Publications
Nobes, G & Martin, J.W. (2021). They should have known better: The roles of negligence and outcome in moral judgements of accidental actions. British Journal of Psychology.
Dhaliwal, N., Martin, J.W., Barclay, P. & Young, L. (2021). Signaling Benefits of Partner Choice Decisions. [preprint]
Martin, J.W., Leddy, K., Young, L. & McAuliffe, K. (2021). An earlier role for intent in children’s partner choice versus punishment. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General. [Pre-print, with analysis code and data: https://psyarxiv.com/ufbcs/ ]
Martin, J.W., Martin, S, & McAuliffe, K. (2021). Third-party punishment promotes fairness in children. Developmental Psychology.
Martin, J.W., Marine, B., & Cushman, F. (2021). The effect of cognitive load on intent-based moral judgment. Cognitive Science. [Pre-print, with analysis code and data: https://osf.io/5wxck/]
Sarin, A., Ho, M., Martin, J.W. & Cushman, F. (2021). Punishment is organized around principles of communicative inference. Cognition. [Pre-print, with analysis code and data: https://osf.io/fxdwm/ ]
Bernhard, R.M., Martin, J.W. & Warneken, F. (2020). Why do children punish? Fair outcomes matter more than intent in children’s second- and third-party punishment. Journal of Experimental Child Psychology, 200, 104090.
Martin, J.W.*, Jordan, J.J.*, Rand, D.G. & Cushman, F. (2019). When do we punish people who don't? Cognition, 193, 104040. [Analysis code and data: https://osf.io/fhmnd/]
Martin, J.W. & Cushman, F. (2016). The adaptive logic of moral luck. In J. Sytsma & W. Buckwalter (eds), The Blackwell Companion to Experimental Philosophy.
Martin, J.W. & Cushman, F. (2016). Why we forgive what can't be controlled. Cognition, 133-143.
Buckholtz, J.W., Martin, J.W., Treadway, M.T., Jan, K., Zald, D.H., Jones, O.D., & Marois, R. (2015). From blame to punishment: Disrupting prefrontal cortex reveals third-party norm enforcement mechanisms. Neuron, 87, 1-12.
Martin, J.W. & Cushman, F. (2015). To punish or to leave: Distinct cognitive processes underlie partner control and partner choice behaviors. PLoS ONE 10(4), 1-14. [codebook; data]
Treadway, M.T.*, Buckholtz, J.W.*, Martin, J.W., Jan, K., Asplund, C.L., Ginther, M.R., Jones, O.D., & Marois, R. (2014). Corticolimbic gating of emotion-driven punishment. Nature Neuroscience, 17 (9), 1270-1275.
Asplund, C.L., Foungie, D., Zughni, S., Martin, J.W. & Marois, R. (2014). The attentional blink reveals the probabilistic nature of discrete conscious perception. Psychological Science 25, 824-831.
Martin, J.W., & Sloman, S.A. (2013). Refining the dual-system theory of choice. Journal of Consumer Psychology 23 (4), 552-555.
Tombu, M.N., Asplund, C.L., Dux, P.E., Godwin, D., Martin, J.W. & Marois, R. (2011). A unified attentional bottleneck in the human brain. PNAS 108 (33), 13426-13431.
Preprints/Working papers
Martin, J.W., Young, L. & McAuliffe, K. (under review). The impact of group membership on punishment and partner choice. [Pre-print, with analysis code and data: https://psyarxiv.com/5qr32 ]
Martin, J.W. & Heiphetz, L. (under review). Internally Wicked: Essentialist Views of Criminality Increase Punitiveness Toward Offenders.
Nobes, G., Martin, J.W. & Panagiotaki G. (under review). Evaluating the Unintended: The Influence of Outcome and Negligence on Moral Judgments of Accidental Harms.
Martin, J.W., Young, L. & McAuliffe, K. (in revision). The psychology of partner choice. PsyArxiv.
Cooper, J.C., DeVries, B.A., Cole, D., Martin, J.W., Tennyson, R.L., Shelton, R.C. & Zald, D.H., Treadway, M.T. (in revision). Blunted striatal effort anticipation signals during effort based decision-making in major depression.
* Denotes equal contribution to this work