Curriculum Vitae - Social Psychology



PETER HEGARTY

Address: Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, Guildford, GU2 7XH.

Telephone: 01483 686898

Email: p.hegarty@surrey.ac.uk.

Website: www2.surrey.ac.uk/psychology/people/dr_peter_hegarty

EDUCATION

1993-1999 Stanford University, U.S.A. PhD (Psychology)

1988-1992 University of Dublin, Trinity College, Ireland. BA 1st Class Honors (Psychology)

EMPLOYMENT

1999-2001 Department of Psychology, Sociology, Anthropology and Social Work, College

of Staten Island, City University of New York: Assistant Professor

2000-2001 Social and Personality Psychology Doctoral Program, City University of New York Graduate Center, City University of New York: Adjunct Faculty

2001-2002 Women’s and Gender Studies Program, Yale University: Visiting Professor

2002-present Department of Psychology, University of Surrey: Lecturer (2002-2006), Senior

Lecturer (2006-2011), and Reader (2011-present):

2004-present Department of Psychology, University of London, Royal Hollway: Guest Lecturer.

2006 Department of Psychology & Program in Women’s Studies, University of

Michigan: Visiting Professor

2011-present University of Essex: External Examiner.

ADMINISTRATION AND SERVICE

University of Surrey

2011-present FAHS Representative: University REF 2013 Committee on Impact.

2010-2011 FAHS Representative: University Quality and Standards Committee.

2008 Teaching Observer: University Scheme for New Lecturers

2006-2007 Member of Vice Chancellor’s Think Tank

2003-2005 Psychology Representative to the School of Human Sciences Committee on

Compliance with the Disability Discrimination Act (Part 4)

University of Surrey: Department of Psychology

2008-2011 Deputy Head of Department and Head of Teaching and Learning

2010-2011 Acting Course Director: M.Sc. in Forensic Psychology

2008-present Senior Colleague to Probationary Faculty: Laura Simonds (2008-2011) and Ilka

Gleibs (2011-present).

2007-2009 Leader: Social, Environmental, and Forensic Psychology Research Cluster

2007-2009 First Year Tutor (B.Sc. Degree Courses)

2004-2007 Course Director: M.Sc. Degree in Social Psychology

2007-present Member of Ten Academic Appointment Committees.

British Psychological Society

2011 Academic Consultant to BPS Timeline Project

2009 Contributing Author to Professional Practice Board Guidelines for psychologists working therapeutically with sexual and gender minority clients.

2008-present Committee Member: History and Philosophy of Psychology Section.

Honorary Treasurer (2010-present).

2004-2006 Committee Chair: Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section

2003-2004 Information Officer: Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section

American Psychological Association

2006 Wayne Placek Award Committee: Reviewer (APA Division 44)

2011 Louise Kidder Award Selection Committee Member (APA Division 9).

Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies.

2001-2002 Executive Board Member

City University of New York: College of Staten Island

2000-2001 Affirmative action representative on psychology search committee

1999-2001 Women's Studies program executive and curriculum committees

1999-2001 Faculty Advisor to Student Gay-Straight Alliance

Stanford University

1999. Dissertation fellows coordinator, Institute for Research on Women and Gender

EDITING AND REVIEWING

Associate Editor

2007-2009 British Journal of Social Psychology: 2007-2009.

Editorial Board/Advisory Group Membership

2009- History of Psychology

2009- Psychology and Sexuality

2009- Gay and Lesbian Issues and Psychology

Occasional Book and Journal Reviewing

Basic and Applied Social Psychology, Blackwell Publishers, British Journal of Developmental Psychology, British Journal of Social Psychology, Cambridge University Press, Developmental Psychology, Du Bois Review, European Journal of Social Psychology, European Journal of Personality, Feminism & Psychology, GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies, History of Psychology, History of the Human Sciences, Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, Journal of the History of Sexuality, Journal of Homosexuality, Journal of Social and Personal Relationships, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology (Sections 1 & 2), Journal of Psychosomatic Obstetrics and Gynecology, Journal of Sex Research, Legal and Criminological Psychology, Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review New Review of Social Psychology, Open University Press, Oxford University Press, Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, Political Behavior, PLoS One, Psychological Science, Qualitative Psychology, Revista: The Spanish Journal of Psychology, Routledge Book Publishers, Self and Identity, Sexualities, Sexuality, Evolution and Gender, Sexuality Research & Social Policy, Social Psychology, Transformations, Transportation Research Part F: Traffic Psychology and Behaviour, Wiley Book Publishers.

TEACHING

Awards and Leadership

1995 Stanford University, Culture and Cultures Committee Curricular Development

Grant. $300

1998-1999 Stanford University: Faculty Advisor, Queer 'Alternative Spring Break' Program

2000 College of Staten Island. LGB Alliance Award for Recognition of Service.

2001 City University of New York: Faculty mentor for “Project Ascend” Summer

Internship Program for Ethnic Minority Students.

2006 University of Surrey. Learning and Teaching Award for Experienced Staff.

2008 European Association of Social Psychology: Invited Tutor to EASP Summer

School, University of Cardiff, 2008.

2008-2010 University of Michigan: Co-Developed, and Taught at, the University of Michigan International Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender Psychology, Summer Institute. (see ).

2009 Higher Education Academy, University of York. Invited Presenter: One day

seminar on Teaching Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology.

2010 Participant in HEA/BPS/Heads of Psychology Departments Chicheley Hall Meeting Shaping Undergraduate Psychology Education in the UK.

2011-present Co-Developed the Continuing Professional Development Event “Teaching

Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology (CHIP)” with initial funding of

£2000 from the Higher Education Academy.

Courses Developed and Taught: University of Surrey

Conceptual and Historical Issues in Psychology (1st year lecture course)

Social Psychology (1st year and 2nd year lecture courses)

Doing Social Psychological Research (M.Sc. seminar)

Crafting Research (M.Sc. seminar)

History of Psychology (Undergraduate seminar)

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Psychology (Undergraduate seminar)

Courses Developed and Taught: University of Michigan

Objectivity and Sexual Difference (Graduate seminar)

Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual and Trans Psychology (Undergraduate lecture course)

Courses Developed and Taught: Yale University:

Science, Technology and Queer Theory (Undergraduate seminar )

Introduction to Lesbian and Gay Studies (Undergraduate lecture course)

Critical Lesbian and Gay Psychology (Undergraduate seminar)

Courses Developed and Taught: City University of New York

Research Methods and Design (Graduate seminar).

Social Psychology (Undergraduate lecture).

Psychology of Women (Undergraduate lecture).

Courses Developed and Taught: Stanford University

Lesbian and Gay Perspectives on Psychology (Undergraduate seminar).

Introductory Psychology (Undergraduate lecture).

B.Sc. Dissertation Students:

2003-2004: Myrto Bechrachi, Natalie Brown, Kirsten Lawton, Laura Rodriguez, Claire

Thurgood, Susan Wheeler.

2004-2005: 1, 2Carmen Buechel, Nigel Dicks, Emma Forsen, Darren Moore, 1Elizabeth

Robinson, Emma O’Connell, Lisa Wollman.

2005-2006: Stephen Ellis, Kitzy Kavita, Helen Lawrence,1,3 Claire McAlpine, Natasha McMillan, Lynsey Mahoney, Lucy Moffatt, Jonathan Silas.

2007-2008: Ruzina Begum, Kathryn Lumby, Anna Swain, Adam Worsdale.

2008-2009: Katharine Brent, 1Laura Fletcher, Laura Dalrymple, Jennifer Rose.

2009-2010: Andrea Charalambous, Christina Joannou, 1Dan O’ Hare, Leoni McRoberts,

Helen Roberts, 1, 4Zoe Walton.

2010-2011: Annie Brookman, Deborah Cordani, Claire Fellows, Katherine Hubbard, Stephanie Turner, Carole Walker.

2011-2012: Sheena Campbell, Fatima Ghaffar, Grant McQueen, Catherine O’Regan, Nila Watson.

M.Sc. Dissertation Students:

2002-3: Penelope Malliagrou-Andreou, 1Nicola Tee.

2003-4: Meral Aslan, Dimitra Pahis, George Zoitsas.

2004-5: 1Toni Brennan, Toni Borneo.

2005-6: 1Carmen Buechel, Andrew Russell.

2007-8: Jane-Marie Fatkin, Haromi Nagao, Yijing Wang.

2008-9: 1Y. Gavi Ansara, Claire Hamer, Antonius Katsouros.

2009-10: Melanie Burton, 1Sophie Mansfeld, Freyja Quick, 1Suzannah Tyler.

2010-11: Jane Layton, Ziba Sertbay.

2011-12: Natasha Bharj, Donna Haytor, Damon Timmons.

1 Published Dissertation

2 BPS Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section Undergraduate Prize Award.

3 BPS Wessex Branch Undergraduate Research Conference Best Presentation Award

4 Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, Mark Bradshaw Prize, and BPS Wessex Branch Tony Gale Memorial Prize.

Ph.D. Students:

Dan Shepperd (2002-2010). Friendships between gay men and heterosexual women:

Discourse analytic studies. (Self-funded).

Afrodita Marcu (2003-2007). Dehumanization of ethnic groups in Britain and Romania: Socio cognitive and ideological aspects. (Funded by ESRC studentship).

Toni Brennan (2005-2009). Charlotte Wolff: Then and now. (Self-funded).

Orla Parslow (Began 2008. Completion Expected 2013). Funded by Departmental Bursary).

Y. Gavi Ansara (Began 2009. Completion Expected 2012). Funded by Departmental Bursary.

Winner of the 2010 Higher Education Academy Award for Postgraduate Contributions to

the Teaching of Psychology.

Freyja Quick (Began 2010. Completion Expected 2013). Funded by Departmental Bursary.

Sebastian Bartos (Began 2011. Completion Expected 2014). Self-funded.

RESEARCH

Awards, Grants, and Prizes

2011 Is the gay manager special? Internal research support award. £1,200. Faculty of Arts and

Human Sciences, University of Surrey.

2010 Testing the Graphism Thesis in Psychology. £6,854. British Academy. (see Hegarty & Walton (in press). Perspectives on Psychological Science, for output).

2009 Effects of Graphs and Tables on the Impact of Social Psychological Research. British Psychological Society Studentship. £1,600.

2006 Overseas Conference Travel Grant. University of Surrey Research Support Fund. £660.

2005 Historical Patterns of Androcentric Explanation in Psychology. University of Surrey

School of Human Sciences. £7000. (See Hegarty & Buechel (2006) Review of General Psychology below for output).

2003 Engendering Academic-Community Partnerships between Lesbian and Gay Psychology

and Public Service Organisations. British Psychological Society. £3000 (See Shepperd

& Hegarty (2004) Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review below for output)

2003 Stigma Controllability: A Fresh Look at Attribution Theory. Economic and Social

Research Council. (RES-000-22-0288). £38,645. (See Hegarty & Golden (2008) Journal of Applied Social Psychology below for output).

2003 Research Grant for Archival Research in U.S.A. British Academy. £2,262. (See Hegarty (in press) Poison in the Gift below for output).

2001 CUNY. Professional and Staff Congress. Research Grant. $4,321. (See Hegarty, Pratto, & Lemieux (2004) Group Processes and Intergroup Relations below for output).

2000 American Psychological Foundation. Wayne F. Placek Investigator Development Award.

$3,000.

2000 CUNY. Professional and Staff Congress. Research Grant. $4,000.

2000 College of Staten Island. Dean's Summer Stipend Research Award. $2,000

2000 University of California, Santa Barbara, Center for the Study of Sexual Minorities in the

Military. (See Hegarty (2003) Journal of the History of Sexuality below for output).

1998 Stanford Humanities Center. Lesbian and Gay Studies Faculty Research Award.

1997 Stanford University, Office of the Dean of Humanities and Social Sciences. Graduate

Research Opportunities Award. $2000. (See Hegarty & Pratto, Journal of Personality and Social Psychology below for output).

1997 Stanford University, Institute for Research on Women and Gender. Dissertation

Fellowship. $1000

1991 University of Dublin, Department of Psychology Graduate’s Prize

1990 University of Dublin, Trinity College. University Scholarship

1988 University of Dublin, Trinity College, Entrance Exhibitionship

Books

Hegarty, P. (in press). Poison in the Gift: Alfred Kinsey, Lewis Terman, and the Sexual

Politics of Smart Men. Chicago: University of Chicago Press (Publication Expected

2012).

Edited Works

Hegarty, P. (in press). Beyond Kinsey: The Committee for Research on Problems of Sex and American Psychology. History of Psychology [Special Feature].

Hegarty, P., Barker, M., & Langdridge, D. (2011). Queer theory and psychology. Psychology and Sexualities, 2 (1), 1-107. [Special Issue].

Hegarty, P. (2007). The history of power. History of Psychology. 10 (2), 75-226. [Special Issue]

Hegarty, P. & Coyle, A. (2005). Special Feature on ‘Masculinity-Femininity: An Exception to a

Famous Dictum?’ by Anne Constantinople (1973). Feminism & Psychology, 15, 379-440. [Special Feature].

Articles and Book Chapters

Under Review

Ansara, Y.G., & Hegarty, P. (under review). Generic masculine language as misgendering:

Cisgenderism in feminist research and the importance of non-cisgenderist research methods. Feminism & Psychology.

Hagger-Johnson, G.E., Hegarty, P., Barker, M., & Richards, C. (under review). Public engagement, knowledge transfer and impact validity. Journal of Social Issues.

Hegarty, P. (in press). Beyond Kinsey: The Committee for Research on Problems of Sex and American Psychology. History of Psychology.

Hegarty, P. (under review). Explaining the difference between the British and the Irish; An

influence of category norms or national stereotypes? Irish Journal of Psychology.

Hegarty, P., Parslow, O., Ansara, Y.G., & Quick, F. (in press). Androcentrism. In M.

Ryan and N. Branscombe (Eds.), The Sage handbook on gender and psychology. London: Sage.

Hubbard, K., & Hegarty, P. (under review). Is heterosexuality essential? Beliefs about the

history of heterosexuality and homosexuality and their relationship to sexual prejudice.

Journal of Homosexuality.

Parslow, O., & Hegarty, P. (under review). Who cares? Lesbian caregivers in a heterosexual

world. Feminism & Psychology.

In Press

Ansara, Y.G., & Hegarty, P. (in press). Cisgenderism in psychology: Pathologizing and

misgendering children from 1999 to 2008. Psychology and Sexuality.

Bruckmüller, S., Hegarty, P., & Abele, A.E. (in press). Framing gender differences: Linguistic

normativity affects perceptions of gendered power and gender stereotypes. European Journal of Social Psychology.

Hegarty, P. (in press). Beyond Kinsey: The Committee for Research on Problems of Sex and American Psychology. History of Psychology.

Hegarty, P. (in press). Getting Miles away from Terman: Did the CRPS fund Catharine

Cox Miles UnSilenced Psychology of Sex? History of Psychology.

Hegarty, P., & Walton, Z. (in press). The consequences of predicting scientific impact in

psychology using journal impact factors. Perspectives on Psychological Science.

Horvath, M.A.H., Hegarty, P., Tyler, S., & Mansfield, S. (in press). “Lights on at the end

of the party:” Are lads’ mags mainstreaming dangerous sexism? British Journal of Psychology.

[In December 2011 this article prompted live radio interviews on BBC Radio 4 (Women’s Hour), BBC Surrey, BBC 5, BBC London, and SPIN 103.8 (Ireland), News Talk Radio (Ireland), newspaper coverage from The Daily Telegraph, The Daily Mirror, Metro (UK), Metro (USA), The Scottish Sun, Times of India, Huffington Post, The Guardian, Sunday Express, Daily Mail, The Morning Star, and discussion on the TV programme “The Wright Show.” A report on this paper on the online magazine was the magazines most popular story of 2011, was viewed by over 600,000 viewers and was ‘liked’ by over 90,000 people on the social media site Facebook].

2012

Brennan, T., & Hegarty, P. (2012). Charlotte Wolff’s contribution to bisexual history: A

reappraisal. Journal of the History of Sexuality, 21, 141-161.

Hegarty, P., & Walton, Z. (2012). The consequences of predicting scientific impact in

psychology using journal impact factors. Perspectives on Psychological Science, 7, 72-78.

2011

Buechel, C., & Hegarty, P. (2011). “What Blokes Want Lesbians to be”: On FHM and the

socialization of pro-lesbian attitudes among heterosexual-identified men. Feminism & Psychology, 21, 240-247.

Hegarty, P. (2011). Becoming curious: An introduction to the special issue on Queer Theory

and Psychology. Psychology and Sexuality, 2, 1-3.

Hegarty, P. (2011). Sexuality, normality, intelligence. What is queer theory up against?

Psychology and Sexuality, 2, 45-57.

Hegarty, P., & Lemieux, A. (2011). Who is the second (graphed) sex and why? The meaning of

order in graphs of gender differences. In T. W. Schubert. & A. Maass (Eds). Spatial Dimensions of Social Thought (pp. 325-349). Mouton de Gruyter: Berlin.

Hegarty, P., Watson, N., Fletcher, K., & McQueen, G. (2011). When gentlemen are first and

ladies are last. Effects of gender stereotypes on the order of romantic partners’ names.

British Journal of Social Psychology, 50, 21-35.

[This article prompted radio coverage on March 15th, 2010 including live interviews on BBC Radio 4’s Today Program, BBC Scotland, and BBC Wales; and newspaper coverage on March 15th and 16th 2010 in the United Kingdom (The Belfast Telegraph, The Daily Mail, The Daily Telegraph, The Evening Times, The Herald, The Scotsman, The Yorkshire Post), in Ireland (Evening Herald, Irish Examiner) and in India (Times of India)].

2010

Adams, J., Blair, K.L., Borrero-Bracero, N.I., Espin, O., Hayfield, N.J., Hegarty, P., Herrman-

Green, L.K., Hsu, M.-H., D., Maurer, O., Manalastas, E.J., McDermott, D.T., Shepperd, D. (2010). Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender psychology: An international conversation among researchers. Psychology & Sexuality, 1, 76-91.

Brennan, T., & Hegarty, P. (2010). Charlotte Wolff and lesbian history: Reconfiguring

liminality in exile. Journal of Lesbian Studies, 14, 338-358.

Brennan, T., & Hegarty, P. (2010). Man seeks man: Gay men’s profiles on a website as

subject production. Psychology of Sexualities Review, 1, 5-18.

Hegarty, P. (2010). A stone in the soup? Changes in sexual prejudice and essentialist

beliefs among British students in a class on LGBT psychology. Psychology and

Sexuality, 1, 3-20.

Hegarty, P., Lemieux, A., & McQueen, G. (2010). Graphing the order of the sexes:

Constructing, recalling, interpreting, and putting the self in gender difference graphs.

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 98, 375-391.

Hegarty, P., & Pratto, F. (2010). Interpreting and communicating the results of gender-related

research. In J. C. Chisler & D.R. McCreary (Eds.). Handbook of Gender Research in Psychology: Volume 1 (pp. 191-211). Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

Shepperd, D., Coyle, A., & Hegarty, P. (2010). Discourses of friendship between heterosexual

women and gay men: Mythical norms and an absence of desire. Feminism & Psychology, 20, 205-224.

2009

Brennan, T., & Hegarty, P. (2009). Magnus Hirschfeld, his biographies, and the possibilities

and boundaries of ‘biography’ as ‘doing history.’ History of the Human Sciences 22 (5),

24-46.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Toward an LGBT-affirmative informed paradigm for children who

break gender norms: A comment on Drummond et al. (2008) and Rieger et al. (2008).

Developmental Psychology, 45, 895-900.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Queerying lesbian and gay psychology’s coming of age: Was history just kid stuff? In M O’Rourke and N. Giffney (Eds.) The Ashgate Research Companion to

Queer Theory (514-544). Aldershot, UK: Ashgate.

2008

Hegarty, P. & Golden, A.M. (2008). Attributions about the controllability of stigmatized traits: Antecedents or justifications of prejudice? Journal of Applied Social Psychology, 38, 1023-1044.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Queer methodologies. In L.T. Moon (Ed.) Feeling queer or

queer feelings: Radical approaches to counseling sex, sexualities and genders (pp.125 140). London: Routledge.

2007

Barker, M., Hagger-Johnson, G., Hegarty, P., Hutchinson, C., & Riggs, D.W. (2007).

Responses from the Lesbian & Gay Psychology Section to Crossley’s Making sense of ‘barebacking.’ British Journal of Social Psychology, 46, 667-677.

Brennan, T., & Hegarty, P. (2007). Who was Magnus Hirshfeld and why do we need to know?

History and Philosophy of Psychology 9 (1), 12-28.

Buechel, C., & Hegarty, P. (2007). Modern prejudice at work: Effects of homonegativeity and perceived erotic value of lesbians and gay men on heterosexuals’ reactions to explicit and distrete couples. Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 8, 71-82.

Hegarty, P. (2007). Getting dirty: Psychology’s history of power. History of Psychology, 10,

75-91.

Hegarty, P. (2007). From genius inverts to gendered intelligence: Lewis Terman and the

power of the norm. History of Psychology, 10, 132-155.

Marcu, A., Lyons, E., & Hegarty, P. (2007). Dilemmatic human-animal boundaries in Britain and Romania: Post-materialist and materialist dehumanization. British Journal of

Social Psychology,46, 875-893.

McAlpine, C., Gill, A., & Hegarty, P. (2007). Why criminalize forced marriage? Islamophobia and assimilation-based justifications. Psychology of Women Section Review 9 (2), 15-

28.

Pratto, F., Korchmaros, J. N., & Hegarty, P. (2007). When race and gender go without saying.

Social Cognition, 25, 221-247.

Pratto, F., Hegarty, P. & Korchmairos, J. (2007). Who gets stereotyped? How

communication practices and category norms lead people to stereotype particular people and groups. In Y. Kashima, K. Fiedler, & P. Freytag (Eds.), Stereotype dynamics: Language-based approaches to stereotype formation, maintenance, and change (pp. 299-319). Mahwah, NJ: Lawrence Erlbaum Associates.

Hegarty, P. (2007). What comes after discourse analysis for LGBTQ psychology? In E.A. Peel and V.C. Clarke (Eds.) Out in psychology: LGBTQ Perspectives (pp. 41-57). Chichester: Wiley and Sons.

[This book won the APA Division 44 Book Award in 2007].

2006

Hegarty, P. (2006). Undoing androcentric explanations of gender differences: Explaining ‘the effect to be predicted’ Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 55, 861-867.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Where’s the sex in sexual prejudice? Lesbian and Gay Psychology

Review, 7, 264-275.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Prejudice against lesbians, gay men, bisexuals, and trans people: A matter of identity, behaviour, or both? Sexual Health Matters, 7, 37-40.

Hegarty, P. & Buechel, C. (2006). Androcentric reporting of gender differences in APA articles, 1965-2004. Review of General Psychology, 10, 377-389.

Hegarty, P., & Hardman, D. (2006). Speaking of sexual politics in psychology. The

Psychologist, 19, 27-29.

Hegarty, P. & Massey, S. (2006). Anti-homosexual prejudice…as opposed to what?: Queer

theory and the social psychology of anti-homosexual prejudice. Journal of Homosexuality, 52, 47-71.

Pratto, F., Glasford, D., & Hegarty, P. (2006). Weighing the prospects of war. Group

Processes and Intergroup Relations, 9, 219-233.

Tee, N. & Hegarty, P. (2006). Predicting opposition to the civil rights of trans persons in the United Kingdom. Journal of Community and Applied Social Psychology, 16, 70-80.

Hegarty, P., Buechel, C., & Ungar, S. (2006). Androcentric preferences for visuospatial representations of gender differences. In D. Barker-Plummer, R. Cox, & N. Swoboda (Eds.). Diagrammatic Representation and Inference: 4th International Conference, Diagrams 2006 (pp. 263-266). Berlin: Springer-Verlag.

2005

Barker, M., & Hegarty, P. (2005). Queer politics: Queer science. Psychology of Women Section

Review, 7 (2), 71-79.

Brown, N., & Hegarty, P. (2005). Attributing primary and secondary emotions to lesbians

and gay men: Denying a human essence or gender stereotyping? Lesbian and Gay

Psychology Review, 6, 14-20.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Harry Stack Sullivan and his chums: Archive fever in American psychiatry?

History of the Human Sciences, 18 (3), 35-53.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Kitzinger’s irony: Then and now. Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 6,

114-116 .

Hegarty, P. & Chryssocchoou, X. (2005). Why are our policies so much better than theirs?

Category norms and the generalization of policies between EU countries. Social

Cognition, 23, 491-529.

Hegarty, P. & Coyle, A. (2005). An undervalued part of the psychology of gender canon?

Reappraising Anne Constantinople’s ‘Masculinity-femininity: An exception to a famous dictum?’ Feminism & Psychology, 15, 379-383.

Robinson, E., & Hegarty, P. (2005). Premise-based category norms and the explanation of age differences. New Review of Social Psychology, 4,138-143.

2004

Hegarty, P. Was he Queer… or just Irish? (2004). Reading the Life of Harry Stack Sullivan.

Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 5, 103-108.

Hegarty, P., Pratto, F., & Lemieux, A. (2004). Heterocentric norms and heterosexist

ambivalences: Drinking in Intergroup Discomfort. Group Processes and Intergroup

Relations, 7, 119-130.

Hegarty, P., & Pratto, F. (2004). The differences that norms make: Empiricism, social

constructionism and the interpretation of group differences. Sex Roles: A Journal of Research, 50, 445-453.

2003

Hegarty, P. (2003). Homosexual signs and heterosexual silences: Rorschach studies of male

homosexuality from 1921 to 1967. Journal of the History of Sexuality, 12, 400-423.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Pointing to a crisis: What finger-length ratios tell us about the

construction of sexuality. Radical Statistics, Issue 83, 16-30.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Contingent Differences: An historical note on Evelyn Hooker’s use of

significance testing. Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 4, 3-7.

Hegarty, P. (2003). ‘More feminine than 999 men out of 1,000:’ The construction of sex roles

in psychology. In T. Lester (Ed.), Gender nonconformity, race and sexuality: Charting the connections (pp. 62-83). Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin Press.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Interpreting the Rorschach test: Poststructuralist histories of psychology and the production of knowledge about sexuality [Extended Abstract]. Proceedings of the 35th Annual Meeting of Cheiron: The International Society for the History of Behavioral

and Social Sciences (pp. 105-113). University of New Hampshire: Durham, NH.

2002

Hegarty, P. (2002). "It's not a choice, it's the way we're built:" Symbolic beliefs about sexual orientation in the United States and in Britain. Journal of Community and Applied Social

Psychology, 12, 153-166.

2001

Hegarty, P. (2001). ‘Real science’, deception experiments and the gender of my lab coat:

Toward a new laboratory manual for lesbian and gay psychology. International Journal of Critical Psychology, 1 (4) 91-108.

Hegarty, P., & Pratto, F. (2001). The effects of category norms and stereotypes on explanations

of intergroup differences. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 80, 723-735.

Hegarty, P., & Pratto, F. (2001). Sexual orientation beliefs: Their relationship to anti-gay

attitudes and biological determinist arguments. Journal of Homosexuality, 41, 121-135.

2000

Hegarty, P., & Chase, C. (2000). Intersexed activism, feminism, and psychology: Opening a

dialogue on theory, research, and practice. Feminism & Psychology, 10, 107-122.

[Partially reprinted in 2000 in Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, and in 2005 in I. Morland & A. Wilcox (Eds.) Queer Theory. Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan].

Pratto, F., & Hegarty, P. (2000). The political psychology of reproductive strategies.

Psychological Science, 11, 57-62.

Pratto, F., Liu, J.H., Levin, S., Sidanius, J., Shih, M., Bachrach, H., & Hegarty, P. (2000). Social

dominance and the legitimation of inequality across cultures. Journal of Cross Cultural Psychology, 31, 369-409.

[This paper received an Honorable Mention from the 2001 Otto Klineberg Intercultural and International Relations Award Committee of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues].

1999

Hegarty, P. (1999). Taking intersexuality seriously: A new challenge for lesbian and gay

psychology. Newsletter of the British Psychological Society Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section, Issue 3, 6-8.

Hegarty, P. (1999). Opening the black box: A reply to Rahman. Newsletter of the British

Psychological Society Lesbian and Gay Section. Issue 2, 11-14.

1997

Hegarty, P. (1997). Materializing the hypothalamus: A performative account of the ‘gay brain.’

Feminism & Psychology, 7, 355-372.

1996

Hegarty, P. (1996). Paradoxes of AIDS education: “Sex panic” and public health. In R.R.

Linden & C. Laub (Eds.), AIDS on the ground: Service learning in a global epidemic (pp.

89-97). Stanford, CA: Haas Center for Public Service.

Book Reviews

Hegarty, P. (2011). “Private practices: Harry Stack Sullivan, the science of homosexuality and

American Liberalism” by Naoko Wake. Teachers College Record. ID Number: 16490.

Hegarty, P. (2010). “Bodies in Doubt: An American History of Intersex” by Elizabeth Reis.

History and Philosophy of Psychology 12 (2) 90-92.

Hegarty, P. (2007). “Internationalizing the history of psychology” Edited by Adrian Brock. History and Philosophy of Psychology, 9 (1), 73-76.

Lenihan, P. & Hegarty, P. (2007). “Exploring transsexualism” by Colette Chiland.

Archives of Sexual Behavior,36, 119-120.

Hegarty, P., Pratto, F., & Crawford, M. (2002). “An unconventional family” by Sandra Bem.

Feminism & Psychology, 12, 120-124.

Hegarty, P. (2001). “Sciences of the flesh: Body and subject in psychoanalysis” by Dianne

Sadoff. Journal of the History of Sexuality, 10¸ 140-143.

Hegarty, P. (2000). “Ethnic and cultural diversity among lesbians and gay men”

Edited by Beverly Greene. Journal of Sex and Marital Therapy, 26, 114-115.

Hegarty, P. (1999). “Engendering AIDS:” Deconstructing sex, text, and epidemic” by Tamsin

Wilton. Journal of Lesbian Studies, 4 (3), 152-156.

Encyclopedia Entries

Hegarty, P. (2005). Evelyn Hooker. In D. A. Gerstner (Ed.) Routledge International

Encyclopedia of Queer Culture. New York: Routledge.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Harry Stack Sullivan. In M. Stein (Ed.). Encyclopedia of Lesbian, Gay, Bisexual, and Transgender History in America. New York: Charles Scribner and Sons.

Non-Reviewed Publications

Hegarty, P. (2007). Slaying the Witch King: Androcentrism in psychology, and the seven habits

of anti-normative people. Dialogue: The Official Newsletter of the Society for Personality

and Social Psychology, 22 (1), 6-7, 10, 30.

Hegarty, P., Barker, M., & McManus, J. (2006). Public statement on the recognition of same-sex

relationships. Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 7, 120-122.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Breaking the norm in the social psychology classroom. Higher Education Academy Psychology Network Newsletter, Issue 36, 3.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section. In The British Psychological Society

Annual Report 2005 (pp. 35-36). The British Psychological Society: Leicester.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section. In The British Psychological Society

Annual Report 2004 (pp. 36-37). The British Psychological Society: Leicester.

Shepperd, D., & Hegarty, P. (2004). Building partnerships between lesbian, gay and bisexual

psychologists and the lesbian, gay and bisexual voluntary sector. Lesbian and Gay

Psychology Review, 5, 127-128.

Hegarty, P. (2004). Getting past ‘divide and conquer’: A statement from the new chair of the

section. Lesbian and Gay Psychology Review, 5, 4-5.

Hegarty, P., Lenihan, P., Barker, M., & Moon, L. (2004). The Bailey affair: Psychology

perverted: A response.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Counterfactual conference cancelled: Organizers consider what might

have been. Dialogue of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology

Hegarty, P. (October 2001). Discovering, again, the meaning of ‘American.’ Newsletter of the

Center for Lesbian and Gay Studies.

Invited Addresses and Symposia

Hegarty, P. (2011). Finding a frontier in the taxonomic archive. Kinsey’s wasps and WASPS

revisited. Invited paper presented at the symposium ‘Stories from the Archive’ Wellcome Institute: UCL Centre for the History of Medicine.

Hegarty, P. (2011). From ideal husbands to inadequate wives. Gerrymandering marital

happiness with the man who made IQ. Invited paper presented at the symposium ‘Biography and Its Place in the History of Psychology and Psychiatry.’ Wellcome Institute: UCL Centre for the History of Medicine.

Hegarty, P. (2010). The history of sexuality. An invited two-part symposium chaired for the

Annual Meetings of the American Psychological Association. San Diego, CA, USA. Supported by APA Division 26: The Society for the History of Psychology.

Hegarty, P. (2010). Why can’t the gifted child be queer? Invited keynote presentation at the

Conference “The Age of Sex,” co-organized by Monash University, University College Dublin and the University of Limerick. Prato, Italy.

Hegarty, P. (2010). Invited presentation at the “Forgotten Alternatives” small group meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues and the European Association for Social Psychology. City University of New York Graduate Centre, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Get yourself in order: Cognitive theories of gender and

gendered selves. Invited talk at the 3rd Annual Southampton Symposium on Self and

Identity. University of Southampton, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Has biological determinism made the world gay-friendly?

Lessons from the United States and beyond. Invited address at the Annual General Meeting of the Sexual Diversity and Gender Issues Special Interest Group of the Psychological Society of Ireland. University College Dublin, Ireland.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Gentlemen first? Graphing the order of the sexes. Paper invited for the

European Science Foundation Funded Expert Meeting on Spatial Representation

and Social Cognition. Venice, Italy.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Alfred Kinsey, Lewis Terman, and the debate that made sex unsmart. Paper

invited for the Symposium on Social Science and the Construction of Modern Sexuality.

Yale University, New Haven, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2007). What comes after discourse for LGBTQ psychology? Paper presented at the launch of the volume Out in Psychology. Aston University, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Gay and lesbian issues. Invited presentation at the 7th Annual Teeside Sexual Health Conference, James Cook University Hospital. Middlesbrough, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2006). How to be normal. Presentation invited by the Student Psychology

Society. Warwick University, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Where is the sex in sexual prejudice? Invited paper at the conference

What’s Different about Sex? jointly organized by the HIV/Sexual Health Faculty of the Division of Clinical Psychology and the Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. London, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2005). What is psychology anyway? Invited paper at the conference ‘Building

Partnerships 3’ organized by the Lesbian and Gay Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Edinburgh, UK.

Pratto, F., Glasford, D.E., & Hegarty, P. (2004). Who's life is it anyway? How group interests

and group values shape what violence is considered moral. Invited paper at the conference ‘War and Peace: Social psychological approaches to armed conflicts and

humanitarian issues.’ Geneva, Switzerland.

Hegarty, P. (2004). Sex, science, silence, and self-report. Invited keynote address at the annual meetings of the International Academy for Sex Research. Helsinki, Finland.

Hegarty, P. (2004). Harry and his chums: How do they belong in the archives of American psychiatry? Keynote address at the ESRC Seminar on the future of feminist

technoscience. Department of Sociology, University of Surrey, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2004). Discerning lesbian and gay psychology: What comes after essentialism and constructionism? Invited presentation at the Annual General Meeting of the Lesbian and Gay Section of the British Psychological Society. University of Westminster, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2001). Coming out in times of war. Invited presentation on the events of September 11th 2001. University of Connecticut, USA

Invited Departmental and Program Colloquia and Seminars

2012 Department of Psychology, University of Canturbury, UK

2012 Department of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK

2012 Department of Psychology, Queen’s University Belfast, UK

2012 Department of Psychology, University of Berne, Switzerland

2011 Department of Psychology, University of Kent, UK.

2011 Program in Women’s Studies, State University of New York, Binghamton, USA.

2011 Program in Social and Personality Psychology, City University of New York University

Centre and Graduate School, USA.

2011 Department of Psychology, University of Connecticut, USA (Forthcoming).

2011 Department of Psychology, University of Huddersfield, UK

2010 Department of Psychology, University of Limerick, Ireland

2009 Department of Psychology, Royal Hollway, University of London, UK

2009 Department of Psychology, University of Geneva, Switzerland

2009 Department of Psychology, Kingston University, UK

2008 Department of Psychology, University of Jena, Germany

2008 Department of Psychology, University of Lancaster, UK

2008 Department of Psychology, University College Dublin, Ireland

2008 Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, UK

2007 Department of Psychology, University of Exeter, UK

2007 Centre for the Interdisciplinary Study of Sexuality and Gender in Europe, University of Exeter, UK

2007 Program in Women’s and Gender Studies, Yale University, USA

2006 Program in Social Psychology, University of California Santa Barbara, USA

2006 Program in Women’s Studies and Department of Philosophy; Pennsylvania State University, USA

2006 Department of Psychology, Pennsylvania State University, USA

2006 Program in Women’s Studies, University of Michigan, USA

2006 Program in Perceptual and Cognitive Psychology, University of Michigan, USA

2006 Program in Personality Psychology and Social Contexts, University of Michigan, USA

2006 Department of Psychology, University of Michigan, USA

2005 Department of Psychology, Southbank University, UK

2004 Department of Psychology, University of Sussex, UK

2003 Department of History/Queer Matters Group, King’s College, UK

2003 Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, UK

2003 Department of Psychology, University of Durham, UK

2003 Department of English/Queer Theories Group, University College Dublin, Ireland.

2002 Program in Social Psychology, University of Connecticut, USA

2002 Department of Psychology, SUNY Stony Brook, USA

2001 Larry Kramer Initiative for Lesbian and Gay Studies, Yale University, USA

2000 Social Psychology Group, New York University, USA

2000 Social Psychology Group, Princeton University, USA.

2000 Social and Personality Psychology Group, CUNY Graduate Center, USA.

1999 SPERI, Department of Psychology, University of Surrey, UK.

Academic Events Organized

2010 Reflexive science. Symposium chaired for the Meetings of the Social Psychology

Division of the British Psychological Society. University of Winchester, UK.

2009 The politics of sexuality: Legal rights, attitudes and activism. Symposium chaired at the

Meetings of the International Society for Political Psychology. Trinity College, Dublin,

Ireland.

2008 Normality. Symposium chaired for the Meetings of the Social Psychology Division of

the British Psychological Society. Royal Dublin Society. Ireland.

2007 The very modern homosexual. Symposium chaired for the first joint meetings of Cheiron: The International Society for the History of Behavioral and Social Sciences and the European Society for the History of the Human Sciences. University College Dublin, Ireland.

2005 What’s different about sex? A one-day joint conference of the Faculty of Sexual Health

organized by the Division of Clinical Psychology and the Lesbian and Gay Section of the British Psychological Society. Co-organized with Dr. Liz Shaw and Dr. Catherine Butler. London, UK.

2005 Queering social psychology: Shifting prejudice and identity. Symposium chaired for

the Meetings of the Social Psychology Division of the British Psychological Society. Edinburgh, UK.

2005 Building relationships. A one-day networking conference bringing together over fifty

psychologists and voluntary and community sector workers with shared interests in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender issues. University of Manchester, UK.

2005 History and opposition: Psychological Binaries and their Dominating Politics.

Symposium chaired for the British Psychological Society Quinquennial Conference,

Manchester, UK.

2004 Building partnerships. A one-day networking conference bringing together over thirty

psychologists and voluntary and community sector workers with shared interests in lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender issues. University of Surrey, UK.

2003 Beyond Condemnation-Tolerance Models of Heterosexism. Symposium chaited for the Meetings of the Social Psychology Division of the British Psychological Society. London School of Economics, UK.

2001. Sexuality and science and technology studies: Knowledge and reflexive practices.

Symposium organized for the Annual Meetings of the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology. University of York, UK.

2. Practical logic: Lesbian, gay, bisexual, and transgender theory in the social sciences. A year-long speaker series, Yale University, USA.

2000,1 Queer CUNY 1 and 2. Two undergraduate research conferences incorporating students

from twenty campuses co-organized and administered, City University of New York, USA.

Conference Presentations (First and Sole Author Presentations Only)

Hegarty, P. (2010). Thinking about sexist language research with readers of The Daily Mail.

Paper accepted for Presentation at the Annual Meetings of the Social Psychology Section

of the British Psychological Society. University of Winchester, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2010). Miles from Terman. Paper accepted for Presentation at the Annual

Meetings of the American Psychological Association. San Diego, CA, USA.

Hegarty, P. & Walton, Z. (2010). Two tests of the graphism thesis in psychology. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Edinburgh, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Successor to Darwin: Of wasps and homosexuals, the lovable monsters of the

Western frontier. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Edinburgh, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2009). Teaching Freud. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the British Psychological Society. Brighton, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Can biology make the United States gay-friendly? The social

constructionist alternative to attribution theory. Annual Meetings of the International

Society for Political Psychology. Paris, France.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Bugging the moderns with Kinsey’s sexology. ‘3 Societies 2008’ Meetings

of the British Society for the History of Science. Oxford, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Gentlemen first? Graphing the order of the sexes. ESCON Expert Meeting.

Venice, Italy.

Hegarty, P. (2008). The facts of life: Lewis Terman, Alfred Kinsey and the debate that made sex

unsmart. Paper presented at the small group meeting ‘Sexuality and the construction of

the social sciences.’ Department of History, Yale University, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2008). How did we all become normal? Meetings of the Social Psychology

Section of the British Psychological Society. Royal Dublin Society, Ireland.

Hegarty, P., & A.F. Lemieux (2008). Graph men first because they are more normal. Meetings

of the Social Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Royal Dublin Society, Ireland.

Hegarty, P. (2008). Why doesn’t the gifted adolescent masturbate? Paper presented at the

Annual Meetings of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Oxford, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2007). Explaining the ‘other’ of group differences. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Social Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. University of Kent, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2007). Lewis Terman, Alfred Kinsey and the heteronormativity of modern rationality. First Joint Meting of the European Society for the History of the Human Sciences (26th Annual meeting) and Cheiron: The International Society for the History of the Behavioral and Social Sciences (39th Annual Meeting). University College Dublin, Ireland.

Hegarty, P. (2007). The liminality of Catharine Cox Miles. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. Oxford, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Verbal and visuospatial evidence of androcentrism in forty years of psychological research on gender differences. Annual meetings of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology. Philadelphia, PA, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Documenting and undoing androcentric explanations of gender differences.

Paper presented at the bi-annual meetings of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. Long Beach, CA, USA.

Hegarty, P., Buechel, C., & Ungar, S. (2006). Androcentric preferences for visuospatial representations of gender differences. Paper presented at Diagrams 2006. Stanford University, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2006). Gendered intelligence and inverted genius: Lewis Terman and the power of norms. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the History and Philosophy of Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society. York, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Another generation of straight kids later. Paper presented at the conference

‘Queer Zagreb 3: The Heteronormativity of Childhood.’ Zagreb, Croatia.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Is homophobia anything like racism? A false belief that moderates old-

fashioned heterosexism. Paper presented at the Annual Meetings of the Social Psychology Section of the British Psychological Society Annual Conference. Edinburgh, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Thinking categorically about the Euroepan Union (EU): Prototypes and

norms. Poster presented at the Annual Meetings of the European Association of Experimental Social Psychology. Würzburg, Germany.

Hegarty, P. (2005). Undoing androcentric explanations of gender differences: Explaining the effect to be predicted. Psychology of Women Section of the British Psychological Society Annual Conference. Huddersfield, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2005). The gender of psychological genius: Degeneracy, homosexuality and giftedness in Lewis Terman’s research on gifted children. British Psychological Society Annual Conference. Manchester, UK.

Hegarty, P. & Golden, A.M. (2004). Attributions about stigmatized traits and attitudes towards

stigmatized groups: An uncertain causal link? Social Psychology Section of the British

Psychological Society Annual Conference. Liverpool, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2004). What do finger-lengths tell us about the construction of sexuality? Psychology of Women Section of the British Psychological Society Annual Conference.

Brighton, UK.

Hegarty, P. & Hodges, I. (2003). Psychology after Foucault. Paper presented at the conference ‘Sexuality after Foucault.’ Center for the Study of Sexuality & Culture, University of

Manchester, UK.

Hegarty, P., Pratto, F., & Lemieux, A. (2003). Heterosexist norms and heterosexist ambivalence:

Drinking in Discomfort. Annual Meetings of the Social Psychology Division of the British Psychological Society. London, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Archive inferno! The production of ignorance about the American Freud.

Paper presented at the International Conference of Critical Psychology, University of Bath, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Interpreting the Rorschach test: Poststructuralist Histories of Psychology

and the Production of Knowledge about Sexuality. Paper presented at the annual meeting

of Cheiron: The International Society for the History of the Behavioral Sciences. Durham, NH, USA.

Hegarty, P. (2003). Pleasure and danger in psychological testing. Paper presented at the

conference “Sexualities, cultures and identities: New directions in gay, lesbian, and queer studies.” Center for Gender and Women’s Studies. University of Newcastle Upon Tyne, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2002). Gender construction and test construction: Masculine and feminine subjects

and queer abjects in early psychometrics. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the UK National Women’s Studies Network. Belfast, Ireland.

Hegarty, P. (2002). Reading the spaces between lines of ink: Historicizing ignorance about

homosexuality in American Rorschach research. Annual Meetings of the European Association for the Study of Science and Technology. York, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2002). "It's not a choice, it’s the way we're built:" Symbolic beliefs about sexual

orientation in Britain and the United States. Annual Meetings of the British Psychological Association. Blackpool, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2001). "It's not a choice, it’s the way we're built:" Symbolic beliefs about sexual

orientation in Britain and the United States. Poster presented at the annual meetings of the Social Psychology Division of the British Psychological Society. University of Surrey, UK.

Hegarty, P. (2000). Academic psychology in the corporate university: No room for sexual

politics? Paper presented at the conference "The corporate university and critical thought." CUNY Graduate Center, New York, NY, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (2000). The "nature" of sexual orientation. Biology, immutability and tolerance.

Bi-annual Meetings of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. Minneapolis, Minnesota, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. & Pratto, F. (1999). Effects of norms and stereotypes on explanations. Research

presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, St. Louis, Missouri, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P., & Pratto, F. (1998). Gaps within a gender: Do gay men need to be explained?

Annual meetings of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology. Lexington, Kentucky, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1998). Explaining empirical differences between social groups. Paper presented at

the annual meetings of the Social Psychology Division of the British Psychological Society. University of Canterbury, Kent, UK.

Hegarty, P. (1998). The interpretation of genes. How attitudes and the construction of evidence

influence the evaluation of genetic claims about stigmatized traits. Paper presented at the conference “Cultural Psychology.” Stanford University, Stanford, CA.

Hegarty, P. (1998). Heterosexual behavioral disconfirmation of stereotypes about gay men and

lesbians. Poster presented at the annual meetings of the American Psychological Association. San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1998). Disconfirmation of stereotypes: Heterosexual behavior and retrospective

recall. Paper presented at the annual meetings of the Western regional division of the Society for the Scientific Study of Sexuality. Honolulu, HI, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1997). Heterosexual tolerance and beliefs about sexual orientation: A

correlational analysis. Poster presented at the annual meetings of the Western Psychological Association. Seattle, WA, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1997). The genetics of obesity: Attributional and symbolic explanations of who

buys it. Paper presented at the Stanford-Berkeley Social and Personality Psychology Symposium. University of California, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1997). Passing (in) the Turing test: Queer thoughts on cognitive and gender

performance. Paper presented at the Lewis and Clark Gender Studies Conference. Lewis and Clark College, Portland, OR, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1996). Paradoxes of AIDS education: Sex panic and public health. Paper

presented at the conference “Managing Desire: HIV Prevention strategies for the 21st century.” University of California, Berkeley, CA, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1995). Seductive Details Re-examined: The effects of interesting details on

learning from text. Annual meetings of the American Educational Research Association, San Francisco, CA, U.S.A.

Hegarty, P. (1992). Mathematics, Why so unfamiliar? Paper presented at the annual student

congress of the Irish Psychological Society, Cork, Ireland.

................
................

In order to avoid copyright disputes, this page is only a partial summary.

Google Online Preview   Download