Titre : |
Social cognition |
Type de document : |
texte imprimé |
Auteurs : |
Susan T. Fiske (1952-....), Auteur ; Shelley E. Taylor, Auteur |
Mention d'édition : |
2è éd. |
Editeur : |
New York : McGraw-Hill |
Année de publication : |
1991 |
Importance : |
1 vol. (XVIII-717 p.) |
Présentation : |
couv. ill. en coul. |
Format : |
24 cm |
ISBN/ISSN/EAN : |
978-0-07-021191-9 |
Note générale : |
Références bibliographiques p. 397-500. Index
|
Langues : |
Anglais (eng) |
Mots-clés : |
Psychologie cognitive |
Note de contenu : |
Approaches to studying the social thinker. - Ebb & flow of cognition in psychology & neuroscience. - What is social cognition?. - People are not things. - Cultures matter. - Brains matter. - Basic concepts in social cognition. - Dual modes in social cognition. - Automatic processes. - Controlled processes. - Motivations influence which modes operate. - Models of both automatic and controlled processes. - Attention and encoding : what gets into our heads. - Salience : a property of stimuli in context. - Vividness : an inherent property of stimuli. - Accessibility : a property of categories in our heads. - Direct perception : not just in our heads. - Faces : the focus of social attention. - Representation in memory. - Associative networks organizing memory. - Procedural and declarative memory : what memory does. - Parallel versus serial processing : coordinating memory processes. - Embodied memory. - Interim summary of memory models. - Social memory structures : why social memory matters. - Topics in social cognition : from self to society. - Self. - Mental representations of the self. - Self-regulation. - Motivation and self-regulation. - The self as a reference point. - Causal attribution processes. - What is attribution theory?. - Early contributions to attribution theory. - Processes underlying attribution. - Attributional biases. - Heuristics. - What are heuristics?. - When are heuristics used and when do they lead to wrong answers?. - Judgments over time. - Accuracy and efficiency in social judgment. - Errors and biases as consequential : improving the inference process. - Errors and biases in social inference : perhaps they don't matter?. - Are rapid judgments sometimes better than thoughtfully-considered ones?. - Neuroeconomics : back to the future?. - Cognitive structures of attitudes. - Background. - Cognitive features of two consistency theories. - Lay theories and attitude change. - Functional dimensions of attitudes. - Cognitive processing of attitudes. - Heuristic-systematic model. - Peripheral vs. central routes to persuasion : elaboration likelihood model. - Motivation and opportunity determine attitude processes mode model. - Implicit associations. - Embodied attitudes. - Neural correlates of attitudes. - Stereotyping a central topic in social cognition. - Introduction. - Blatant bias. - Subtle bias. - Effects of bias. - Prejudice : interplay of cogntive and affective biases. - Intergroup cognition and emotion. - Racial prejudice. - Gender prejudice. - Age prejudice. - Sexual prejudice. - From social cognition to affect. - Differentiating among affects, preferences, evaluations, moods, emotions. - Early theories. - Physiological and neuroscience theories of emotion. - Social cognitive foundations of affect. - From affect to social cognition. - Affective influences on cognition. - Individual differences in the affect-cognition interplay. - Affect versus cognition. - Behavior and cognition. - Goal-directed behavior. - When are cognitions and behavior related?. - Using behavior for impression management. - Using behavior to test hypotheses about others |
Social cognition [texte imprimé] / Susan T. Fiske (1952-....), Auteur ; Shelley E. Taylor, Auteur . - 2è éd. . - New York : McGraw-Hill, 1991 . - 1 vol. (XVIII-717 p.) : couv. ill. en coul. ; 24 cm. ISBN : 978-0-07-021191-9 Références bibliographiques p. 397-500. Index
Langues : Anglais ( eng)
Mots-clés : |
Psychologie cognitive |
Note de contenu : |
Approaches to studying the social thinker. - Ebb & flow of cognition in psychology & neuroscience. - What is social cognition?. - People are not things. - Cultures matter. - Brains matter. - Basic concepts in social cognition. - Dual modes in social cognition. - Automatic processes. - Controlled processes. - Motivations influence which modes operate. - Models of both automatic and controlled processes. - Attention and encoding : what gets into our heads. - Salience : a property of stimuli in context. - Vividness : an inherent property of stimuli. - Accessibility : a property of categories in our heads. - Direct perception : not just in our heads. - Faces : the focus of social attention. - Representation in memory. - Associative networks organizing memory. - Procedural and declarative memory : what memory does. - Parallel versus serial processing : coordinating memory processes. - Embodied memory. - Interim summary of memory models. - Social memory structures : why social memory matters. - Topics in social cognition : from self to society. - Self. - Mental representations of the self. - Self-regulation. - Motivation and self-regulation. - The self as a reference point. - Causal attribution processes. - What is attribution theory?. - Early contributions to attribution theory. - Processes underlying attribution. - Attributional biases. - Heuristics. - What are heuristics?. - When are heuristics used and when do they lead to wrong answers?. - Judgments over time. - Accuracy and efficiency in social judgment. - Errors and biases as consequential : improving the inference process. - Errors and biases in social inference : perhaps they don't matter?. - Are rapid judgments sometimes better than thoughtfully-considered ones?. - Neuroeconomics : back to the future?. - Cognitive structures of attitudes. - Background. - Cognitive features of two consistency theories. - Lay theories and attitude change. - Functional dimensions of attitudes. - Cognitive processing of attitudes. - Heuristic-systematic model. - Peripheral vs. central routes to persuasion : elaboration likelihood model. - Motivation and opportunity determine attitude processes mode model. - Implicit associations. - Embodied attitudes. - Neural correlates of attitudes. - Stereotyping a central topic in social cognition. - Introduction. - Blatant bias. - Subtle bias. - Effects of bias. - Prejudice : interplay of cogntive and affective biases. - Intergroup cognition and emotion. - Racial prejudice. - Gender prejudice. - Age prejudice. - Sexual prejudice. - From social cognition to affect. - Differentiating among affects, preferences, evaluations, moods, emotions. - Early theories. - Physiological and neuroscience theories of emotion. - Social cognitive foundations of affect. - From affect to social cognition. - Affective influences on cognition. - Individual differences in the affect-cognition interplay. - Affect versus cognition. - Behavior and cognition. - Goal-directed behavior. - When are cognitions and behavior related?. - Using behavior for impression management. - Using behavior to test hypotheses about others |
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