Dual-Process Theories in Social Psychology by Yaacov Trope (1999, Hardcover)

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Product Identifiers

PublisherGuilford Publications
ISBN-101572304219
ISBN-139781572304215
eBay Product ID (ePID)227543

Product Key Features

Number of Pages657 Pages
Publication NameDual-Process Theories in Social Psychology
LanguageEnglish
Publication Year1999
SubjectCognitive Psychology & Cognition, Psychiatry / General, Social Psychology
TypeTextbook
Subject AreaPsychology, Medical
AuthorYaacov Trope
FormatHardcover

Dimensions

Item Height1.7 in
Item Weight49.1 Oz
Item Length10.3 in
Item Width7.3 in

Additional Product Features

Intended AudienceScholarly & Professional
LCCN98-054246
Reviews"This volume assembles leading researchers to provide in-depth discussions of a key theoretical construct in cognitive and social psychology. Researchers, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates have gained a valuable resource for understanding how dual process theories have been used to clarify our understanding of phenomena in many areas, including attitudes, person perception, stereotyping, cognitive control, and self-regulation. It is a luxury to have these thoughtful papers gathered together in one place." --Marcia K. Johnson, PhD, Professor, Psychology Department, Princeton University "Understanding how human beings react to the social world has always been a central problem for psychology. Explanations in terms of learning theories or principles of rationality are rarely sufficient. This book contains brilliant accounts of the 'other' ways of looking at social behavior--as imitation, as forms of risk regulation, as conformity, as wish fulfillment. It will serve as an excellent guide and text." --Jerome Bruner, PhD, University Professor, Research Professor of Psychology, Senior Research Fellow in Law, New York University, "This volume assembles leading researchers to provide in-depth discussions of a key theoretical construct in cognitive and social psychology. Researchers, graduate students, and advanced undergraduates have gained a valuable resource for understanding how dual process theories have been used to clarify our understanding of phenomena in many areas, including attitudes, person perception, stereotyping, cognitive control, and self-regulation. It is a luxury to have these thoughtful papers gathered together in one place." --Marcia K. Johnson, PhD, Professor, Psychology Department, Princeton University "Understanding how human beings react to the social world has always been a central problem for psychology. Explanations in terms of learning theories or principles of rationality are rarely sufficient. This book contains brilliant accounts of the 'other' ways of looking at social behavior--as imitation, as forms of risk regulation, as conformity, as wish fullfilment. It will serve as an excellent guide and text." --Jerome Bruner, PhD, University Professor, Research Professor of Psychology, Senior Research Fellow in Law, New York University, "[A] rich, rewarding, volume....a rich resource that will no doubt move the field along in its quest for some ultimate integration of research and theory on dual-process models. It should also serve to further elucidate our understanding of numerous social phenomena that could benefit from the application of a dual-process approach....we are enriched by the publication of a volume that provides a balanced and broad perspective on the current status of [dual-process] models in social psychology." --Contemporary Psychology APA Review of BOOKS
Dewey Edition21
IllustratedYes
Dewey Decimal302
Table Of ContentI. Overview 1. What the Mind's Not, Gilbert 2. The History of Dual-Process Notions, and the Future of Preconscious Control, Moskowitz, Skurnik, and Galinsky II. Dual-Process Theories in Attitudes and Social Cognition, and Single-Process Countermodels A. Attitudes (and Beyond) 3. The Elaboration Likelihood Model: Current Status and Controversies, Petty and Wegener 4. The Heuristic-Systematic Model in Its Broader Context, Chen and Chaiken 5. The MODE Model of Attitude-Behavior Processes, Fazio and Towles-Schwen 6. Depth of Processing, Belief Congruence, and Attitude-Behavior Correspondence, Ajzen and Sexton B. Person Perception 7. Spontaneous versus Intentional Inferences in Impression Formation, Uleman 8. A Dual-Process Model of Overconfident Attributional Inferences, Trope and Gaunt 9. Modes of Social Thought: Theories and Social Understanding, Levy, Plaks, and Dweck 10. Dual-Processing Accounts of Inconsistencies in Responses to General versus Specific Cases, Sherman, Beike, and Ryalls C. Stereotyping in Particular 11. The Continuum Model: Ten Years Later, Fiske, Lin, and Neuberg 12. Dual Processes in the Cognitive Representation of Persons and Social Categories, Brewer and Harasty 13. On the Dialectics of Discrimination: Dual Processes in Social Stereotyping, Bodenhausen, Macrae, and Sherman D. One or Two Processing Modes in Social Cognition? 14. Separate or Equal?: Bimodal Notions of Persuasion and a Single-Process "Unimodel," Kruglanski, Thompson, and Spiegel 15. Parallel Processing of Stereotypes and Behaviors, Kunda 16. Associative and Rule-Based Processing: A Connectionist Interpretation of Dual-Process Models, Smith and DeCoster III. Issues of Cognition Control in Processing and Judgment 17. Automaticity and Control in Stereotyping, Devine and Monteith 18. The Cognitive Monster: The Case against the Controllability of Automatic Stereotype Effects, Bargh 19. The Role of Cognitive Control: Early Selection versus Late Correction, Jacoby, Kelley, and McElree IV. Issues of Affect and Self-Regulation in Dual-Process Theories 20. Deliberative versus Implemental Mindsets in the Control of Action, Gollwitzer and Bayer 21. Sufficient and Necessary Conditions in Dual-Process Models: The Case of Mood and Information Processing, Bless and Schwarz 22. Affect in Attitude: Immediate and Deliberative Perspectives, Giner-Sorolla 23. Some Basic Issues Regarding Dual-Process Theories from the Perspective of Cognitive-Experiential Self-Theory, Epstein and Pacini 24. Processes Underlying Metacognitive Judgments: Information-Based and Experience-Based Monitoring of One's Own Knowledge, Koriat and Levy-Sadot 25. Promotion and Prevention as motivational Duality: Implications for Evaluative Processes, Higgins V. Applications and Extensions of Dual-Process Theorizing 26. Exploring the Boundary between Fiction and Reality, Prentice and Gerrig 27. Motives and Modes of Processing in the Social Influence of Groups, Wood 28. The Social Contingency Model: Identifying Empirical and Normative Boundary Conditions on the Error-and-Bias Portrait of Human Nature, Tetlock and Lerner 29. On the Relationship between Social and Cognitive Modes of Organization, Baron and Misovich 30. Dualities and Continua: Implications for Understanding Perceptions of Persons and Groups, Hamilton, Sherman, and Maddox 31. When Do Decent People Blame Victims?: The Differing Effects of the Explicit/Rational and Implicit/Experiential Cognitive Systems, Lerner and Goldberg
SynopsisThis volume presents a comprehensive review of research and theory on dual-process models of social information processing. These models distinguish between qualitatively different modes of information processing in making decisions and solving problems. Contributors review the basic assumptions of these approaches and review the ways they have been applied and tested in such areas as attitudes, stereotyping, person perception, memory and judgement. Also examined are the relationships between different sets of processing modes, the factors that determine their utilization, and how they work in combination to affect responses to social information., This informative volume presents the first comprehensive review of research and theory on dual-process models of social information processing. Leading contributors review the basic assumptions of these approaches., This informative volume presents the first comprehensive review of research and theory on dual-process models of social information processing. These models distinguish between qualitatively different modes of information processing in making decisions and solving problems (e.g., associative versus rule-based, controlled versus uncontrolled, and affective versus cognitive modes). Leading contributors review the basic assumptions of these approaches and review the ways they have been applied and tested in such areas as attitudes, stereotyping, person perception, memory, and judgment. Also examined are the relationships between different sets of processing modes, the factors that determine their utilization, and how they work in combination to affect responses to social information.
LC Classification NumberHM291.D76 1999

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