Cong Wei
Beijing Normal University
20 Papers
12 Citations
Cong Wei is an academic researcher from Beijing Normal University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Corruption & Biology. The author has an hindex of 5, co-authored 11 publications.
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Papers
High Power Distance Enhances Employees’ Preference for Likable Managers: A Resource Dependency Perspective
TL;DR: Employees' response to managers' likability and the moderating effect of power distance at both the cultural and individual levels are explored and it is suggested that high power distance-oriented participants demonstrate stronger preference for likable manager candidates than do low power Distance participants.
240
Tracking and Analyzing Public Emotion Evolutions During COVID-19: A Case Study from the Event-Driven Perspective on Microblogs
TL;DR: The findings suggest that the public’s feedback on COVID-19 predated official accounts on the microblog platform, and there were clear differences in the trending events that large users (users with many fans and readings) and common users paid attention to during each phase of CO VID-19.
22
Are greedy individuals more corrupt
TL;DR: In this article, two studies were conducted to examine the effect of greed on corruption and the buffering role of descriptive corruption norms, and they showed that greed positively predicted corrupt intent when descriptive corruption norm were high; by contrast, the relationship disappeared when the prevalence of corrupt intent was low.
17
A Cross-Cultural Perspective on the Preference for Potential Effect: An Individual Participant Data (IPD) Meta-Analysis Approach
TL;DR: This research replicated Tormala et al.
Data from a pre-publication independent replication initiative examining ten moral judgement effects
Warren Tierney,Martin Schweinsberg,Jennifer Jordan,Deanna M. Kennedy,Israr Qureshi,S. Amy Sommer,Nico Thornley,Nikhil Madan,Michelangelo Vianello,Eli Awtrey,Luke Lei Zhu,Daniel Diermeier,Justin E. Heinze,Malavika Srinivasan,David Tannenbaum,Eliza Bivolaru,Jason Dana,Clintin P. Davis-Stober,Christilene du Plessis,Quentin Frederik Gronau,Andrew C. Hafenbrack,Eko Yi Liao,Alexander Ly,Maarten Marsman,Toshio Murase,Michael Schaerer,Christina M. Tworek,Eric-Jan Wagenmakers,Lynn Wong,Tabitha Anderson,Christopher W. Bauman,Wendy L. Bedwell,Victoria L. Brescoll,Andrew Canavan,Jesse Chandler,Erik W. Cheries,Sapna Cheryan,Felix Cheung,Felix Cheung,Andrei Cimpian,Mark A. Clark,Diana Cordon,Fiery Cushman,Peter H. Ditto,Alice Amell,Sarah E. Frick,Monica Gamez-Djokic,Rebecca Hofstein Grady,Jesse Graham,Jun Gu,Adam Hahn,Brittany E. Hanson,Nicole J. Hartwich,Kristie Hein,Yoel Inbar,Lily Jiang,Tehlyr Kellogg,Nicole Legate,Timo P. Luoma,Heidi Maibeucher,Peter Meindl,Jennifer Miles,Alexandra A. Mislin,Daniel C. Molden,Matt Motyl,George E. Newman,George E. Newman,Hoai Huong Ngo,Harvey Packham,P. Scott Ramsay,Jennifer L. Ray,Aaron M. Sackett,Anne-Laure Sellier,Tatiana Sokolova,Walter Sowden,Daniel Storage,Xiaomin Sun,Jay J. Van Bavel,Jay J. Van Bavel,Anthony N. Washburn,Cong Wei,Erik Wetter,Carlos T. Wilson,Sophie Charlotte Darroux,Eric Luis Uhlmann +84 more
TL;DR: In the Pre-Publication Independent Replication (PPIR) project as discussed by the authors, 25 research groups attempted to replicate 10 moral judgment effects from a single laboratory's research pipeline of unpublished findings using online/lab surveys containing psychological manipulations.