Peter Koval
Contact information
Peter KovalTiensestraat 102
3000 Leuven
Phone: (+32) 16 325964
Fax: (+32) 16 325993
Research interests
- Emotion dynamics in daily life
- Emotional inertia
- Relationship between emotion dynamics and psychological well-being
- Depression
Publications
Group by: Type / Year & Type
International journal articles
- Bastian, B., Kuppens, P., Park, J., Koval, P., & Uchida, Y. (in press). Feeling bad about being sad: The role of social expectancies in amplifying negative emotions. Emotion.

- Bastian, B., Laham, S., Wilson, S., Haslam, N., & Koval, P. (in press). Blaming, praising and protecting our humanity: The implications of everyday dehumanization for judgments of moral status. British Journal of Social Psychology.

- Bastian, B., Loughnan, S., & Koval, P. (2011). Essentialist beliefs predict automatic motor-responses to social categories. Group Processes & Intergroup Relations, 14, 559-567. doi:10.1177/1368430210385258

- Haslam, N., & Koval, P. (2010). Possible research area bias in the draft ERA journal rankings. Australian Journal of Psychology, 62, 112-114. doi:10.1080/00049530903334489

- Haslam, N., & Koval, P. (2010). Predicting long-term citation impact of articles in social psychology. Psychological Reports, 106, 891-900. doi:10.2466/pr0.106.3.891-900
- Kashima, Y., Koval, P., & Kashima, E. S. (2011). Reconsidering culture and self. Psychological Studies, 56, 12-22. doi:10.1007/s12646-011-0071-4

- Koval, P., & Kuppens, P. (in press). Changing emotion dynamics: Individual differences in the effect of anticipatory social stress on emotional inertia. Emotion.

- Koval, P., Kuppens, P., Allen, N. B., & Sheeber, L. B. (in press). Getting stuck in depression: The roles of rumination and emotional inertia. Cognition & Emotion.

- Koval, P., Laham, S. M., Haslam, N., Bastian, B., & Whelan, J. A. (in press). Our flaws are more human than yours: Ingroup bias in humanizing negative characteristics. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.

- Laham, S. M., Koval, P., & Alter, A. L. (in press). The name pronunciation effect: Why people like Mr. Smith more than Mr. Colquhoun. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology.

