Social Cognition
Four Volume Set
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Social Cognition
Social Cognition
April 2013 | 1 792 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
All human interactions are conditioned on social cognition and, in turn, influence social cognition: it is a core field in social psychology, and now it also overlaps social neuroscience, social and cognitive development, behavioural economics, health psychology, diversity science, and more. This four-volume collection brings together some of the most influential and important articles to have come out of the field over the past decades, as well as taking in modern developments which reflect just how vital the subject still is today.
Volume One: Basic Concepts in Social Cognition
Volume Two: Topics in Social Cognition: Self, Attributions, Heuristics, and Inferences
Volume Three: Topics in Social Cognition: Cognitive Approaches to Attitudes, Stereotyping and Prejudice
Volume Four: Beyond Cognition: Affect and Behaviour
VOLUME ONE
PART ONE: INTRODUCTION
S.E. Asch
Forming Impressions of Personality
Joseph Henrich, Steven Heine and Ara Norenzayan
The Weirdest People in the World?
Kevin Ochsner and Matthew Lieberman
The Emergence of Social Cognitive Neuroscience
Thomas Ostrom
The Sovereignty of Social Cognition
PART TWO: DUAL MODES IN SOCIAL COGNITION
Henk Aarts and Ap Dijksterhuis
Habits as Knowledge Structures
John Bargh, Mark Chen and Lara Burrows
Automaticity of Social Behavior
David Gilbert, Brett Pelham and Douglas Krull
On Cognitive Busyness
Daniel Wegner et al
Paradoxical Effects of Thought Suppression
PART THREE: ATTENTION AND ENCODING
Jasmin Cloutier, Malia Mason and C.Neil Macrae
The Perceptual Determinants of Person Construal
Susan Fiske
Attention and Weight in Person Perception
E.Tory Higgins, William Rholes and Carl Jones
Category Accessibility and Impression Formation
Janine Willis and Alexander Todorov
First Impressions
PART FOUR: REPRESENTATION IN MEMORY
C. Neil Macrae and Galen Bodenhausen
Social Cognition
Thomas Srull, Meryl Lichenstein and Myron Rothbart
Associative Storage and Retrieval Processes in Person Memory
Lawrence Williams and John Bargh
Experiencing Physical Warmth Promotes Interpersonal Warmth
VOLUME TWO
PART FIVE: SELF IN SOCIAL COGNITION
Todd Heatherton, C. Neil Macrae and William Kelley
What the Social Brain Sciences Can Tell us about the Self
Hazel Rose Markus and Shinobu Kitayama
Culture and the Self
William Swann, Jr., Brett Pelham and Douglas Krull
Agreeable Fancy or Disagreeable Truth? Reconciling Self-Enhancement and Self-Verification
Shelley Taylor and Jonathon Brown
Illusion and Well-Being
PART SIX: ATTRIBUTION PROCESSES
Lasana Harris, Alexander Todorov and Susan Fiske
Attributions on the Brain
Bertram Malle
The Actor-Observer Asymmetry in Attribution
Leslie Ann McArthur
The How and What of Why
PART SEVEN: HEURISTICS AND SHORTCUTS: EFFICIENCY IN INFERENCE AND DECISION-MAKING
Nicholas Epley et al
Perspective-Taking as Egocentric Anchoring and Adjustment
Loran Nordgren et al
What Constitutes Torture? Psychological Impediments to an Objective Evaluation of Enhanced Interrogation Tactics
Emily Pronin, Thomas Gilovich and Lee Ross
Objectivity in the Eye of the Beholder
Amos Tversky and Daniel Kahneman
Judgment under Uncertainty
PART EIGHT: ACCURACY AND EFFICIENCY IN SOCIAL INFERENCE
Richard Nisbett et al
The Use of Statistical Heuristics in Everyday Inductive Reasoning
Lee Ross, Mark Lepper and Michael Hubbard
Perseverance in Self-Perception and Social Perception
William Swann
Quest for Accuracy in Person Perception
VOLUME THREE
PART NINE: COGNITIVE STRUCTURES OF ATTITUDES
Frederica Conrey and Eliot Smith
Attitude Representation
Alice Eagly and Shelly Chaiken
Attitude Research in the 21st Century
Jon Krosnick et al
Attitude Strength
PART TEN: COGNITIVE PROCESSING OF ATTITUDES
Shelly Chaiken
Heuristic versus Systematic Information-Processing and the Use of Source versus Message Cues in Persuasion
Russell Fazio and Michael Olson
Implicit Measures in Social Cognition Research
Richard Petty and John Cacioppo
Issue Involvement Can Increase or Decrease Persuasion by Enhancing Message-Relevant Cognitive Response
PART ELEVEN: STEREOTYPING: COGNITION AND BIAS
Susan Fiske et al
A Model of (Often Mixed) Stereotype Content
Samuel Gaertner et al
Reducing Intergroup Bias
Miles Hewstone, Mark Rubin and Hazel Willis
Intergroup Bias
C.Neil Macrae, Alan Milne and Galen Bodenhausen
Stereotypes as Energy-Saving Devices
PART TWELVE: PREJUDICE: INTERPLAY OF COGNITIVE AND AFFECTIVE BIASES
Galen Bodenhausen and Destiny Peery
Social Categorization and Stereotyping in Vivo
G.M. Herek and K. McLemore
Sexual Prejudice
Michael North and Susan Fiske
An Inconvenienced Youth
Jennifer Richeson and J. Nicole Shelton
When Prejudice Does Not Pay
Laurie Rudman and Peter Glick
Prescriptive Gender Stereotypes and Backlash toward Agentic Women
VOLUME FOUR
PART THIRTEEN: FROM SOCIAL COGNITION TO AFFECT
Susan Andersen and Serena Chen
The Relational Self
Lisa Feldman Barrett et al
The Experience of Emotion
Fritz Strack, Leonard Martin and Sabine Stepper
Inhibiting and Facilitating Conditions of the Human Smile
PART FOURTEEN: FROM AFFECT TO SOCIAL COGNITION
David DeSteno et al
Discrete Emotions and Persuasion
Jennifer Lerner and Dacher Keltner
Fear, Anger and Risk
Paula Niedenthal et al
Embodiment in Attitudes, Social Perception and Emotion
R.B. Zajonc
Feeling and Thinking
PART FIFTEEN: BEHAVIOR AND COGNITION
Veronika Brandstätter, Angelika Lengfelder and Peter Gollwitzer
Implementation Intentions and Efficient Action Initiation
Tanya Chartrand and John Bargh
The Chameleon Effect
Richard Nisbett and Timothy DeCamp Wilson
Telling More Than We Can Know
Carl Word, Mark Zanna and Joel Cooper
The Non-Verbal Mediation of Self-Fulfilling Prophecies in Interracial Interaction