Social judgements : implicit and explicit processes /
Saved in:
Imprint: | Cambridge, UK ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2003. |
---|---|
Description: | xxi, 417 p. : ill. ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology series ; v. 5 |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/4929585 |
Table of Contents:
- 1. Responding to the social world: explicit and implicit processes in social judgments
- 2. Biases in social judgment: design flaws or design features?
- 3. Reflexive and reflective judgment processes: a social cognitive neuroscience approach
- 4. Decomposing the person perception process: cerebral hemispheric asymmetries in social perception
- 5. The psychodynamics of social judgments: an attachment theory perspective
- 6. Towards a social psychology of person judgments: implications for person perception accuracy and self-knowledge
- 7. A parametric unimodel: of human judgment: integrating dual-process frameworks in cognition from a single-mode perspective
- 8. Social judgments based on pseudo-contingencies: a forgotten phenomenon
- 9. The size of context effects in social judgment
- 10. Affective influences on social judgments and decisions: implicit and explicit processes
- 11. Hot cognition and social judgments: when and why do descriptions influence our feelings?
- 12. Attitudinal process vs. content: the role of information processing biases in social judgment and behavior
- 13. The importance of the question in the judgment of abilities and opinions via social comparison
- 14. Consequences of automatic goal pursuit and the case of nonconscious mimicry
- 15. Implicit and explicit processes in social judgments: the role of goal-based explanations
- 16. Impact of ostracism on social judgments and decisions: explicit and implicit processes
- 17. To control or not to control stereotypes: separating the implicit and explicit process of perspective-taking and suppression
- 18. Responding to the social world: attributions and stereotype-based judgments
- 19. Implicit and explicit process in social judgment: deep and high