Abdolhossein Abdollahi

     
Institution
Islamic Azad University, Zarand Branch

Current Position
Assistant Professor

Highest Degree
Ph.D. in Psychology from Tehran Allameh Tabatabaee University, 2002

Research Interests
Aggression
Attitudes
Emotion
Evolution/Genetics
Group Processes
Motivation/Goal Setting
Political Psychology
Social Cognition

 
Abdolhossein Abdollahi
Dept. of Psychology, Kasra Building, No. 1
Alley 2, Keshavarz Boulevard
Islamic Azad University, Zarand Branch
Kerman
Iran

Home Page
Phone: 0098-913-142-4783

Vita

Abdolhossein Abdollahi
I am an experimental social psychologist primarily interested in Terror Management Theory (TMT), a social psychological theory positing that much human social behavior is driven by the need to avoid the conscious and unconscious thoughts of one's own death and mortality.

My most notable study was about how terror management processes (i.e., death reminders nonconscious activation) might affect the way people respond to real or perceived hostile outgroups threatening the "reality" of their cultural worldviews (e.g., religion). More specifically, when under the influence of death thoughts, both Iranian and American participants tended to react more aggressively toward such outgroups as the US and the West (for Iranians) and the US enemies (for Americans). That is, the same psychological inclinations that make them want to kill us make us want to kill them -- regardless of which specific group is referred to by the words "us" and "them." These experimental findings (published in the journal Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin in 2006) received a high level of publicity in various scientific communities and the paper has been reprinted in an important book on terrorism entitled "Psychology of Terrorism: The Best Writings about the Mind of the Terrorist" edited by Jeff Victoroff and Arie Kruglanski.

In a related vein, recently my colleagues and I have published a paper in Current Directions in Psychological Science reviewing new studies indicating that the same underlying psychological processes that fuel aggression, under certain conditions, can promote peace. Our experiments show that one way to reach this goal is to prime our commonalities as human beings. That is, our humanity, our compassionate beliefs, and our humane relationships. This could be done using such simple procedures as exposing people to pictures illustrating compassionate scenes, quotes from religious books, etc.

In another relevant line of research, I have studied the effects of trauma exposure and dissociation on the functioning of participants' anxiety-buffering systems. The results of the study (to be published in Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy) have led to introduction of a new theory my colleagues and I have called "Anxiety Buffer Disruption Theory (ABDT)." According to ABDT, individuals high in the tendency to dissociate in response to a traumatic event would be especially prone to a disruption in their anxiety buffering system, resulting in less worldview defense and more negative affect in responses to reminders of their mortality.

Still in another research domain, my colleagues and I have recently examined the role of young adults' parental attachment in terror management. Results of our studies (published in Journal of Personality and Social Psychology) revealed that activating thoughts of one's parent in response to mortality salience (MS) reduced death-thought accessibility and worldview defense and increased feelings of self-worth. Moreover, we found that MS led to greater ease of recalling positive maternal interactions and greater difficulty recalling negative interactions, and increased attraction to a stranger who was described as being similar to one's parent. Finally, the findings indicated that after MS, insecure individuals were more likely to rely on relationships with their parents, whereas secure individuals were more likely to rely on relationships with romantic partners.

My colleagues and I have also worked on demonstrating that the MS effects are actually context-dependent. That is, under certain circumstances, they may yield different results. Specifically, in a new study, we have shown that when participants are primed with a combination of mortality salience and compassionate religious values, their tendency to support violent solutions to the current conflict in the Middle East would be attenuated. These findings suggest that hope for reducing religious violence in the world today is unlikely to come from secular pressure, but rather, is likely to depend on the religious community highlighting the core compassionate teachings of love and acceptance.

In the context of TMT, I have published several other papers and articles on terrorism, political extremism, martyrdom, attachment, common humanity, compassion, and social consensus in such journals as Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, Current Directions in Psychological Science, and Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression. Also, in April 2009, the Association for Psychological Science (APS) introduced me as a rising star in psychological science (APS Observer, Volume 22, Number 4):

http://www.psychologicalscience.org/observer/getArticle.cfm?id=2496

Recently I have started collaborating with Prof. Anthony Lemieux (Purchase College, State University of New York) to design and run an online course in the psychology of terrorism.

I am on the editorial boards of the following journals:

1. The Journal of Social Psychology

http://www.heldref.org/jspedit.php

2. Journal of Social, Evolutionary, and Cultural Psychology

http://www.jsecjournal.com/Editorialboard.htm

3. Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression, the flagship journal of the international Society for Terrorism Research

http://www.societyforterrorismresearch.org/pages/journalstaff.html

4. In-Mind Magazine, a social psychological online peer-reviewed journal

http://www.in-mind.org/submission-guidelines.html

I have a blog entitled "Terror Management" on the Psychology Today Magazine website which represents the latest findings and theorizings on TMT. You may want to take a glance at it by going to the following link:

http://www.psychologytoday.com/blog/bloggers/abdolhossein-abdollahi-phd

My work has been funded by national and international research centers and organizations. I am a member of the American Psychological Association (APA), the Association for Psychological Science (APS), and the Society for Personality and Social Psychology (SPSP).

I am also interested in such areas as false memory, judgment and decision making, evolutionary psychology, social cognition, and social embodiment.


Journal Articles:

  • Abdollahi, A., & Fiske, S. T. (2008). Social judgment: Warmth and competence are universal dimensions. In-Mind Magazine.
  • Abdollahi, A., Henthorn, C., & Pyszczynski, T. (2009). Experimental peace psychology: Priming consensus mitigates aggression against outgroups under mortality salience. Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression, 2(1), 30-37.
  • Abdollahi, A., Pyszczynski, T., Maxfield, M., & Lusyszczynska, A. (2010). Post-traumatic stress reaction as a disruption in anxiety-buffer functioning. Psychological Trauma: Theory, Research, Practice, and Policy.
  • Cox, C. R., Arndt, J., Pyszczynski, T., Greenberg, J., Abdollahi, A., & Solomon, S. (2008). Terror management and adults' attachment to their parents: The safe haven remains. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 94(4), 696-717.
  • Lemieux, A. F., & Abdollahi, A. (2009). Collaborative Online International Learning: The example of a course in the psychology of terrorism in the United States and Iran. Psychology International, 20(1), 14-15.
  • Pyszczynski, T., Abdollahi, A., Solomon, S., Greenberg, J., Cohen, F., & Weise, D. (2006). Mortality salience, martyrdom, and military might: The Great Satan versus the Axis of Evil. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin, 32, 525-537.
  • Pyszczynski, T., Motyl, M., & Abdollahi, A. (2009). Righteous violence: Killing for God, country, freedom and justice. Behavioral Sciences of Terrorism and Political Aggression, 1(1), 12-39.
  • Pyszczynski, T., Rothschild, Z., & Abdollahi, A. (2008). Terrorism, violence, and hope for peace: A terror management perspective. Current Directions in Psychological Science, 17(5), 318-322.
  • Rothschild, Z., Abdollahi, A., & Pyszczynski, T. (2009). Does peace have a prayer? The effect of mortality salience, compassionate values, and religious fundamentalism on hostility toward out-groups. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 45 (4), 816-827.

Other Publications:

  • Pyszczynski, T., Abdollahi, A., Greenberg, J., & Solomon, S. (2006). Crusades and Jihads: An existential psychological perspective on the psychology of terrorism and political extremism. In J. Victoroff (Ed.), Tangled roots: Social and psychological factors in the genesis of terrorism (pp. 85-98). Amsterdam: IOS Press.
  • Pyszczynski, T., Rothschild, Z., Motyl, M., & Abdollahi, A. (2008). The cycle of righteous destruction: A terror management theory perspective on terrorist and counter-terrorist violence. In Stritzke, Lewandowsky, Denemark, Morgan, & Claire (Eds.), Terrorism and torture: An interdisciplinary perspective (pp. 154-178). Cambridge University Press.
  • Vail, K. E., Motyl, M., Abdollahi, A. & Pyszczynski, T. (2009). Dying to Live: Terrorism, War, and Defending One's Way of Life. In D. Antonius, A. D. Brown, T. K. Walters, J. M. Ramirez, & S. J. Sinclair (Eds.), Interdisciplinary Analyses of Terrorism and Political Aggression (pp. 49-70). Cambridge Scholars Publishing.

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