Notes
Shelley Correll co-authored an article in Harvard Business Review, “Vague Feedback is Holding Women Back,” which explains that “women are systematically less likely to receive specific feedback tied to outcomes, both when they receive praise and when the feedback is developmental. In other words, men are offered a clearer picture of what they are doing well and more-specific guidance of what is needed to get to the next level.”
Martin Gilens and co-author Benjamin Page (fellow 1998-99) wrote in the Washington Post to respond to critics of their seminal 2014 paper on U.S. political inequality, “Testing Theories of American Politics: Elites, Interest Groups, and Average Citizens,” published in Perspectives on Politics.
Louis Hyman published “Temps, Consultants, and the Rise of the Precarious Economy” in The Hedgehog Review, published by the Institute for Advanced Studies in Culture.
Mick Smyer co-authored two articles, one of them the lead article, in the journal American Psychologist. The articles are part of a special issue dedicated to “Aging in America: Perspectives from Psychological Science.” Smyer also published “Is There a Secret to Aging Well?” in Solutions.