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Jessica L. Tracy, Ph.D.

Jess is an Associate Professor of Psychology at the University of British Columbia, and a Michael Smith Foundation for Health Research Scholar.

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In the Emotion and Self Lab at the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia, we study the process, structure, expression, and regulation of emotions and self. Much of our research is focused on self-conscious emotions (pride, shame,…

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Narratives of redemption predict recovery

New research from Will Dunlop and Jess Tracy suggests that newly sober alcoholics who talk about their last drink in redemptive terms are over 40% more likely to stay sober, months later, than those who don’t. Narrated redemption also predicts…

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Narratives of redemption predict recovery

New findings from Will Dunlop and Jess Tracy suggest that the narration of stories of self-redemption predicts recovery from alcoholism. Read the paper, now in press at JPSP.

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Narratives of redemption predict recovery

New research from Will Dunlop and Jess Tracy suggests that newly sober alcoholics who talk about their last drink in redemptive terms are over 40% more likely to stay sober, months later, than those who don’t. Narrated redemption also predicts…

Read more »

Narratives of redemption predict recovery

New findings from Will Dunlop and Jess Tracy suggest that the narration of stories of self-redemption predicts recovery from alcoholism. Read the paper, now in press at JPSP.

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Sobering stories: Narratives of self-redemption predict behavioral change and improved health among recovering alcoholics.

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Sobering stories: Narratives of self-redemption predict behavioral change and improved health among recovering alcoholics.

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Home

In the Emotion and Self Lab at the Department of Psychology at the University of British Columbia, we study the process, structure, expression, and regulation of emotions and self. Much of our research is focused on self-conscious emotions (pride, shame,…

Read more »

(Implicitly) Judging a Book By Its Cover: The Power of Pride and Shame Expressions in Shaping Judgments of Social Status

Pride and shame expressions convey status more powerfully than competing contextual information– paper by Azim Shariff, Jess, and Jeff Markusoff published at ess at PSPB. 

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