Anne Wilson

Professor and Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology Wilfrid Laurier University

  • Waterloo ON

Expert in identity, time, memory, goals, inequality, and cultural norms

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Biography

Dr. Wilson is a social psychology professor and Canada Research Chair at Wilfrid Laurier University.
She is an expert in self and identity, the psychology of time, goal pursuit and motivation, social inequality, and sociocultural norms. She is a Fellow of the Successful Societies Program of the Canadian Institute for Advanced Research and a member of the College of New Scholars Artists and Scientists, Royal Society of Canada.

Industry Expertise

Research
Education/Learning
Writing and Editing

Areas of Expertise

Social Psychology
Self/Identity
Well-Being
Psychology of change and stability
Psychology of time and space
Goal pursuit
Motivation
Beliefs about climate change
Environmentally sustainable behaviour
Beliefs about morality
Perceptions of stigmatized groups
Body Image
Sociocultural norms
Social Inequality
Gender and diversity
Close Relationships
Historical Injustice

Accomplishments

Tier II Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology

2007-01-01

Term 2 renewal in 2012.

The Canada Research Chairs Program invests approximately $265 million per year to attract and retain some of the world’s most accomplished and promising minds. Chairholders aim to achieve research excellence in engineering and the natural sciences, health sciences, humanities, and social sciences.
See more: http://www.chairs-chaires.gc.ca/chairholders-titulaires/profile-eng.aspx?profileId=2475

Fellow, Canadian Psychological Association

2014-01-01

Fellows shall be Members of the Association who have made a distinguished contribution to the advancement of the science or profession of psychology or who have given exceptional service to their national or provincial associations.
See more: http://www.cpa.ca/aboutcpa/cpaawards/fellows

Member of the College of New Scholars, Artists, and Scientists, Royal Society of Canada

2014-01-01

The Members of the College are Canadians and Permanent Residents who, at an early stage in their career, have demonstrated a high level of achievement. The criteria for election is excellence, and membership is for seven years. Up to 100 Members may be elected each year.
See more: http://www.rsc.ca/en/college-new-scholars-artists-and-scientists

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Education

University of Waterloo

Ph.D.

Social Psychology

2000

Mount Allison University

B.A.

Hon. Psychology/Sociology

1994

Media Appearances

Mom bods: The science of body image and deconstructing media coverage of mothers getting their “bodies back.”

CBC KW  radio

2015-08-08

Are images of perfect-body moms meant to be aspirational, motivational, or just depressing? Our parenting columnist Tenille Bonoguore spoke to a local professor who researches body image.

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Be it resolved, it’s that time of year

ObserverXtra  online

2015-12-31

Anne Wilson, psychology professor at Wilfrid Laurier University with a focus on identity and goal setting, says often we set goals that don’t end up panning out, especially at New Year’s. But she’s got some tips for making them stick.

“One of the best pieces of advice that’s backed up by evidence is it’s better to set small achievable goals and those goals are still perfectly fine if they fit into a bigger picture way that you want to see your life changing,” Wilson said.

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We're more vulnerable to heat-related illnesses than we think: study

CBC News  online

2016-07-23

People tend to underestimate their own vulnerability to heat-related illnesses during prolonged periods of hot weather, says Anne Wilson.

The professor of social psychology at Wilfrid Laurier University is one of the lead researchers of an ongoing study at the university looking at the impact of heat-related illnesses on vulnerable populations.

She said it's this attitude of, "It can happen to you, but not me," that often causes people to be unprepared in coping with the heat.

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Event Appearances

Time for a change: When, why, and for whom is the passage of time linked to perceptions of change in the temporally-extended self?

Self and Identity Preconference, annual convention of the Society for Personality and Social Psychology  San Diego, California, USA

2016-01-28

Subjective judgments of uncertainty in the face of future climate threats

Interdisciplinary Workshop on Emotion, Cognition, and Water Decisions  Fergus, Ontario, Canada

2015-08-10

What implications do societal beauty ideals have for girls' and women's well-being and relationships? What can we do about it?

United Way Women's Giving Circle  Waterloo, Ontario, Canada

2015-06-01

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Research Grants

Canadian Research Chair

Government of Canada (The Canada Research Chairs Program)

Tier II Canada Research Chair in Social Psychology (renewal)

Successful Societies Fellow

Canadian Institute for Advanced Research

Fellowship to support Successful Societies Research Program

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada (Insight Grant)

Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council of Canada

Project: Subjective perception of time, causality, and probability in judgments of future climate change risk

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Partnerships

Partnership with Plasticity Labs, Inc.

Plasticity Labs, Inc.

Through a MITACS-funded partnership with Plasticity Labs, Inc., a company focused on increasing employee happiness and engagement, we are exploring a combination of theoretically innovative and applied research questions, such as the impact of well-being and happiness on turnover, productivity, and engagement.

We combine experimental research in the lab with applied research in organizations to achieve advances in knowledge and other evidence-based innovations.

Articles

The post birthday world: Consequences of temporal landmarks for temporal self-appraisal and motivation

Journal of Personality and Social Psychology

2013-02-01

Much as physical landmarks help structure our representation of space, temporal landmarks such as birthdays and significant calendar dates structure our perception of time, such that people may organize or categorize their lives into "chunks" separated by these markers. Categories on the temporal landscape may vary depending on what landmarks are salient at a given time. We suggest these landmarks have implications for identity and motivation. The present research examined consequences of salient temporal landmarks for perceptions of the self across time and motivation to pursue successful future selves. Studies 1 and 2 show that temporally extended selves are perceived as less connected to, and more dissimilar from, the current self when an intervening landmark event has been made salient. Study 3 addresses the proposed mechanism, demonstrating that intervening landmarks lead people to categorize pre- and postlandmark selves into separate categories more often than when the same time period contains no salient landmarks. Finally, we examined whether landmark-induced mental contrasting of present state and future desired state could increase goal-pursuit motivation (in an effort to bridge the gap between inferior present and better future states). Studies 4-6 demonstrate that landmark-induced discrepancies between current health and hoped-for future health increased participants' motivation to exercise and increased the likelihood that they acted in line with their future-oriented goals.

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The sooner, the better: Temporally proximal exercise outcomes promote intrinsic motivation

Applied Psychology: Health and Well-Being

2014-09-01

Despite evidence that outcomes are highly valued when they are expected sooner rather than further into the future (Ainslie, 1975), limited research effort has been devoted to understanding the role of exercise outcome proximity. The purpose of this study was to examine how temporal proximity to positive outcomes influences exercisers' intrinsic motivation. We expected that focusing people on temporally proximal exercise outcomes would increase intrinsic motivation, especially among low-frequency exercisers. Conclusions: This study reveals the importance of considering proximity as an important dimension of exercise outcomes-particularly when promoting intrinsic motivation among relatively infrequent exercisers.

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Marking time: Selective use of temporal landmarks as barriers between current and future selves

Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin

2014-01-01

Temporal landmarks such as birthdays and significant calendar dates structure our perception of time. People might highlight temporal landmarks spontaneously in an effort to regulate connections between temporal selves. Five studies demonstrated that landmarks are used spontaneously to induce psychological separation from undesirable temporal selves. Participants were more likely to think of events that fell in between the current and the future self if an imagined future self was negative than if it was positive (Studies 1a, 1b, and 2). Furthermore, when a self-enhancement mindset was activated, participants were more likely to call to mind intervening temporal landmarks to protect themselves from a negative future self than when this mindset was not activated (Study 3). Finally, when psychological separations between the current self and a negative future self were introduced through alternate means, participants no longer selectively used landmarks to separate themselves from this future self (Study 4).

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