SELECT PUBLICATIONS
Chapters
Prusaczyk, E., Earle M., Choma, B, L., & Calogero, R. (2024). An objectification theory lens for understanding compliance with COVID-19 safety measures. In Miller, M. K. (Eds.), The Social Science of the COVID-19 Pandemic: A Call to Action for Researchers. Oxford University Press: Oxford, United Kingdom.
W., Malcolm, E., Fisher., & Prusaczyk, E. (2022). Multivocational by choice: What difference does it make? In Watson, J., & Santos, N (Eds). Tentmakers. Oregon, OR, USA: Pickwick.
Hodson, G., & Prusaczyk, E. (2021). Cavalier humor beliefs: Dismissing jokes as “just jokes” facilitates prejudice and internalizes negativity among targets. In Strick, M., & Ford, T. E. (Eds.), The Social Psychology of Humor. Oxon, UK: Routledge.
Journal Articles
Puffer. H., Hodson, G., & Prusaczyk, E. (2024). Attitudes toward women’s participation in sex work: Opportunity for agency or harmful exchange? Archives of Sexual Behavior.
Hodson, G., & Prusaczyk, E. (2023). A cautionary note on interpreting research findings in the presence of statistical suppression. Journal of Social Psychology.
Malcolm, W., Fisher, E., & Prusaczyk, E. (2021). The complexity of assessing ministry-specific satisfaction and stress. Journal of Psychology and Theology.
Earle, M.*, Prusaczyk, E.*, Choma, B, L., & Calogero, R. (2021). Compliance with COVID-19 safety measures: A test of an objectification theory model. Body Image, 37, 6-13.
*Shared first authourshipPrusaczyk, E., Earle, M., & Hodson, G. (2021). A brief nudge or education intervention delivered online can increase willingness to order a mushroom-beef burger. Food Quality and Preference, 87, 104045.
Earle, M., Hoffarth, R., Prusaczyk, E., MacInnis, C., & Hodson, G. (2021). A multilevel analysis of LGBT rights support across 77 countries: The role of primary and secondary contact and country laws. British Journal of Social Psychology.
- Prusaczyk, E., & Hodson, G. (2020). “To the moon, Alice”: Cavalier humor beliefs and women’s reactions to aggressive and belittling sexist jokes. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 88, 103973.
Prusaczyk, E., & Hodson, G. (2020). The roles of political conservatism and binary gender beliefs in predicting prejudices toward gay men and people who are transgender. Sex Roles, 82, 438-446.
Prusaczyk, E., & Hodson, G. (2019). Re-examining left-right differences in abortion opposition: The roles of sexism and shared reality. Testing, Psychometrics, Methodology in Applied Psychology, 26, 431-445.
Rothwell, V., Hodson, G., & Prusaczyk, E. (2019). Why pillory Hillary? Testing the endemic sexism hypothesis regarding the 2016 U.S. election. Personality and Individual Differences, 138, 106-108.
Prusaczyk, E., & Hodson, G. (2018). Left-right differences in abortion policy support in America: Clarifying the role of sex and sexism in a nationally representative 2016 sample. Personality and Individual Differences, 127, 22-25.
Prusaczyk, E., & Choma, B, L. (2018). Skin tone surveillance, depression, and life satisfaction in Indian women: Colour-blind racial ideology as a moderator. Body Image, 27, 179-186.
Choma, B. L., & Prusaczyk, E. (2018). The effects of system justifying beliefs on skin-tone surveillance, skin-color dissatisfaction, and skin-bleaching behavior. Psychology of Women Quarterly, 42, 162-177.