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Thinking, Fast and Slow - Daniel Kahneman

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form a cluster: Barbara Fredrickson, Positivity: Groundbreaking Research Reveals How to<br />

Embrace the Hidden Strength of Positive Emotions, Overcome Negativity, <strong>and</strong> Thrive (New<br />

York: R<strong>and</strong>om House, 2009). Joseph P. Forgas <strong>and</strong> Rebekah East, “On Being Happy <strong>and</strong><br />

Gullible: Mood Effects on Skepticism <strong>and</strong> the Detection of Deception,” Journal of<br />

Experimental Social Psychology 44 (2008): 1362–67.<br />

smiling reaction: Sascha Topolinski et al., “The Face of Fluency: Semantic Coherence<br />

Automatically Elicits a Specific Pattern of Facial Muscle Reactions,” Cognition <strong>and</strong> Emotion<br />

23 (2009): 260–71.<br />

“previous research…individuals”: Sascha Topolinski <strong>and</strong> Fritz Strack, “The Analysis of<br />

Intuition: Processing Fluency <strong>and</strong> Affect in Judgments of Semantic Coherence,” Cognition <strong>and</strong><br />

Emotion 23 (2009): 1465–1503.<br />

6: Norms, Surprises, <strong>and</strong> Causes<br />

An observer: <strong>Daniel</strong> <strong>Kahneman</strong> <strong>and</strong> Dale T. Miller, “Norm Theory: Comparing Reality to Its<br />

Alternatives,” Psychological Review 93 (1986): 136–53.<br />

“tattoo on my back”: Jos J. A. Van Berkum, “Underst<strong>and</strong>ing Sentences in Context: What<br />

Brain Waves Can Tell Us,” Current Directions in Psychological Science 17 (2008): 376–80.<br />

the word pickpocket: Ran R. Hassin, John A. Bargh, <strong>and</strong> James S. Uleman, “Spontaneous<br />

Causal Inferences,” Journal of Experimental Social Psychology 38 (2002): 515–22.<br />

indicate surprise: Albert Michotte, The Perception of Causality (Andover, MA: Methuen,<br />

1963). Alan M. Leslie <strong>and</strong> Stephanie Keeble, “Do Six-Month-Old Infants Perceive Causality?”<br />

Cognition 25 (1987): 265–88.<br />

explosive finale: Fritz Heider <strong>and</strong> Mary-Ann Simmel, “An Experimental Study of Apparent<br />

Behavior,” American Journal of Psychology 13 (1944): 243–59.<br />

identify bullies <strong>and</strong> victims: Leslie <strong>and</strong> Keeble, “Do Six-Month-Old Infants Perceive<br />

Causality?”<br />

as we die: Paul Bloom, “Is God an Accident?” Atlantic, December 2005.<br />

7: A Machine for Jumping to Conclusions<br />

elegant experiment: <strong>Daniel</strong> T. Gilbert, Douglas S. Krull, <strong>and</strong> Patrick S. Malone, “Unbelieving<br />

the Unbelievable: Some Problems in the Rejection of False Information,” Journal of<br />

Personality <strong>and</strong> Social Psychology 59 (1990): 601–13.

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