Markus Kemmelmeier

Markus Kemmelmeier is a German social psychologist at the University of Nevada, Reno, where he is a professor and director of the Ph.D. program in interdisciplinary social psychology.

Markus Kemmelmeier
CitizenshipGerman
Alma materUniversitaet Mannheim (Diplom, 1994)
University of Michigan (M.A., 1997; Ph.D., 2001)
Known forPolitical psychology
Cultural psychology
Scientific career
FieldsSocial psychology
InstitutionsUniversity of Nevada, Reno
ThesisMotivated racial cognition: Power and implicit goals to affirm or attenuate social hierarchy (2001)
Doctoral advisorEugene Burnstein

Career

He is known for his research on the psychological effects of exposure to flags, such as the American flag.[1][2] He has also researched the relationship between political ideology and intelligence.

gollark: It was very optimized because it uses vectorization and algorithms.
gollark: Also, I disagree with this. I wrote a highly optimized string sorting implementation using C and horrible intrinsics some weeks back.
gollark: And yet it is NOT written in Java.
gollark: Good idea, rewrite dale in machine code.
gollark: Not entirely sure why.

References

  1. Resnick, Brian (2015-07-10). "The Science of Why Taking Down the Confederate Flag Matters". The Atlantic. Retrieved 2018-02-24.
  2. Drutman, Lee (2008-12-17). "Does Old Glory Have a Dark Side?". Pacific Standard. Retrieved 2018-02-24.


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