Grégory Lo Monaco
Aix-Marseille University
65 Papers
148 Citations
Grégory Lo Monaco is an academic researcher from Aix-Marseille University. The author has contributed to research in topics: Social representation & Domestic violence. The author has an hindex of 15, co-authored 61 publications. Previous affiliations of Grégory Lo Monaco include University of Provence.
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Papers
Methods for Studying the Structure of Social Representations: A Critical Review and Agenda for Future Research
TL;DR: In this article, a review of the methodologies commonly used in the framework of the structural approach to social representations is presented, including free and hierarchical evocations, the characterization questionnaire, the similarity analysis, the basic cognitive schemes model, the attribute-challenge technique and the test of context independence.
Free associations and social representations: some reflections on rank-frequency and importance-frequency methods
TL;DR: In this article, a comparative analysis of rank-frequency and importance-frequency methods for free association corpora concerning the representations of cancer, palliative care, and academic success is presented.
141
Social representations of wine and culture: A comparison between France and New Zealand
TL;DR: The authors investigated social representations of wine as a function of wine expertise and culture and found that experts associated wine with friendship, red wine, and cheese, whereas experts referred to sharing, heritage, and conviviality.
95
Test d’Indépendance au Contexte (TIC) et Structure des Représentations Sociales
TL;DR: In this article, a test dindependance au contexte (TIC) is proposed, which can rendre compte trans-situationnel or contingent des elements representationnels, tout en presentant un moindre cout cognitif percu.
71
Legitimizing intimate partner violence: the role of romantic love and the mediating effect of patriarchal ideologies
TL;DR: The results demonstrated that the relationship between romantic love and the legitimization of violence is mediatized by ambivalent sexism and domestic violence myths, illustrating the need to deconstruct romantic love ideology and the psychosocial logics underlying the legitimizations of intimate partner violence.