Publications

Social Cognition [Cologne, Germany]

Fischer, J., Fischer, P., Englich, B., Aydin, N., & Frey, D. (2011). Empower my decisions: The effects of power gestures on confirmatory information processing. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 47 (6 ), 1146-1154.

 

Englich, B., & Soder, K. (2009). Moody experts – How mood and expertise influence judgmental anchoring. Judgment and Decision Making, 4 (1), 41-50.

 

Englich, B. (2008). When knowledge matters – differential effects of available knowledge in standard and basic anchoring tasks. European Journal of Social Psychology, 38, 896-904.

 

Englich, B., Mussweiler, T., & Strack, F. (2006). Playing dice with criminal sentences: The influence of irrelevant anchors on experts’ judicial decision making. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32 (2), 188-200.


Englich, B., Mussweiler, T., & Strack, F. (2005). The last word in court - A hidden disadvantage for the defense. Law and Human Behavior, 29 (6), 705-722.


Uehiro Centre for Practical Ethics [Oxford, Great Britain]

Kahane, G. and N. Shackel. ‘Do Abnormal Responses Show Utilitarian Bias?Nature, 452, 7185, 2008.

 

Kahane, G. and N. Shackel. ‘Methodological Issues in the Neuroscience of Moral Judgment,’ Mind and Language, 25, 5: 561-582, 2010.

 

Kahane, G. ‘Evolutionary Debunking Arguments’, Noûs, 45, 1: 103-125, 2011.

 

Kahane, G., K. Wiech, N. Shackel, M. Farias, J. Savulescu and I. Tracey, ‘The Neural Basis of Intuitive and Counterintuitive Moral Judgement’, forthcoming in Social, Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience, 2011.

 

Kahane, G. ‘The Armchair and the Trolley: An Argument for Experimental Ethics’, Philosophical Studies, 2011.

 

Theory and History of Psychology [Groningen, The Netherlands]

Schleim, S. (forthcoming March 2012). Brains in Context in the Neurolaw Debate: The Examples of Free Will and “Dangerous” Brains. International Journal for Psychiatry and Law 35.

 

Schleim, S., & Schirmann, F. (2011). Philosophical implications and multidisciplinary challenges of moral physiology. TRAMES: A Journal of the Humanities and Social Sciences, 15(2), 127-146. doi:10.3176/tr.2011.2.02

 

Schleim S., Spranger T., Erk, S. & Walter, H. (2010). From moral to legal judgment: The influence of normative context in lawyers and other academics (restricted access). Social Cognitive and Affective Neuroscience. Epub ahead of print.


Schleim, S. & Roiser, J. P. (2009). fMRI in translation: the challenges facing real-world applications (public access). Frontiers in Human Neuroscience 3(63): 1-7.


Schleim, S. (2008). Moral Physiology, Its Limitations and Philosophical Implications. Jahrbuch für Wissenschaft und Ethik 13: 51-80.