Researchers

Eric Hehman
McGill University
Department of Psychology
Address: Office 1455, Department of Psychology 2001 McGill College, 7th floor Montreal, QC H3A 1G1
Tel: 514.398.8263
Personal URL: http://erichehman.com/
Personal URL: http://hehmanlab.org/
Education
Post-doctoral fellowship, New York University

Post-doctoral fellowship, Dartmouth University

PhD, University of Delaware

BA, University of Massachusetts
Research
Eric Hehman is an Assistant Professor of Psychology at McGill University and director of the Seeing Human Lab.

Generally, Dr. Hehman’s research examines how individuals perceive and evaluate one another across group boundaries (e.g., race, gender, sexual-orientation, occupation, etc). To address these questions, he takes a multi-method approach, incorporating a broad range of behavioral (e.g., computer-mouse tracking, digital face modeling, group interactions) and statistical techniques (e.g., multilevel modeling, structural equation modeling).
Research Interests
Publications
Disproportionate use of lethal force in policing is associated with regional racial biases of residents
Journal: Social Psychological and Personality Science
Volume: 9
Year: 2018
First page:393
Last page: 401
Jessica K. Flake
Jimmy Calanchini
The faces of group members share physical resemblance
Journal: Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin
Volume: 44
Year: 2018
First page:3
Last page: 15
Jessica K. Flake
Jonathan B. Freeman
The conceptual structure of face impressions
Journal: Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences of the United States of America
Volume: 115
Year: 2018
First page:9210
Last page: 9215
Ryan M. Stolier
Jonathan B. Freeman
Mirella Walker
Matthias D. Keller
States higher in racial bias spend less on disabled Medicaid enrollees
Journal: Social Science & Medicine
Volume: 280
Year: 2018
First page:150
Last page: 157
A dynamic structure of social trait space
Journal: Trends in Cognitive Sciences
Volume: 3
Year: 2018
First page:197
Last page: 200
Establishing construct validity evidence for regional measures of explicit and implicit racial bias
Journal: Journal of Experimental Psychology: General
Volume: 148
Issue: 6
Year: 2019
First page:1022
Last page: 1040
Toward a comprehensive model of impression formation: What we know, what we do not, and paths forward
Journal: Social and Personality Psychology Compass
Volume: 13
Issue: 2
Year: 2019
First page:1
Last page: 16
Perceiver and target characteristics contribute to impression formation differently across race and gender
Journal: Journal of Personality and Social Psychology
Volume: 117
Issue: 2
Year: 2019
First page:364
Last page: 385
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