• Faculty

  • Katrina Fincher

    Assistant Professor of Psychology (CSD)

    Email
    fincherk@newschool.edu

    Office Location
    G - 80 Fifth Avenue

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    Katrina Fincher

    Profile

    Katrina Fincher studies moral psychology. Her research focuses on the basic cognitive and perceptual psychological mechanisms that enable people to live in social groups, in particular three mechanisms that enable this transition; perceptual dehumanization (her primary focus), covert retribution, and sacred values. 


    Degrees Held

    PhD, University of Pennsylvania 


    Professional Affiliation

    Association for Psychological Science

    Society for Judgment and Decision Making

    Society for Personality and Social Psychology

    National Latina/o Psychological

    Association Academy of Management


    Recent Publications

    Fincher, K. M. (2019). Social Antecedents and Perceptual Consequences of How We Look at Others. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 148(1), 143–157.

    Morris, M. W., Savani, K., & Fincher, K. (2019). Metacognition Fosters Cultural Learning: Evidence from Individual Differences and Situational Prompts. Journal of Personality and Social Psychology, 116(1), 46–68.

    Fincher, K.M., Tetlock, P.E. & Morris, M.W. (2017) Interfacing with Faces: Perceptual Humanization and Dehumanization, Current Directions in Psy. Sci. ​

    Fincher, K.M. & Morris, M.W.  (2016) Look Again: The Value in Distinguishing Three Processes Underlying Social-Perceptual Effects, Psychological Inquiry, 27:4.

    Fincher, K.M., & Tetlock, P.E. (2016) Perceptual Dehumanization of Faces Is Activated by Norm Violations and Facilitates Norm Enforcement, Journal of Experimental Psychology : General.  

    Fincher. K.M & Tetlock, P.E. (2015) Brutality Undercover of Ambiguity: Covert Retributivism and Punitiveness Traps. Personality and Social Psychology Bulletin.  

    Tetlock, P.E. & Fincher, K.M., (2014) Social Functionalism. "Theory and Explanation in Social Psychology." Guilford Press, New York.

    Mellers B, Ungar L, Baron J, Ramos J, Gurcay B, Fincher K.M., Scott S.E., Moore D, Atanasov P, Swift SA, Murray T, Stone E, & Tetlock, P (2014). Psychological strategies for winning a geopolitical forecasting tournament. Psychological science, 25(5), 1106-1115.  

    Baron, J. Metz, S.E., Scott, S., & Fincher, K.M. Why does the Cognitive Reflection Test (sometimes) predict utilitarian moral judgment (and other things)? Journal of Applied Research in Memory and Cognition 4 (2015) 265-284.  

    Hormes, J. M., Rozin, P., Green, M. C., & Fincher, K. (2013). Reading a book can change your mind, but only some changes last for a year: food attitude changes in readers of The Omnivore's Dilemma. Frontiers in Psychology, 4.  

    Mellers, B., & Fincher, K.M.(2013) Surprise: A belief or an emotion? Progress in Brain Research, Vol. 202, Amsterdam: The Netherlands, 2013, pp. 3-19. 

    Rozin, P., Fincher, K.M., Guillot, L,.,Rozin, A., & Tsukayama, E. (2013). Glad to be sad, and other examples of benign masochism. Judgment & Decision Making, 8(4).  

    Fedotova, N., Fincher, K.M., Goodwin, G., & Rozin P. (2012) How Much Do Thoughts Count?: Preference for Emotion versus Principle in Judgments of Antisocial and Prosocial Behavior. Emotion Review.  

    Rozin, P., Haidt, J., & Fincher, K.M. (2009). From oral to moral. Science, 323, 1179-1180  

    Allison K. C., Paré E, Cicco Barker J, Kavanaugh K, Fincher, K., Sarwer DB. Predicting excess weight gain among overweight pregnant women: the PoEMS study. Journal of Women’s Health 2007; 16:1102, P-20.  


    Research Interests

    morality, cognition, perception  


    Awards And Honors

    2016 Mortimer D. Sackler Summer Institute in Neuroscience and Law

    2010–2015 Russell Ackoff Student Research Fellowship, Risk Management and Decision Processes Center, The Wharton School (Total Awards: $17,500)

    2009–2015 Mellon Fellowship, Department of Psychology University of Pennsylvania (Total Awards: $280,000)

    2013–2015 Benjamin Franklin Summer Fellowship Department of Psychology, University of Pennsylvania (Total Awards: $6,300)


    Current Courses

    Humanization & Dehumanization
    GPSY 6444, Spring 2026

    Independent Study
    LPSY 3950, Spring 2026

    Independent Study
    GPSY 6990, Spring 2026

    Moral Psychology
    GPSY 6438, Spring 2026

    Senior Work Project
    LPSY 4001, Spring 2026

    Future Courses

    Intergroup Relations
    LPSY 3525, Fall 2026

    Polit Psyc: Moral, Hiera&Grps
    LPSY 3152, Fall 2026

    Past Courses

    Intergroup Relations
    LPSY 3525, Fall 2025

    Polit Psyc: Moral, Hiera&Grps
    LPSY 3152, Fall 2025

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