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020 _a9780415648929
040 _cCUS
082 _a302.12
_bMOS/C
100 _aMoskowitz, Gordon B, ed.
_96183
245 0 _aCognitive social psychology: The Princeton symposium on the legacy and future of social cognition
260 _aNew York:
_bTaylor & Francis Group,
_c2015.
300 _a503p.
505 _aContents: Part I:The Motives Driving Social Cognition.C.D. Hardin, T.D. Conley, A Relational Approach to Cognition: Shared Experience and Relationship Affirmation in Social Cognition. M.M. Thompson, M.E. Naccarato, K.C.H. Parker, G.B. Moskowitz, The Personal Need for Structure and Personal Fear of Invalidity Measures: Historical Perspectives, Current Applications, and Future Directions. J. Stone, Behavioral Discrepancies and the Role of Construal Processes in Cognitive Dissonance. E.M. Pomerantz, J.L. Saxon, G.A. Kenney, Self-Evaluation: The Development of Sex Differences. H. Blanton, Evaluating the Self in the Context of Another: The Three-Selves Model of Social Comparison Assimilation and Contrast. J.T. Jost, Outgroup Favoritism and the Theory of System Justification: A Paradigm for Investigating the Effects of Socioeconomic Success on Stereotype Content. Part II:Building Blocks of Social Cognition: Representation and Structure.J.J. Hetts, B.W. Pelham, A Case for the Nonconscious Self-Concept. S. Chen, The Role of Theories in Mental Representations and Their Use in Social Perception: A Theory-Based Approach to Significant-Other Representations and Transference. M.W. Morris, D.R. Ames, E.D. Knowles, What We Theorize When We Theorize That We Theorize: Examining the "Implicit Theory" Construct From a Cross-Disciplinary Perspective. M. Schaller, L.G. Conway, III, From Cognition to Culture: The Origins of Stereotypes That Really Matter. J.W. Sherman, The Dynamic Relationship Between Stereotype Efficiency and Mental Representation. L.S. Newman, A Cornerstone for the Science of Interpersonal Behavior? Person Perception and Person Memory, Past, Present, and Future. Part III:Subjective Perception and Motivated Judgment.D.S. Krull, On Partitioning the Fundamental Attribution Error: Dispositionalism and the Correspondence Bias. D.A. Stapel, W. Koomen, Let's Not Forget the Past When We Go to the Future: On Our Knowledge of Knowledge Accessibility. S.J. Stroessner, J.E. Plaks, Illusory Correlation and Stereotype Formation: Tracing the Arc of Research Over a Quarter Century. J.D. Vorauer, The Other Side of the Story: Transparency Estimation in Social Interaction. D.T. Wegener, M. Dunn, D. Tokusato, The Flexible Correction Model: Phenomenology and the Use of Naive Theories in Avoiding or Removing Bias. A. Liberman, Exploring the Boundaries of Rationality: A Functional Perspective on Dual-Process Models in Social Psychology. Part IV:Control Over Cognition and Action.N. Roese, The Crossroads of Affect and Cognition: Counterfactuals as Compensatory Cognition. C.M. Brendl, Goals and the Compatibility Principle in Attitudes, Judgment, and Choice. G.B. Moskowitz, Preconscious Control and Compensatory Cognition. I.V. Blair, Implicit Stereotypes and Prejudice. M.J. Monteith, C.I. Voils, Exerting Control Over Prejudiced Responses.
650 _aCognitive psychology.
650 _aSocial psychology.
_93956
650 _aSociale cognitie.
_96184
942 _2ddc
_cWB16
947 _a5061
999 _c210795
_d210795