group.
  • However, reading these insults didn’t change how people saw the target group’s human qualities, but it did make them seem less likable.
View Article and Find Full Text PDF