Hanah Chapman
MA Psychology
PHD Affective Neuroscience
Hanah Chapman completed her PhD in the Affect and Cognition Laboratory. She is currently a postdoctoral fellow in social neuroeconomics at the California Institute of Technology.
Emotion and Morality
I study emotion and morality, both independently and as they interact.
For an up-to-date summary of my research program and publications, please visit my Caltech site.
Chapman, H.A., Lee, D., Susskind, J.M., Bartlett, M.S. & Anderson, A.K. The face of distaste. Under revision.
Chapman, H.A. & Anderson, A.K. Things rank and gross in nature: A review and synthesis of moral disgust. Under revision.
Chapman, H.A., Johannes, K., Poppenk, J.L., Moscovitch, M. & Anderson, A.K. Evidence for the special salience of disgust in cognition-emotion interactions. Under revision.
Chapman, H.A & Anderson, A.K. (In press) Understanding disgust. Annals of the New York Academy of Sciences.
Chapman, H.A. & Anderson, A.K. (2011). Varieties of moral emotional experience. Emotion Review, 3, 255-257.
Chapman, H.A. & Anderson, A.K. (2011). Response to commentary by Royzman and Kurzban. Emotion Review, 3, 272-273.
Chapman, H.A., Woltering, S., Lamm, C. & Lewis, M. (2010). Hearts and minds: Coordination of neurocognitive and cardiovascular regulation in children and adolescents. Biological Psychology, 84, 296-303.
Chapman, H.A., Bernier, D. & Rusak, B. (2010). MRI-related anxiety levels change within and between repeated scanning sessions. Psychiatry Research: Neuroimaging, 182, 160-4.
Chapman, H.A., Kim, D.A. Susskind, J.M. & Anderson, A.K. (2009). In bad taste: Evidence for the oral origins of moral disgust. Science, 323, 1222-6.