Introduction to Social Cognition
Introduction to Social Cognition
The Essential Questions and Ideas
Moskowitz, Gordon B.
Guilford Publications
07/2024
557
Mole
9781462554546
15 a 20 dias
Descrição não disponível.
1. Thinking Is for Action (Purposeful), So We Make Meaning from Chaos
2. We Create Internal Mental Representations of External Reality
3. Self-Report Is Unreliable Because Cognition Is Often Automatic
4. We Can Know What People Think Even When They Don't Know
5. First Impressions Are "Sticky" and Difficult to Update
6. First Impressions Can Be Implicit, Making Them Even More Persistent
7. We Follow Rules When Asking "Why?," Acting Like Intuitive Scientists
8. Biases Are Common and Arise from Normal Cognitive Processes
9. Biases Are Common and Are Often Motivational in Nature
10. Beyond the Information Given: Responding Guided by Priming
11. Prejudice and Stereotyping
12. Cognitive Processing Is Flexible, and Processing Types Dissociable
13. The Updating of Impressions Is Promoted by Diagnostic Stimuli and One's Goals
References
Author Index
Subject Index
2. We Create Internal Mental Representations of External Reality
3. Self-Report Is Unreliable Because Cognition Is Often Automatic
4. We Can Know What People Think Even When They Don't Know
5. First Impressions Are "Sticky" and Difficult to Update
6. First Impressions Can Be Implicit, Making Them Even More Persistent
7. We Follow Rules When Asking "Why?," Acting Like Intuitive Scientists
8. Biases Are Common and Arise from Normal Cognitive Processes
9. Biases Are Common and Are Often Motivational in Nature
10. Beyond the Information Given: Responding Guided by Priming
11. Prejudice and Stereotyping
12. Cognitive Processing Is Flexible, and Processing Types Dissociable
13. The Updating of Impressions Is Promoted by Diagnostic Stimuli and One's Goals
References
Author Index
Subject Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.
introductory texts; textbooks; majors; undergraduate courses; classes; college students; cognitive; stereotypes; implicit bias; first impressions; person perception; prejudice; understanding psychology research; human behavior
1. Thinking Is for Action (Purposeful), So We Make Meaning from Chaos
2. We Create Internal Mental Representations of External Reality
3. Self-Report Is Unreliable Because Cognition Is Often Automatic
4. We Can Know What People Think Even When They Don't Know
5. First Impressions Are "Sticky" and Difficult to Update
6. First Impressions Can Be Implicit, Making Them Even More Persistent
7. We Follow Rules When Asking "Why?," Acting Like Intuitive Scientists
8. Biases Are Common and Arise from Normal Cognitive Processes
9. Biases Are Common and Are Often Motivational in Nature
10. Beyond the Information Given: Responding Guided by Priming
11. Prejudice and Stereotyping
12. Cognitive Processing Is Flexible, and Processing Types Dissociable
13. The Updating of Impressions Is Promoted by Diagnostic Stimuli and One's Goals
References
Author Index
Subject Index
2. We Create Internal Mental Representations of External Reality
3. Self-Report Is Unreliable Because Cognition Is Often Automatic
4. We Can Know What People Think Even When They Don't Know
5. First Impressions Are "Sticky" and Difficult to Update
6. First Impressions Can Be Implicit, Making Them Even More Persistent
7. We Follow Rules When Asking "Why?," Acting Like Intuitive Scientists
8. Biases Are Common and Arise from Normal Cognitive Processes
9. Biases Are Common and Are Often Motivational in Nature
10. Beyond the Information Given: Responding Guided by Priming
11. Prejudice and Stereotyping
12. Cognitive Processing Is Flexible, and Processing Types Dissociable
13. The Updating of Impressions Is Promoted by Diagnostic Stimuli and One's Goals
References
Author Index
Subject Index
Este título pertence ao(s) assunto(s) indicados(s). Para ver outros títulos clique no assunto desejado.