Institute of Sustainability Psychology
Organisational unit: Institute
- Junior professorship for Sustainability Science and Psychology
- Professorship for Health Psychology and Applied Biological Psychology
- Professorship for Social-, Organizational and Political Psychology, especially empirical Negotiation Research
- Professorship of Psychology, especially Collective Action for Sustainability
- Professorship of Psychology, especially sustainable behaviour
- Professorship of Psychology, in particular Collective Action for Sustainability
- Professorship of Psychology, in particular Methodology and Evaluation Research
Organisation profile
ISP is currently made up of two working areas or groups: the working group on "Sustainability Education and Communication" and the working group on "Psychology and Sustainability".
The working group on "Sustainability Education and Communication" is interdisciplinary and orients its research and educational practice towards the concept of Education for Sustainable Development (ESD). It is responsible for teaching in the subject of subject-specific education.
The "Psychology and Sustainability" working group conducts research based on central psychological theories and methods and develops these further in a practice-oriented manner, especially in the area of climate and sustainability. This includes how sustainability thinking and action develops over the lifespan, also in institutional and informal learning processes, how risks are understood and communicated by different individuals, how sustainable health promotion can be implemented, and what characteristics distinguish multidimensional negotiations for scarce resources.
Main research areas
The integrative consideration of economic, social, ecological and cultural dimensions of a problem is part of the basic understanding of the concept of sustainable development. It is also the basis for research questions and teaching concepts that are oriented towards this guiding principle. This approach usually requires the integration of different disciplinary perspectives through cooperation between different disciplines.
At ISEP, this happens on the one hand within the institute itself, and on the other hand within the university through its affiliation with the Faculty of Sustainability. ISEP's research and projects are enriched by project-related and longer-term cooperation with national and international scientific partners. Social problems require the expansion of scientific perceptiveness and competences beyond interdisciplinary cooperation. Therefore, research work and teaching projects are usually transdisciplinary, designed as cooperation with practice partners through transdisciplinarily organised research projects, but also through the involvement of students in research projects; through further education; through advice on school programme development/profile development of educational institutions and through regional cooperation as a joint learning and research process.
- 2022
- Published
Negotiating Sustainability Transitions: Why Does It Matter? What Are the Challenges? How to Proceed?
Majer, J. M. & Troetschel, R., 15.07.2022, In: Sustainability. 14, 14, 5 p., 8691.Research output: Journal contributions › Other (editorial matter etc.) › Research
- Published
Interpersonal Physiological Synchrony Predicts Group Cohesion
Tomashin, A., Gordon, I. & Wallot, S., 12.07.2022, In: Frontiers in Human Neuroscience. 16, 12 p., 903407.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
The Adaptive Test of Emotion Knowledge for 3-to 9-Year-Olds: Psychometric Properties and Validity
Voltmer, K. & Salisch, M., 08.07.2022, In: Frontiers in Psychiatry. 13, 19 p., 901304.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Education › peer-review
- Published
Confidence levels and likelihood terms in IPCC reports: a survey of experts from different scientific disciplines
Kause, A., Bruine de Bruin, W., Persson, J., Thorén, H., Olsson, L., Wallin, A., Dessai, S. & Vareman, N., 01.07.2022, In: Climatic Change. 173, 1-2, 18 p., 2.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Give and take frames in shared-resource negotiations
Majer, J., Zhang, K., Zhang, H., Höhne, B. & Trötschel, R., 01.06.2022, In: Journal of Economic Psychology. 90, 20 p., 102492.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Emotionale Kompetenz bei Kindern und Jugendlichen: Entwicklung und Folgen
Klinkhammer, J., Voltmer, K. & von Salisch, M., 24.05.2022, 2., erweiterte und überarbeitete Auflage ed. Stuttgart: Kohlhammer Verlag GmbH. 196 p.Research output: Books and anthologies › Monographs › Research › peer-review
- Published
Conflict strength: Measuring the tension between cooperative and competitive incentives in experimental negotiation tasks
Majer, J., Schweinsberg, M., Zhang, H. & Trötschel, R., 06.05.2022, In: Collabra: Psychology. 8, 1, 17 p., 35330.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
From Claiming to Creating Value: The Psychology of Negotiations on Common Resource Dilemmas
Trötschel, R., Treek, M., Heydenbluth, C., Zhang, K. & Majer, J. M., 01.05.2022, In: Sustainability. 14, 9, 26 p., 5257.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Using measures of reading time regularity (RTR) to quantify eye movement dynamics, and how they are shaped by linguistic information
Tschense, M. & Wallot, S., 01.05.2022, In: Journal of Vision. 22, 6, 21 p., 9.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review
- Published
Changes in the Complexity of Limb Movements during the First Year of Life across Different Tasks
Laudanska, Z., Perez, D. L., Radkowska, A., Babis, K., Malinowska-Korczak, A., Wallot, S. & Tomalski, P., 15.04.2022, In: Entropy. 24, 4, 13 p., 552.Research output: Journal contributions › Journal articles › Research › peer-review