Advances in Experimental Social PsychologyAcademic Press, 1984 M12 19 - 433 pages Advances in Experimental Social Psychology |
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Page xii
... role in emotions, and in his chapter (Chapter 4), Leventhal offers an information-processing analysis of emotions that incorporates recent developments in the study of cognitive processes. This formulation is essentially a network ...
... role in emotions, and in his chapter (Chapter 4), Leventhal offers an information-processing analysis of emotions that incorporates recent developments in the study of cognitive processes. This formulation is essentially a network ...
Page 3
... role for biological processes in personality. After all, human intelligence is a product of our phylogenetic heritage—though it should be said, contrary to the suggestion of the sociobiologists, that our biological capacity to generate ...
... role for biological processes in personality. After all, human intelligence is a product of our phylogenetic heritage—though it should be said, contrary to the suggestion of the sociobiologists, that our biological capacity to generate ...
Page 4
... role for the environment, in the final analysis, the balance of power favors cognitive control over environmental control. The social centext can coerce behavior, but it has less impact when it comes to the way people think. As long as ...
... role for the environment, in the final analysis, the balance of power favors cognitive control over environmental control. The social centext can coerce behavior, but it has less impact when it comes to the way people think. As long as ...
Page 10
... roles for him or her to play. Of course, Mead understood that some social roles are not central to the person; these selves are, correspondingly, not so important. Perhaps the most thorough analysis of the self-concept from the ...
... roles for him or her to play. Of course, Mead understood that some social roles are not central to the person; these selves are, correspondingly, not so important. Perhaps the most thorough analysis of the self-concept from the ...
Page 25
... role orientation (Markus, Crane, Bernstein, & Siladi, 1982). Subjects may say many things about themselves for a variety of reasons. Shorter response latencies seem to indicate that the subject needs less time to find a reason—perhaps ...
... role orientation (Markus, Crane, Bernstein, & Siladi, 1982). Subjects may say many things about themselves for a variety of reasons. Shorter response latencies seem to indicate that the subject needs less time to find a reason—perhaps ...
Contents
49 | |
Chapter 3 A PerceptualMotor Theory of Emotion | 117 |
Chapter 4 Equity and Social Change in Human Relationships | 183 |
Chapter 5 A New Look at Dissonance Theory | 229 |
Chapter 6 Cognitive Theories of Persuasion | 267 |
An Empirical and Conceptual Overview | 361 |
Index | 429 |
Contents of Other Volumes | 435 |
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Academic Press action activity actors Ajzen altruism analysis argued arguments assumption attitude change attribution attribution theory aversive beliefs Berkowitz bystander Cacioppo causal Chaiken Cialdini cognitive dissonance Cognitive Psychology cognitive response communicator communicator's concept consequences cost–reward counterattitudinal cues defined dissonance arousal Eagly effects emotional experience empathic empirical episodic memories equity Equity theory Erlbaum evaluation example Experimental Social Psychology expressive expressive-motor feed-forward feedback feelings Fishbein function Gergen Greenwald helping behavior heuristic Hillsdale hypothesis impact impression management indifference curves individual inference influence interaction involvement Journal of Experimental Journal of Personality Leventhal McGuire mediate memory message content moods norms one's outcomes perceived perception Personality and Social perspective position predictions procedural knowledge processes prosocial reactance reactions relationship rewards role schemata self-concept self-esteem self-perception theory situations social exchange social exchange theory specific stimulus structure studies subjects suggests theoretical tion variables versus victim Wyer