Advances in Experimental Social Psychology

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Format: Hardcover
Pub. Date: 1990-01-01
Publisher(s): Academic Pr
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Summary

Each volume in Advances in Experimental Social Psychology contains an index, and each chapter includes references.

Table of Contents

Contributorsp. ix
Culture and the Structure of Personal Experience: Insider and Outsider Phenomenologies of the Self and Social World
Introductionp. 1
A Sociofunctional Account of Perceptionp. 3
Relational Versus Egocentric Projectionp. 13
Memory Imageryp. 16
Online Imageryp. 18
Mental Models of the Self and Others in Narrativep. 21
Confusing What Is in One's Own Head and What Is Out Therep. 28
Confusing What Is in One's Own Head with What Is in Other People's Heads: The Illusion of One's Own Transparency and Empathy-as-Projectionp. 31
Projection-as-Empathy in a Group Settingp. 36
Characterizing the Worldp. 38
General Discussionp. 41
Referencesp. 59
Uncertainty-Identity Theory
Historical Backgroundp. 70
Uncertaintyp. 73
Social Identityp. 79
Entitativityp. 87
Social Extremism and Totalistic Groupsp. 91
Extensions, Applications, and Implications of Uncertainty-Identity Theoryp. 97
Uncertainty-Identity Theory in Relation to Other Ideasp. 105
Concluding Commentsp. 111
Referencesp. 114
Metacognitive Experiences and the Intricacies of Setting People Straight: Implications for Debiasing and Public Information Campaigns
Introductionp. 127
Metacognitive Experiencesp. 129
Accessibility Experiences and the Emergence and Attenuation of Biasp. 132
Fluency, Familiarity, and Truth: Implications for Public Information Campaignsp. 143
Implications and Future Directionsp. 153
Referencesp. 157
Multiple Social Categorization
Introductionp. 164
First Principles and Assumptionsp. 170
Differentiation-Discriminationp. 177
Decategorizationp. 218
Conclusionsp. 234
Referencesp. 239
On the Parameters of Human Judgment
Introductionp. 255
The Role of Rules in Judgment Formationp. 257
The Parameters of Human Judgmentp. 265
A Parametric Model of Social Judgmentp. 275
Recapitulation and Conclusionsp. 291
Referencesp. 297
Panglossian Ideology in the Service of System Justification: How Complementary Stereotypes Help Us to Rationalize Inequality
Introductionp. 306
System Justification Theoryp. 308
The System-Justifying Function of Complementary Stereotypesp. 312
Moderators of the Effect of Complementary Stereotypes on System Justificationp. 335
Implicit Complementary Versus Noncomplementary Stereotypical Associationsp. 346
Concluding Remarks: SJT and Stereotyping as Rationalizationp. 350
Referencesp. 352
Feeling the Anguish of Others: A Theory of Vicarious Dissonance
Introductionp. 360
Personal Cognitive Dissonancep. 361
Social Identity and Vicarious Dissonancep. 365
Evidence for Vicarious Dissonancep. 368
The Process of Vicarious Dissonancep. 381
Vicarious Dissonance and the Collectivep. 384
Vicarious Hypocrisy: Translating Dissonance into Actions and Attitudes to Improve Healthp. 390
Summary and Conclusionsp. 395
Referencesp. 397
Indexp. 405
Contents of Other Volumesp. 419
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved.

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