Open Peer Commentary
Social, not individual, identification is the key to understanding group phenomena
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- 26 October 2016, e143
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The subtle effects of incentives and competition on group performance
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e144
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Considering the role of ecology on individual differentiation
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- 26 October 2016, e145
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Solved paradoxes and old hats? The research needed on differentiated selves
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- 26 October 2016, e146
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How group members contribute to group performance: Evidence from agent-based simulations
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- 26 October 2016, e147
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Reputational concerns as a general determinant of group functioning
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- 26 October 2016, e148
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Humans are not the Borg: Personal and social selves function as components in a unified self-system
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- 26 October 2016, e149
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Social identification is generally a prerequisite for group success and does not preclude intragroup differentiation
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- 26 October 2016, e150
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Groups need selves, but which selves? Dual selves in groups and the downsides of individuation
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- 26 October 2016, e151
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We agree and we disagree, which is exactly what most people do most of the time
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- 26 October 2016, e152
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Group members differ in relative prototypicality: Effects on the individual and the group
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e153
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Beyond old dichotomies: Individual differentiation can occur through group commitment, not despite it
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e154
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Group membership: Who gets to decide?
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- Published online by Cambridge University Press:
- 26 October 2016, e155
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Task specificity and the impact on both the individual and group during the formation of groups
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- 26 October 2016, e156
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Member differentiation and group tasks: More than meets the eye
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- 26 October 2016, e157
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Group behavior in the military may provide a unique case
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- 26 October 2016, e158
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Differentiation of selves: Differentiating a fuzzy concept
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- 26 October 2016, e159
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Differentiated selves help only when identification is strong and tasks are complex
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- 26 October 2016, e160
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Disputing deindividuation: Why negative group behaviours derive from group norms, not group immersion
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- 26 October 2016, e161
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Vicarious contagion decreases differentiation – and comes with costs
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- 26 October 2016, e162
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