Invited
Symposia, Colloquia, Conference Presentations

  1. Nisbett, R.E., Borgida, E., Crandall, R., & Reed, H. (1975). Popular induction:  Information is not necessarily informative.  Paper presented at the 12th Carnegie-Mellon Symposium on Cognition, Pittsburgh, PA.
  2. Borgida, E. (1976).  Character testimony in the law:  What kind of evidence is informative?  Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  3. Borgida, E., Swann, W.B., Jr., & Campbell, B. (1977).  Attitudes and behavior:  The specificity hypothesis revisited.  Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco.
  4. Borgida, E., Oskner, P., & Tompkins, A. (1978).  Perception of rape victims:  The impact of evidentiary reform.  Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto.
  5. Borgida, E., Ludden, C., & Bush, G. (1978).  Evidentiary reform of rape laws.  Paper presented at the meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto.
  6. Borgida, E. (1978). Discussant, 1978 Minnesota Symposium on Child Psychology:  Cognition, affect and social relations:  Developmental perspectives.
  7. Borgida, E., Locksley, A., & Brekke, N. (1979). Cognitive and evaluative aspects of sex stereotyping.  Paper presented at the Symposium on Personality and Cognition, Princeton University.
  8. Borgida, E. & Ludden, C. (1979). The rape victim in the legal system.  Paper presented at the Criminal Justice Research and Evaluation Conference.  Sponsored by the Governor’s Crime Control Planning Board, State of Minnesota.  (Reprinted in Proceedings of the 1979 Research and Evaluation Conference on Criminal Justice in Minnesota.  Published by the Crime Control Planning Board, State of Minnesota, 1980.)
  9. Borgida, E. & Brekke, N. (1980). Toward a process analysis approach to jury deliberation.  Symposium on Psychology and Law: Jury Research. Law and Society Association annual meeting.  University of Wisconsin, Madison.
  10. Borgida, E. & Park, R. (1980). The entrapment defense and jury decision making.  Paper presented at the symposium on “Contemporary research on the American criminal jury” at the American Society of Criminology meetings, San Francisco.
  11. DeBono, K.G. & Borgida, E. (1982). Hypothesis-testing and the role of expert knowledge.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  12. Howard-Pitney, B. & Borgida, E. (1982). Personal involvement and the generalizability of salience effects.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  13. Gangestad, S. & Borgida, E. (1982). Intuitive prediction and intuitive regression:  Accounting for predictor information.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  14. Borgida, E. (1982). Moderator, Invited symposium on “Social Cognition and Social Judgment.”  Annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  15. Borgida, E. (1982). Discussant, Symposium on “Social psychology in the courtroom:  Empirical investigations of trial practice attorney mythology.”  Annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  16. Penrod, S. & Borgida, E. (1982). Social cognition and the law of evidence.  Paper presented at the International Conference on Psychology and Law, University College, Swansea, England.
  17. Borgida, E. (1982). Invited Address:  The Minnesota Women Lawyers Association, “The psychological study of courtroom behavior,” St. Paul, MN.
  18. Borgida, E., & DeBono, K.G. (1983). Cameras in the courtroom.  Symposium on perceptions of law, justice, and the courts.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Denver.
  19. Brekke, N., Borgida, E., & Mensing, D.K. (1983). Expert scientific testimony in rape trials.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  20. Borgida, E. (1983). Social science research and institutional design:  A legal reform case. Invited Colloquium:  Technology, Institutions and Efficiency in the American Economy Study Group, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis. MN. 
  21. Borgida, E., Brekke, N., & Frazier, P. (1983). Syndrome evidence in court.  Paper presented at the meeting of the American Psychology-Law Society, Chicago.
  22. Borgida, E. (1983). Cable TV program:  Cameras in the courtroom:  Effects on witness. Invited Symposium:  William Mitchell College of Law, St. Paul, MN.   
  23. Young, J. & Borgida, E. (1984). Personal agendas and the influence of self interest on voting behavior.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  24. Borgida, E. (1984).  Discussant, Symposium on “Gender and public policy.” Annual meetings of the American Psychological Association, Toronto.
  25. Aldrich, J.H., Borgida, E., & Sullivan, J.L. (1984).  On the nature and role of long-term attitudes in public opinion and political behavior.  Paper presented at the 1984 annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC.
  26. Borgida, E. (1984). Invited Participant, Jurist in Residence Program on Expert Testimony, School of Law, University of Minnesota.
  27. Omoto, A.M. & Borgida, E. (1985).Ethnic stereotyping.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  28. Swim, J., Borgida, E., & Morse, C. (1985). Televising rape trials:  Public opinion and legal policy.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  29. Howard-Pitney, B., Borgida, E., & Omoto, A.M. (1985). Personal involvement and perceptual salience:  A cognitive response analysis.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  30. Borgida, E. (1985). Moderator, Invited Address by Thomas Cook.  Recent attacks on well-known validity distinctions:  An appreciative rejoinder.  Annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  31. Borgida, E., Aldrich, J.H., & Sullivan, John L. (1985). Thinking about politics.  Paper presented in the symposium on “Advances in Political Psychology” at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Los Angeles.
  32. Morier, D. & Borgida, E. (1986). Examining the robustness of conjunctive reasoning.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  33. Brekke, N. & Borgida, E. (1986). On the admissibility of rape trauma syndrome evidence.  Invited Symposium on Jury Research at the annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Chicago.
  34. Borgida, E. (1986). “Waltzing before a blind audience” and other political tales.  Presentation at the Fifth Annual Conference on Social Cognition, Nags Head Conference Center, Kill Devil Hills, NC.
  35. Borgida, E. & Frazier, P. (1986).  The status of rape trauma syndrome evidence in court.  Presentation to the Hennepin County (Minnesota) Attorney’s Sexual Assault Task Force, Minneapolis.
  36. Borgida, E. & Omoto, A.M. (1986).  Racial stereotyping and prejudice:  The role of personal involvement.  Paper presented at the Invited Symposium on “Motivated social cognition” at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  37. Frazier, P. & Borgida, E. (1986).  Juror common understanding and the admissibility of rape trauma syndrome evidence in court.  Paper presented at the Invited Symposium on Jury Decision Making at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  38. Swim, J., Borgida, E., & Maruyama, G. (1986).  Sex discrimination:  A meta-analysis of the literature.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  39. Borgida, E. (1986).  Panel on “Pregnancy and health risks:  How to intervene.” Discussant at the XXI Minnesota Symposium on Child Psychology. Minneapolis.
  40. Aldrich, J., Borgida, E., Rahn, W.M., & Sullivan, J.L. (1987).  Paper presented at the Invited Symposium on “Political Information Processing” at the annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, San Francisco.
  41. Aldrich, J., Borgida, E., Sullivan, J., Thomsen, C., & Young, J. (1987).  Paper presented at the Invited Symposium on “Experimental Studies on Political Cognition” at the annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Chicago.
  42. Young, J., Thomsen, C., Borgida, E., Sullivan J., & Aldrich, J. (1987).  The impact of chronic and temporary accessibility of self-interest on memory for political information.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  43. Borgida, E., Young, J., Thomsen, C., Sullivan, J., & Aldrich, J. (1987).  Chronic and temporary construct accessibility of self-interest in political reasoning.  Paper presented at the Invited Symposium on “Political attitudes, political cognition, and political persuasion” at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, New York.
  44. Borgida, E. (1987).  Using expert witnesses:  Analysis and effects of testimony.  Invited Address at the Project Impact Conference II:  Interests of the Child and Interests of the Public—Child and Adolescent Sexual Abuse and the Legal System.  Sponsored by the Government Training Service, State of Minnesota, Brainerd, MN.
  45. Borgida, E. (1988).  The uses of expert psychological testimony in court:  A social psychological perspective.  Invited Paper presented at the 1988 meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  46. Borgida, E. (1988).  Invited consultant, American Psychological Association, Amicus curiae project, Hopkins v. Price Waterhouse, U.S. Supreme Court.
  47. Thomsen, C.J. & Borgida, E. (1988).  Forming impressions of intergroup rival and allies:  More on the flexibility of the social perceiver.  Invited symposium on the “Motivational Determinants of Intergroup Attitudes.”  Annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Atlanta.
  48. Borgida, E. & Rahn, W. (1988).  Is voter decision-making candidate centered?  Invited symposium on “Experimental studies of political learning and persuasion.”  Annual meeting of the American Political Science Association, Washington, DC.
  49. Frazier, P. & Borgida, E. (1988).  Multiple victimization experiences in rape victims.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Atlanta.
  50. Borgida, E., Simmons, R.G., Conner, C., & Lombard, K. (1988).  The Minnesota study of unrelated living donors.  Paper presented at the International Conference on Psychological Research on Organ Donation.  Kansas State University, Manhattan, KS.
  51. Borgida, E., Conner, C., Lengnick, S., & Lombard, K. (1989).  Understanding kidney donation:  Donor-recipient closeness and decision-making processes.  Paper presented at the meeting of the Midwestern Sociological Society, St. Louis.
  52. Gresham, A., Borgida, E., Swim, J., French, S., & Bull, M.A. (1989).  Juror common understanding of child sexual abuse and children as witnesses.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  53. Borgida, E. (1990).  Predicting and understanding living kidney donation.  Invited paper at the Seventh Annual Claremont Symposium on Applied Social Psychology:  “Helping and being helped in the real world,” The Claremont Colleges, Claremont, CA.
  54. Borgida, E. (1990).  Expert testimony and juries:  Educational or prejudicial?  Invited symposium on the Psychology of Jury Decision Making, American Association for the Advancement of Science, New Orleans.
  55. Bull, M.A., Borgida, E., Gresham, A.W., & Swim, J. (1990).  Expert testimony in child sexual abuse cases: An empirical investigation of partisan orientation.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  56. Borgida, E. & Thomsen, C.J. (1990).  Social cognition and politics:  Some thoughts on the role of priming and cognitive accessibility in political reasoning.  Invited paper, International Society of Political Psychology, Washington, DC.
  57. Kojetin, B.A., Borgida, E., & Snyder, M. (1990).  Understanding recycling attitudes, habit, and behavior.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Boston.
  58. Miene, P.K., Park, R., Borgida, E., & Anderson, J. (1990).  The evaluation of hearsay evidence.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Boston.
  59. Borgida, E., Conner, C., & Manteufel, L. (1990).  Living kidney donation:  Testing the theory of planned behavior.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Boston.
  60. Borgida, E. (1990).  Invited participant, First European Conference on Social Cognition.  Max-Planck Institute for Psychology, Munich, West Germany.
  61. Swim, J., Borgida, E., & McCoy, K. (1991).  The impact of a child’s videotaped testimony on juror and jury decision making.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco.
  62. Borgida, E. (1991).  Living kidney donation and the “gift of life”:  A social psychological perspective.  Invited Address, Annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  63. Gresham, A.W., Bull, M., Regan, P.C., & Borgida, E. (1991).  The influence of expert testimony and child witness demeanor on jury decision making.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  64. Lengnick, S., Borgida, E., & Kojetin, B. (1991).  Value relevance in commitment to donating a kidney.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  65. Miene, P.K., Borgida, E., & Park, R.  (1991). The psychology of hearsay evidence,.  Invited paper presented at the Hearsay Reform Conference, School of Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN.
  66. Borgida, E. (1991).  Invited Colloquium on news media coverage of the courts, School of Journalism and Mass Communication, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
  67. Kovera, M.B., Levy, R., Borgida, E., & Penrod, S. (1992).  Expert witnesses in child sexual abuse cases:  Effects of expert testimony and cross examination.  Paper presented at the 1992 meeting of the American Psychology-Law Society, San Diego.
  68. Borgida, E. (1992).  Invited Lecture:  The use of research on sex stereotyping in discrimination litigation.  Minnesota Chapter of the National Employment Lawyers Association, Minneapolis.
  69. Regan, P.C., Otto, A.L., Lengnick, S.L., Manteufel, L., Penrod, S.D., & Borgida, E. (1992).  The impact of direct experience with electronic media coverage on jurors’ attitudes.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  70. Lavine, H., Thomsen, C., Borgida, E, & Sullivan, J.L. (1992).  A test of the single versus dual evaluation model of attitude accessibility.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  71. Rudman, L., Gonzales, M.H., & Borgida, E. (1992).  Mishandling the gift of life:  Noncompliance in renal transplant recipients.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  72. Kovera, M.B., & Borgida, E. (1992).  Children on the witness stand:  A persuasion analysis of jurors’ perceptions.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  73. Borgida, E. (1992).  Invited Symposium:  Television and the legal process.  Forum sponsored by the Silha Center for the Study of Media Ethics and Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis.
  74. Borgida, E., (1992).  Invited Speaker, Children as witnesses in court:  The use and abuse of psychological data.  NATO Advanced Study Institute on “The child witness in context:  Cognitive, social and legal perspectives,” Lucca, Italy.
  75. Borgida, E., Penrod, S., Manteufel, L., Lengnick, S., Otto, A., & Regan, P. (1992).  The effects of news media in the courtroom:  A field experiment. Invited Symposium on Media and the Law, The Third European Conference of Law and Psychology.  Oxford University, Oxford, England.
  76. Borgida, E., Lavine, H., Thomsen, C.J, & Sullivan, J.L. (1992).  Directional and motivational effects of self-interest on attitudes and policy preferences.  Invited Symposium on “Self-interest and judgment”.  Annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  77. Borgida, E. & Rudman, L.A. (1992).  Master status and the Swedish Bikini Team:  Out of the courtroom and into the laboratory.  Invited symposium on sexual harassment research, Society for Experimental Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX.
  78. Borgida, E. (1993).  Expert testimony in sexual harassment cases.  Invited address to the American Bar Association’s Section of Labor and Employment Law, Committee on Employee Rights and Responsibilities, Palm Beach Gardens, FL.
  79. Borgida, E. (1993).  Social science on trial:  On the use of research on sex stereotyping and sexual harassment in court. The Raymond G. Johnson Memorial Lectureship in Psychology, Macalester College, St. Paul, MN. 
  80. Lavine, H., Sullivan, J.L., Borgida, E., & Thomsen, C.J. (1993).  Revisiting the issue salience – attitude accessibility hypothesis.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Boston.
  81. Manteufel, L.L., Smith, B.C., Borgida, E., & Penrod, S.D. (1994).  Cameras in the courtroom:  Does Court TV educate the public?  Paper presented at the Biennial Conference of the American Psychology–Law Society, Santa Fe, NM.
  82. Robertson, B.A., Rudman, L.A., & Borgida, E. (1994).  Sexual harassment in academia:  Procedural justice vs. socialization issues in dispute resolution.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  83. Brock, J.M. & Borgida, E. (1994).  Q-sort methodology yields two underlying factors of family-expressed prejudice.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  84. Silverman, J.L., Haney, B.A., Gonzales, M.H., Borgida, E., & Rudman, L.A. (1995).  A longitudinal study of noncompliance with medical regimens:  The case of kidney transplantation.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, New York.
  85. Mobilio, L.J. & Borgida, E. (1995).  “If only’s” and “should have’s”:  A study of counterfactual thinking and judgments of victim blame.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  86. Burgess, D. & Borgida, E. (1995).  Sexual harassment:  An experimental test of sex-role spillover theory.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.  
  87. Haney, B.A., Borgida, E., & Farr, J. (1995).  Project Public Achievement:  Assessing the impact of an experiential civic education.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Society for Political Psychology, Washington, DC.
  88. Rudman, L.A., Borgida, E., & Seales, L. (1995).  Set/Reset in action:  Undermining the behavioral consequences of priming sexism in men.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, New York.
  89. Manteufel, L.L., Borgida, E., & Penrod, S.D. (1995).  The media, the law, and cameras in court:  Assessing media effects of the OJ Simpson trial on knowledge of and attitudes about the justice system.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Toronto, Canada.
  90. Borgida, E. (1995).  Invited graduate student workshop on “Gender stereotypes and the courts.”  Annual meeting of the Law and Society Association, Toronto, Canada.
  91. Kovera, M.B., Borgida, E., & Gresham, A.W. (1996).  The impact of child witness preparation and expert testimony on juror decision making.  Paper presented at the 1996 Mid-Year Conference of the American Psychology-Law Society, Hilton Head, SC.
  92. Burgess, D. & Borgida, E. (1996).  Sex-role spillover theory:  Scientific and legal issues.  Paper presented at the SPSSI 60th Anniversary Conference:  Social issues theory, research and action, Ann Arbor, MI.
  93. Borgida, E. (1996).  Gender stereotyping, sexual harassment, and the law.  Invited paper at the annual meeting of the Minnesota Psychological Association, Minneapolis.
  94. Borgida, E. (1996).  On the significance of Lewin’s other dictum: Nothing’s so theoretical as a good practical problem.  Invited symposium paper at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, San Francisco.
  95. Borgida, E. (1997).  Giving psychology away?  The case of gender stereotyping and sexual harassment.  Invited paper, annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  96. Oyamot, C.M., Wyman, M.A., & Borgida, E. (1997).  A comparison of psychological and national choice models in the prediction of xenophobic attitudes.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  97. Borgida, E. & Burgess, D. (1997).  Refining sex-role spillover theory: Psychological and legal implications.  Invited symposium, “Empirical and theoretical developments in the psycholegal study of workplace sexual harassment.”  American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  98. Hunt, J. & Borgida, E. (1998).  Beyond leading questions: Modifications in eyewitness interviews.  Paper presented at the American Psychology – Law Society, Redondo Beach, CA.
  99. Burgess, D. & Borgida, E. (1998). How perceiver gender and occupational context shape perceptions of sexual harassment.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, San Francisco.
  100. Hunt, J. S. and Borgida, E. (1999).  Developmental differences in witnessess’ responses to modifications.  Invited symposium, Society for Research in Child Development, Biennial Meeting, Albuquerque, NM.
  101. Borgida, E., Dresel, L., Jackson, M., Riedel, E., and Sullivan, J. L. (1999).  A tale of two towns: Assessing the role of political resources in a community electronic network.  Paper presented at the annual meeting of the International Society for Political Psychology, Amsterdam, Netherlands.
  102. Ammazzalorso, H.L. and Borgida, E. (1999).  Expressing positive intergroup attitudes: The unlikely host of prejudiced reactions. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Boston.  
  103. Borgida, E., Sullivan, J.L., Jackson, M., Riedel, E., & Gangl, A.  (2000). Internet access and civic life: A research agenda for political and social psychology.  Invited symposium on Political Social Psychology, 12th annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, June 8-11, 2000, Miami Beach, FL.
  104. Sinclair, H.C., Borgida, E., & Chalmers, C. (2000).  Assessing legal gatekeeping of psychological science in sexual harassment cases.  Paper presented at the first annual meeting of the Society of Personality and Social Psychology, Feb. 3-6, 2000, Nashville, TN.
  105. Hunt, J.S. & Borgida, E. (2000).  Getting ready to talk to the cops: Expectations about investigative interviews.  Paper presented at the American Psychology- Law Society 2000 Biennial Conference, March 9-12, 2000, New Orleans.
  106. Hunt, J.S. & Borgida, E. (2000).  Do expectations about conversation rules affect eyewitness testimony?  Paper presented at the American Psychology- Law Society 2000 Biennial Conference, March 9-12, 2000, New Orleans.
  107. Borgida, E. (2000). Invited Faculty Workshop, University of Minnesota School of Law.
  108. Borgida, E. (2000). Discussant for Invited Symposium on “Sex of expert witness: An empirical and experiential view.” Biennial conference of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), Minneapolis, June 16-18.
  109. Sinclair, H.C., Borgida, E., Polovitz, J., & Tichauer, J. (2000).”Special relationships”: Predictors of sentences in stalking cases. Poster presented at the 2000 SPSSI Convention, June 16-18, 2000, Minneapolis.
  110. Sinclair, H.C., Borgida, E., Polovitz, J., & Tichauer, J. (2000).”Special relationships”: Predictors of sentences in stalking cases. Poster presented at the 2000 SPSSI Convention, June 16-18, 2000, Minneapolis.
  111. Tichauer, J.L., Sinclair, H.C., Borgida, E., & Polovitz, J. (2000). Stalking stereotypes and their impact on judgments of stalking situations. Poster presented at the 2000 SPSSI Convention, June 16-18, 2000, Minneapolis.
  112. Gangl, A., Jackson, M., Riedel, E., Borgida, E., Sullivan, J.L., & Oxendine, A. (2000). Bridging the digital divide: The role of political capital in community electronic networks. Paper presented at the 23rd annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Seattle, July 1-4, 2000.
  113. Borgida, E. (2001). Gender stereotyping: Implications for theory development and discrimination law. Invited Symposium on “Social psychology and law: Current trends, research, and influences on litigation. 2nd annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX, February 1-3, 2001.
  114. Borgida, E. & Sinclair, H.C. (2001). The nature and measurement of courtship persistence: Implications for understanding sexual harassment. Poster presented at the 2nd annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX, February 1-3, 2001.
  115. Yoshida, E. & Borgida, E. (2001). The influence of friendships on attitudes toward racial outgroups. Poster to be presented at the 73rd annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, May 3-5, 2001.
  116. Oyamot, C. & Borgida, E. (2001). Ambivalence and the authoritarian: Competing values and attitudes toward immigrants. Paper to be presented at the 24th annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Cuernavaca, Mexico, July 15-18, 2001.
  117. Borgida, E. (2001). Discussant, Contrasting and complementary approaches to political behavior: Excerpts from the forthcoming Handbook of Political Psychology. Invited Symposium, 24th annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Cuernavaca, Mexico, July 15-18, 2001.
  118. Borgida, E. & Sinclair, H.C. (2002). Courtship persistence: Social antecedents, legal consequences. Invited Symposium, American Psychology-Law Society Biennial Conference, Austin, TXs, March, 2002.
  119. Sinclair, H.C. & Borgida, E. (2002). Classifying crimes by classifying victims: Investigating lay conceptions of hate crime. Invited paper, American Psychology-Law Society Biennial Conference, Austin, TX.
  120. Sinclair, H.C., Borgida, E., & Collins, W.A. (2002). Exploring the antecedents and consequences of courtship persistence. Invited Symposium on “Stalking and courtship persistence: Classifications and social-personality predictors.” Biennial meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues, Toronto, Canada.
  121. Borgida, E. (2003). Invited Symposium on “Stereotyping evidence: The forgotten method of proof.” Fourteenth annual meeting of the National Employment Lawyers Association, Vail, CO., June 25-28, 2003.
  122. Borgida, E. (2003). Payoffs for theory development are available, though not always accessible. Invited Symposium on “The payoffs of political psychology for basic theory-building in social psychology.” Annual meeting of the Society of Experimental Social Psychology, Boston, October 2-4, 2003.
  123. Borgida, E. (2004). Invited Faculty Workshop: Social framework analysis and employment discrimination. School of Law, University of Minnesota.
  124. Stark, E., Borgida, E., Pickens, B., & Kim, A. (2004). Understanding public attitudes toward tobacco harm reduction: The role of attitude structure. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago.
  125. Stark, E., Kim, A., Borgida, E., Pickens, B., & Aussendorf, H. (2004). Understanding attitudes toward federal regulation of tobacco products: Symbolic beliefs vs. self-interest. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Chicago.  
  126. Borgida, E. (2004). Social framework analysis and employment discrimination. Invited Symposium on “Psychology and Law: Stereotypes and discrimination.” Annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Washington, DC.
  127. Borgida, E. & Kim, A. (2004). Gender stereotyping research in sex discrimination litigation: The legacy of Brown v. Board of Education. Paper presented at the SPAM conference, University of Kansas, Lawrence, KS.
  128. Borgida, E. (2004). Gender stereotyping. Invited Lecture, Brooklyn Law School, “Science for Judges” Program.
  129. Borgida, E. (2004). Public opinion on reduced exposure tobacco products: Insights from psychological science. Invited colloquium, University of Minnesota’s Transdisciplinary Tobacco Use Research Center, Minneapolis.
  130. Ergun, D., Worth, K.A., Lippmann, B., Borgida, E., & Farr, J. (2005). Civic engagement and collective identity: A multilevel analysis. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, New Orleans.
  131. Worth, K.A., Ergun, D., Lippmann, B., Borgida, E., & Farr, J. (2005). Predicting participation: The comparative role of collective identity and engagement motives. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, Los Angeles.
  132. Borgida, E., & Lippmann, B. (2005). Electronic Media Coverage of the courtroom: What does social science tell us about the effects of “Publicity/Transparency”?  Paper presented at the International Workshop on “Publicity in Democratic Decision Making: Bringing social scientists and political philosophers together.” Chaire Hoover d’ethique economique et sociale Universite catholique de Louvain, Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium.
  133. Kim, A., Hunt, C., Borgida, E., & Chaiken, S. (2006). The effect of temporal perspective, self-interest, and vales on policy attitude formation. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, New York.
  134. Fisher, E., Deason, G., Borgida, E., & Oyamot, C. (2006). How perceived social norms and egalitarian value salience drive RWAs’ outgroup evaluations. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Society, New York.
  135. Hunt, C., Kim, A. Borgida, E., & Chaiken C. (2006). Self-interest vs. symbolic attitudes: The role of temporal perspective. Poster presented at the 2006 meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Barcelona, Spain.
  136. Borgida, E. (2006). Social psychology in court: Does the science take us beyond common knowledge? Invited Faculty Lecture, 2006 APA Summer Institute, Minneapolis.
  137. Borgida, E. (2006). When psychological science and common knowledge clash. Caregiver bias working group. WorkLifeLaw Project, University of California Hastings College of the Law and The Sloan Foundation, Wellfleet, MA.
  138. Borgida, E. (2006). Setting the framework: “Super science” or common sense? Invited speaker at the National Employment Lawyers Association workshop on “Beyond stereotypes: Discovering and proving hidden bias in employment cases,” Washington, DC.
  139. Borgida, E. (2006). Social psychology in court: Does the science take us beyond common knowledge?  Invited symposium at the 2006 meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, Co-Chair (with Prof. Susan T. Fiske), Philadelphia PA.
  140. Fisher, E. & Borgida, E. (2007). Prejudice reduction through close intergroup contact: A process of social re-categorization. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis, TN.
  141. Borgida, E. (2007). Discussant for Invited Symposium on “Political cognition: The causes and consequences of construals.” Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Memphis TN.
  142. Borgida, E. (2007). Implicit bias and employment discrimination law. Invited presentation to the Behavioral Law and Economics Workshop, Institute for Law and Rationality, University of Minnesota Law School.
  143. Borgida, E. (2007). Stereotypes in labor and employment arbitration. Invited keynote address, National Academy of Arbitrators, 2007 Annual Meeting. San Francisco.
  144. Borgida, E. (2007). A smorgasbord on the social and political psychology of voting. Invited “Science Café,” Federation for the Advancement of Brain and Behavioral Sciences, National Press Club, Washington, DC.
  145. Borgida, E. (2007). Implicit bias: A social scientific perspective. Invited symposium on “Implicit bias claims: How to prove, or defend against, this type of claim.34th Annual Labor and Employment Law Institute CLE, Minnesota Bar Association, Minneapolis.
  146. Borgida, E. (2007). Psychological science in the courtroom. Invited speech to the CLA (College of Liberal Arts) Luncheon Series, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
  147. Borgida, E. (2008). The dynamic of race in the jury selection process. Invited address to the McGee Civil Rights Moot Court CLE on “Jury selection and psychological science: What’s race got to do with it?” University of Minnesota School of Law, Minneapolis.
  148. Eagly, A., Deason, G., & Borgida, E. (2008). What does expert testimony on stereotyping research have to offer lawyers in discrimination cases? Issues of general vs. specific causation vs. scientists’ continuum framework.  Invited symposium on WorkLife Law, Hastings Law Journal, Hastings College of the Law, University of California.
  149. Borgida, E. (2008). Discussant for Invited Symposium on “Why do we vote: And why do we vote for who we do? 2008 Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP), Albuquerque, NM.
  150. Borgida, E. (2008). Introduction to Invited Address by Richard E. Nisbett, “The myth of fixed intelligence: Why schools and culture count.” 2008 Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP), Albuquerque, NM.
  151. Girvan, E.J., Deason, G., & Borgida E. (. Do not protest too much: Backlash and implicit bias in employment arbitration decisions. Paper presented in invited symposium, Annual meeting of the American Psychology-Law Society, San Antonio, Texas.
  152. Borgida, E. (2009). Invited speaker at “Combating workplace discrimination,” Panel on “Dealing with uncertainty: How should researchers and courts proceed?” University of Virginia School of Law.
  153. 153. Borgida, E., Deason, G., & Girvan, E. (2009). Explicit and implicit gender bias in arbitration decision-making. Paper presented in an invited symposium (“Current research at the social psychology/law interface”), Annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, Portland, ME.
  154. Borgida, E.(2009). The merits and challenges of transparency: A proposed experimental examination of camera coverage on courtroom trials. Paper presented at the Twin cities Law & Society Conference, School of Law, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis MN.
  155. Borgida, E. (2010). What does expert testimony on stereotyping research have to offer in employment discrimination litigation? Invited colloquium, Ohio State University School of Law.
  156. Borgida, E. (2010). Invited symposium on “The construction of racial discrimination.” Conference on “From Slavery to Freedom to the White House: Race in the 21st Century America.” Sponsored by Duke University’s Center on Law, Race and Politics, and the Duke University School of Law.
  157. Borgida, E. (2010). Invited colloquium on Implicit gender bias everyday life: Implications for leadership, academic achievement, and law. Women’s Faculty Cabinet Spring Reception, University of Minnesota.
  158. Borgida, E. (2010). “Objects of Desire, Derision, and Deceit: The Role of Law in Gender Bias.” Invited Continuing Legal Education (CLE) symposium, The Guthrie Theater, Minneapolis. A CLE in conjunction with the Guthrie Theater production of “Dollhouse” by Rebecca Gilman, based on Henrik Ibsen’s “A Doll’s House.”
  159. Deason, G., Girvan, E., & Borgida, E. (2010). Employment arbitration decisions: Why are parents more likely to prevail? Invited Symposium on “Employment discrimination” at the 8th Biennial Conference of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues. New Orleans.
  160. Borgida, E. (2010). Invited Presidential Address: Reflections of a Schachter grandson working under the voodoo spell of Lewinian action research. 8th Biennial Conference of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issue. New Orleans, LA.
  161. Oyamot, C.M. Jr., Fisher, E.L., Deason, G., & Borgida, E. (2010). Authoritarians’ attitudes toward immigrants: The interactive role of social norms, personal values, and the authoritarian predisposition. Invited Symposium: “Conceptual approaches to authoritarianism”, Annual meeting of the International Society for Political Psychology, San Francisco.
  162. Borgida, E. (2010). Guest Lecturer (“Implicit processes in everyday life: Implications for politics and law”). Summer Institute in Political Psychology. Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
  163. Borgida, E. (2010). On the translation of scientific research into helpful information for fact finders. Invited Symposium on “Social psychology in the trenches: Lessons learned from trying to make the world a better place. Annual meeting of the Society for Experimental Social Psychology, Minneapolis.
  164. Borgida, E. (2010). Subtle influences, significant effects: Understanding arbitration decision-making in order to guard against bias. Invited Address to the National Academy of Arbitrators 2010 Fall Education Conference, Cleveland, OH.
  165. Miller, A. & Borgida, E. (2011). Moral typecasting underlies punitive responses toward criminal offenders: Implications for the study of race and criminal justice. Poster presented at the Political Psychology Pre-Conference, Annual Meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio, TX.
  166. Girvan, E., Deason,G., & Borgida, E. (2011). No royal road for reducing prejudice: Experience, not accountability, attenuates gender bias in employment-arbitration decisions. Invited Sympoisum on Employment Discrimination, 2011 American Psychology/4th International Congress on Psychology and Law, Miami, FL.
  167. Borgida, E. (2011). Implicit bias: Scientific and legal issues. Invited CLE (Continuing Legal Education) symposium on “Elimination of bias in the legal profession. The footsteps behind you: Implicit bias in the legal profession.” Gray, Plant, Mooty, Mooty & Bennett, Minneapolis.
  168. Borgida, E. (2011). Implicit bias: Legal and scientific issues.  Invited CLE (Continuing Legal Education) symposium on “Implicit bias: Legal and scientific issues.” Ramsey County (MN) Bar Association.
  169. Borgida, E. (2011). Guest Lecturer: Political psychology as interdisciplinary collaboration and Implicit bias: Scientific and legal issues. Summer Institute in Political Psychology, Stanford University, Stanford, CA.
  170. Borgida, E. (2012). Social cognition in law: What’s discrimination have to do with it? Invited Preconference Symposium (“Current and future topics in social psychology and law”).  Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego.
  171. Williams, A., Fisher, E., Borgida, E., Andow, D., Hurley, T., & Solarz, S. (2012). All for one or one for all: Motivations to volunteer in a community-based context. Poster presented at the Annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego.
  172. Borgida, E., Girvan, E., & Deason, G. (2012). Implicit bias in arbitration: Experience, not accountability, attenuates gender bias in employment-arbitration decisions. Invited presentation, Annual Meeting of the National Academy of Arbitrators, Minneapolis.
  173. Vitriol, J., Appleby, J., & Borgida, E. (2012). Eyewitness evidence, race, and implicit bias. Paper presented at the 2012 9th Biennial Conference, Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSSI), Charlotte, NC.
  174. Miller, A.L., & Borgida, E. (2012). Moral typecasting underlies punitive responses to crime. Paper presented at the 2012 9th Biennial Conference, Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), Charlotte, NC.
  175. Oakley, W., Andow, D.A., Borgida, E., & Hurley, T.M. (2012). Time costs of volunteer networks for monitoring invasive species. Upper Midwest Invasive Species Conference, La Crosse, WI
  176. Girvan, E.J., Deason, G., & Borgida, E. (2013). The influence of explicit and implicit gender attitudes on labor arbitration decisions. Paper presented in symposium on Legal decision making at the 2013 Annual Meeting of the American Psychology-Law Society, Portland, OR.
  177. Girvan, E.J., Deason, G., & Borgida, E. (2013). The influence of implicit and explicit gender attitudes on labor arbitration decisions. Invited paper presented at the Implicit Bias, Philosophy and Psychology Conference. University of Sheffield, Sheffield, U.K.
  178. Tylczak, L. A., E. Borgida, T. M. Hurley, A. Williams, and D. A. Andow. (2013). Woodlands in peril: Evaluating natural resource volunteerism as a weapon against invasive pests. Annual meeting of the Ecological Society of America, Minneapolis, MN.
  179. Tylczak, L.A., Andow, D.A., Hurley, T., Borgida, E., & Sagor, E. (2014). Citizen science in entomology: Establishing and maintaining insect detection networks in at-risk habitats. Paper presented at the 62nd annual meeting of the Entomological Society of America, Portland, OR, November 16-19, 2014.
  180. Borgida, E. (2014). Moderator and panelist, Invited Symposium: “Celebrating the career of John Sullivan.” Annual Scientific Meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Rome, Italy.
  181. Oyamot, C., Fisher, E.L., Deason, G., & Borgida, E. (2014). “Exploring the socio-political attitudes of humanitarian authoritarians.” Invited Symposium: Authoritarianism and conformity. Annual Scientific Meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Rome, Italy.
  182. Appleby, J., & Borgida, E. (2014). “Ideological metastereotypes: Overestimating political antipathy. Invited Symposium: Ideology and political cognition. Annual Scientific Meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Rome, Italy.
  183. Girvan, E.J., & Borgida, E. (2014). The influence of social cognitive psychology in law. Paper presented at the annual American Psychology-Law Society conference, New Orleans, LA.
  184. Williams, A., Borgida, E., Andow, D.A., Hurley, T.M., & Tylczak, L. A (2015). Sticking around and loving it: Psychological factors underlying volunteer engagement and retention. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, Long Beach, CA.
  185. Borgida, E. (April 1, 2015). Invited Colloquium, Duke University, School of Law, “Law and the science of implicit bias.”
  186. Borgida, E. (July 28, 2015). The science of implicit bias and what it means for the criminal justice system. U.S. Attorneys’ Office, Minneapolis MN. Invited CLE lecture.
  187. Borgida, E. (October 16, 2015). The stalled science of cameras in the courtroom. Invited Colloquium, Department of Psychological and Brain Sciences, Indiana University, Bloomington, IN.
  188. Weiner, E., & Borgida, E. (January 30, 2016). Disgust, immigration, and social welfare attitudes. Poster presented at the 2016 annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego, CA.
  189. Borgida, E. (January 28, 2016). The stalled science of cameras in the courtroom. Invited preconference lecture. 2016 annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego, CA.
  190. Borgida, E. & Clatch, L. (March 12, 2016). The devil is in the details: Anti-discrimination law post Wal-Mart Stores, Inc. v. Dukes. Invited symposium on “Social framework evidence in court.” Annual meeting of the American Psychology – Law Society, Atlanta, GA.
  191. Borgida, E., & Loken, B. (April 12, 2016). Consumer perceptions of smokeless tobacco constituents as a function of public display. Tobacco Research Program, Tobacco Research Studies Colloquium Series, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, MN.
  192. Borgida, E. (April 15, 2016). Out of the shadows: Implicit bias, institutional responses. Invited symposium speaker, University of Oregon School of Law, Eugene, OR.
  193. Clatch, L., Borgida, E., & Murray, J.A. (June 3, 2016). Decision-making in plea bargaining: The role of delay and probability discounting. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Law & Society Association, New Orleans, LA.
  194. Borgida, E. (June 23, 2016). Invited discussant: Panel on lessons learned in Minnesota on bridging the gap between science and policy. Policy Workshop at the annual meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), Minneapolis, MN.
  195. Appleby, J., Vitriol, J.A., & Borgida, E. (June 25, 2016). Racial bias increases false identification of black faces in simultaneous lineups. Paper presented at the annual meeting of the Society for the Psychological Study of Social Issues (SPSSI), Minneapolis, MN.
  196. Appleby, J., & Borgida E. (July 13-16, 2016). Political meta-stereotypes and inter-ideological discourse: The moderating role of anxiety. Paper presented at the 2016 annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Warsaw, Poland.
  197. Oyamot, C., Jackson, M., Deason, G., Fisher, E., & Borgida, E. (July 13-16, 2016). Social norms and egalitarian values mitigate authoritarian intolerance toward sexual minorities. Paper presented at the 2016 annual meeting of the International Society of Political Psychology, Warsaw, Poland.
  198. Vitriol, J.A., Borgida, E., & Lavine, H. (July 21-24, 2016). Meta-cognition and resistance to persuasion in the 2012 Presidential election. Paper presented at the European Association of Social Psychology (EASP) conference on the psychology of attitudes, Cologne, Germany.
  199. Panos, M., & Borgida, E. (January 21, 2017). The relationship between social network composition and attitudes towards healthy eating and exercise. Poster presented at the 2017 annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Antonio TX.
  200. Bu, W., Borgida, E. (January 19, 2017). Asian wrongdoers in the criminal justice system: Are they helped or harmed by Asian stereotypes? Poster presented at the Society for Personality and Social Psychology Law & Social Psychology Preconference, San Antonio, TX.
  201. Borgida, E. Invited Policy-Makers/Judiciary Panel, Minnesota Advisory Committee to the U.S. Commission on Civil Rights, March 21, 2017, University of St. Thomas School of Law, “Can Bias or Prejudice-Reduction Programs Lead to Persisting Change in Policing?”
  202. Borgida, E. K Scholar colloquium on “Implicit Bias,” Clinical and Translational Science Institute, October 4, 2017.
  203. Borgida, E. Continuing Legal Education (CLE), “Implicit Racial Bias,” U.S. Attorney’s Office, Minneapolis MN, October 25, 2017.
  204. Clatch, L., & Borgida, E. (2018). Probability and delay discounting: A promising application to plea bargain decision-making. Paper presented at the annual conference of the American-Psychology Law Society, Memphis TN.
  205. Bu, W., & Borgida, E. (2018). Revisiting the Asian American Model Minority Stereotype: More complex than competent and cold? Poster presented at the annual conference of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Atlanta, GA.
  206. Madzelan, M., & Borgida, E. (2018). The role of benevolent and hostile sexism in electoral contexts. Paper presented at the annual conference of the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago IL.
  207. Bu, W. & Borgida, E. (2019). Attention check effects on responses to racial attitude measures. Poster presented at the annual conference of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology. Portland, OR, Feb. 7-9, 2019.
  208. Vitriol, J., Appleby, J., & Borgida, E. (2019). Racial bias increases false identification of Black faces in simultaneous line-ups. Paper presented at the SPSSI 2019 Conference, San Diego, CA. June 21-23, 2019.
  209. Walters, A., & Borgida, E. (2020). Context matters: Reducing implicit racial bias in plea bargaining situations. Poster presented at the SPSP Annual meeting, New Orleans, LA, 2/29/20.
  210. Saluka, M., Lavine, H., & Borgida, E. (2020). A woman’s place ia in the (White) House: The role of gender role beliefs throughout the 2016 Presidential election. 78th annual Midwest Political Science Association Conference, Chicago, April 16-19, 2020.
  211. Borgida, E. (2020). Invited Symposium Discussant. Empirical psychological research & law: Discrimination, harassment, class cert & corporate culture. Annual meeting of the American Psychology-Law Society, New Orleans, LA, March 5-7, 2020.
  212. Borgida, E. (2020). Chair, Invited Symposium, New directions in the psychological study of racial disparities, police encounters, and race relations. Law, Society & Psychological Science program at the Law & Society Association annual meeting, June 12, 2020. [in-person meeting cancelled, virtual conference]
  213. Borgida, E. (2020). Invited Symposium Panelist, How can psychology contribute to ending mass incarceration and criminalization? 2020 SPSSI annual meeting, “Making the invisible visible: Transformative research and social action.” Denver CO, June 26-28, 2020. [in-person meeting cancelled, virtual conference].
  214. Walters, A., & Borgida, E. (February 9-13, 2021). Perceiving same vs. cross-gender harassment in the workplace: The role of separate spheres ideology. Poster presented at the 2021 annual (virtual) meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP).
  215. Madzelan, M.K., Borgida, E., Williams, A.L., Wang, T., & Loken, B. (February 2021). Smokeless tobacco use and the theory of planned behavior: Past behavior best predicts smokeless tobacco use. Poster presented at the 2021 annual (virtual) meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP).
  216. Borgida, E. (2021). Scientific update on bias mitigation intervention strategies. Invited Symposium: Opportunities and challenges in harnessing VR (Virtual Reality) Technology for bias mitigation. IEEE (Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers) VR 2021 Conference [Virtual], Lisbon, Portugal. March 30, 2021.
  217. Walters, A., & Borgida, E. (2022). Separate Spheres Ideology in the 2020 U.S. Presidential Election: A 3-Wave Panel Study. Poster presented at the 2022 annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, February 16-19, 2022, San Francisco, CA.
  218. Gilbert, K., & Borgida, E. (2022). Increasing positive views of diversity and inclusion on a college campus: A social norms approach to persuasion. Poster presented at the 2022 annual meeting of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, February 16-19, 2022, San Francisco, CA.
  219. Hopkins, L. Federico, C., & Borgida, E. (August 2023). Vigilante or patriot? Ideological influences on judgments of violent social movement members. Poster presented at the annual meeting of the American Psychological Association, Washington, DC.
  220. Okah, E. D., Pratt, R. J., Logan Allen, E. L., Pavia, M., Machuchu, M., Borgida, E., Burgess, D. J., James, D. D., Allen, M. L. (September 2023). Stereotypic bias in the counseling of black patients, CTSI Translational Science Symposium & Poster Session, University of Minnesota, Minneapolis, Minnesota.
  221. Hopkins, L. Federico, C., & Borgida, E. (February 2024). Vigilante or patriot? Ideological influences on judgments of violent social movement members. Poster presented at the annual meeting for the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego CA.
  222. Nickle, M., Borgida, E., & Federico, C. (February 2024). Can you “Stop Woke” by correction? Correcting misinformation on critical race theory. Poster presented at the annual meeting for the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego CA.
  223. Horne, L.H., Borgida, E., & Gilbert, K. (February 2024). Overturning Roe v. Wade: The influence of Separate Spheres Ideology and abortion identity. Poster presented at the annual meeting for the Society for Personality and Social Psychology, San Diego CA.
  224. Okah, E., Logan, E., Allen, M., James, D., Pavia, M., Machuchu, M., Borgida, E., Burgess, D., & Pratt, R. (September 2024). Primary care clinicians’ approaches to counseling hypertensive black patients. Paper presented at the International Conference on Communication in Healthcare (ICCH), Residencia de Estudiantes Ramon Pignatelli, Zaragoza, Spain.
  225. Nickle, M., Federico, C., & Borgida, E. (April 2024). Can you “Stop Woke” by correction? Correcting misinformation on critical race theory. Paper presented at the 2024 Annual Meeting of the Midwest Political Science Association, Panel on “Public opinion, misinformation, and public attitudes.” Chicago, IL.
  226. Okah, E., Allen, M., Jones, C., Chakolis, R., Burgess, D., Borgida, E., Phelan, S., & Pratt, R. (2024). Identifying biased communication behaviors to improve hypertension control. Paper presented at the C2DREAM 3rd Annual Health Equity Conference: “Building community and collaboration across Minnesota.” Duluth, MN, June 11, 2024.
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