Brett J. Peters
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGIST
PEER-REVIEWED PUBLICATIONS
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Peters, B.J., Hammond, M.D., Reis, H.T., & Jamieson, J.P. (in press). The consequences of having a dominant romantic partner on testosterone responses during a social interaction. Psychoneuroendocrinology. doi: 10.1016/j.psyneuen.2016.09.024
Peters, B.J. & Jamieson, J.P. (2016). The consequences of emotion suppression in romantic relationships: A challenge and threat perspective. Emotion 16(7), 1050-1066. doi: 10.1037/emo0000202
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Jamieson, J.P., Peters, B.J., Greenwood, E.J., & Altose, A. (2016). Reappraising stress arousal improves performance and reduces evaluation anxiety in classroom exam situations. Social Psychological and Personality Science, 1-9. doi:10.1177/1948550616644656
Roche, J.M., Peters, B.J., & Dale, R. (2015). “Your Tone Says It All”: The processing and interpretation of affective language. Speech Communication, 66, 47-64. doi: 10.1016/j.specom.2014.07.004
Peters, B.J., Overall N.C. & Jamieson, J.P. (2014). Physiological and cognitive consequences of emotion suppression and expression in dyadic interactions. International Journal of Psychophysiology, 94(1), 100-107. doi:10.1016/j.ijpsycho.2014.07.015
Jamieson, J., Valdesolo, P., & Peters, B.J. (2014) Sympathy for the devil? The physiological, psychological, and decision effects of being an agent (and target) of dissent. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 55, 221-227.
Beltzer, M.L., Nock, M.K., Peters, B.J., & Jamieson, J.P. (2014). Rethinking butterflies: The emotional, physiological, and performance effects of arousal reappraisal during public speaking. Emotion 14(4), 761-8. doi: 10.1037/a0036326
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BOOK CHAPTERS
Reis, H.T., de Jong, D.C., Lee, K.Y., O'Keefe, S.D., & Peters, B.J. (2015). Promoting intimacy:
Strategies suggested by the appetitive side. In C. R. Knee & H. T. Reis (Eds.), Positive approaches to optimal relationship development. New York: Cambridge University Press.
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UNDER REVIEW & IN PREPARATION
Peters, B.J., Overall, N.C., Girme, Y.U., & Jamieson, J.P. (under review). Partners’ attachment insecurity predicts greater physiological threat in anticipation of attachment-relevant interactions. Personal Relationships.
Peters, B.J.*, Roche, J.M.*, & Jamieson, J.P. (under review). The effects of expressive suppression on language planning and production. Speech Communication.
Peters, B.J., Hammond, M.D., Reis, H.T., & Jamieson, J.P. (in prep). The dyadic nature of relationship dominance when capitalizing on good news.
Peters, B.J. & Overall, N.C. (in prep). Buffering avoidant attachment: The role of inferred avoidance.
Peters, B.J. & Reis, H.T. (in prep). Advances in capitalization research.
Tomlinson, J.M., Peters, B.J., & Feeney, B.C. (in prep). Longitudinal, physiological, and observational evidence for the importance of partner support for self-expansion during the transition to retirement.
Overall, N.C. & Peters, B.J. (in prep). A dyadic model of emotional suppression during support interactions.
Jayamaha, S.D., Overall, N.C., Peters, B.J., & Girme, Y.U. (in prep). Self-esteem contagion: Partners’ low self-esteem and lack of autonomy support undermines self-efficacy and self-worth.
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*denotes mutual first authorship
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