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Dr. Alecia Santuzzi

Assistant Professor

510 Huntington Hall

Email  : amsantuz@syr.edu
Phone  : 315-443-9917

Education

:

Ohio University, B.A. Psychology
Tulane University, M.S. Psychological Sciences: Social Psychology
Tulane University, Ph.D. Psychological Sciences: Social Psychology
University of Illinois, Postdoctoral training in Quantitative Methods

Research Interest

:

My substantive research generally covers interpersonal perception and accuracy in impression formation. More specifically, I am interested in how people form impressions of what other people think about them, especially when people are interacting with members of different social categories (e.g., ethnicity, sex, smoking status).

A second area of interest is in measurement and research methods, spanning such topics as multilevel analyses, structural equation models, scale development and validation, factors that affect self-report measures, and dyad & group research methods.

Representative Publications

:

Sanntuzzi, A. M. (2007). Perceptions and metaperceptions of negative evaluation: Group composition and interpersonal accuracy in a social relations model. Group Processes and Intergroup Relations, 10, 383-398.

Santuzzi, A. M., & Ruscher, J. B. (2007). Distancing from incompetent in-group members: Evidence for the Black Sheep Effect in ethnicity and residence. Race, Gender, and Class, 13, 87-95.

Santuzzi, A. M., Metzger, P. L., & Ruscher, J. B. (2006). Body image and expected future interaction. Current Research in Social Psychology, 11, 153-171.

Ruscher, J. B., Santuzzi, A. M., & Hammer, E. Y. (2003). Shared impression formation in the cognitively interdependent dyad. British Journal of Social Psychology, 42, 411-435.

Santuzzi, A. M., & Ruscher, J. B. (2002). Stigma salience and paranoid social cognition: Understanding variability in metaperceptions of prejudice among stigmatized targets. Social Cognition, 20, 171-197.

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