Joseph P. Forgas / Kipling D. Williams / William Von Hippel (eds.)
Social Judgments
Herausgeber: Forgas, Joseph P.; Hippel, William Von; Williams, Kipling D.
Joseph P. Forgas / Kipling D. Williams / William Von Hippel (eds.)
Social Judgments
Herausgeber: Forgas, Joseph P.; Hippel, William Von; Williams, Kipling D.
- Gebundenes Buch
- Merkliste
- Auf die Merkliste
- Bewerten Bewerten
- Teilen
- Produkt teilen
- Produkterinnerung
- Produkterinnerung
This 2003 book presents key research by leading international researchers on the psychology of social judgments.
Andere Kunden interessierten sich auch für
- The Construction of Social Judgments204,99 €
- E C PoultonBias in Quantifying Judgments159,99 €
- Valerie TiberiusMoral Psychology206,99 €
- Sylvia ScribnerMind and Social Practice154,99 €
- Bernard WeinerJudgments of Responsibility60,99 €
- H. Papousek / U. Jürgens (eds.)Nonverbal Vocal Communication133,99 €
- Nikolas S. RoseInventing Our Selves80,99 €
-
-
-
This 2003 book presents key research by leading international researchers on the psychology of social judgments.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 442
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 864g
- ISBN-13: 9780521822480
- ISBN-10: 0521822483
- Artikelnr.: 21587700
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
- Verlag: Cambridge University Press
- Seitenzahl: 442
- Erscheinungstermin: 23. Februar 2015
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 235mm x 157mm x 30mm
- Gewicht: 864g
- ISBN-13: 9780521822480
- ISBN-10: 0521822483
- Artikelnr.: 21587700
- Herstellerkennzeichnung
- Libri GmbH
- Europaallee 1
- 36244 Bad Hersfeld
- gpsr@libri.de
1. Responding to the social world: explicit and implicit processes in
social judgments Joseph P. Forgas; 2. Biases in social judgment: design
flaws or design features? Martie G. Haselton and David M. Buss; 3.
Reflexive and reflective judgment processes: a social cognitive
neuroscience approach Matthew Lieberman; 4. Decomposing the person
perception process: cerebral hemispheric asymmetries in social perception
Michael A. Zarate and Colby J. Stoever; 5. The psychodynamics of social
judgments: an attachment theory perspective Phillip R. Shaver and Mario
Mikulincer; 6. Towards a social psychology of person judgments:
implications for person perception accuracy and self-knowledge David C.
Funder; 7. A parametric unimodel: of human judgment: integrating
dual-process frameworks in cognition from a single-mode perspective Arie W.
Kruglanski, Wo Young Chun, Hans Peter Erb, Antonio Peirro, Lucia Mannetti
and Scott Spiegel; 8. Social judgments based on pseudo-contingencies: a
forgotten phenomenon Klaus Fiedler and Peter Freytag; 9. The size of
context effects in social judgment Herbert Bless, Norbert Schwarz and
Michaela Wanke; 10. Affective influences on social judgments and decisions:
implicit and explicit processes Joseph P. Forgas and Rebekah East; 11. Hot
cognition and social judgments: when and why do descriptions influence our
feelings? Diederik A. Stapel; 12. Attitudinal process vs. content: the role
of information processing biases in social judgment and behavior William
von Hippel, Patrick Vargas and Denise Sekaquaptewa; 13. The importance of
the question in the judgment of abilities and opinions via social
comparison Jerry Suls, Rene Martin and Ladd Wheeler; 14. Consequences of
automatic goal pursuit and the case of nonconscious mimicry Tanya L.
Chartrand and Valerie E. Jefferis; 15. Implicit and explicit processes in
social judgments: the role of goal-based explanations John McClure, Robbie
M. Sutton and Denis J. Hilton; 16. Impact of ostracism on social judgments
and decisions: explicit and implicit processes Kipling D. Williams, Trevor
I. Case and Cassandra Govan; 17. To control or not to control stereotypes:
separating the implicit and explicit process of perspective-taking and
suppression Adam D. Galinsky, Paul V. Martorana and Gillian Ku; 18.
Responding to the social world: attributions and stereotype-based judgments
Lucy Johnston and Lynden Miles; 19. Implicit and explicit process in social
judgment: deep and high Marilynn B. Brewer.
social judgments Joseph P. Forgas; 2. Biases in social judgment: design
flaws or design features? Martie G. Haselton and David M. Buss; 3.
Reflexive and reflective judgment processes: a social cognitive
neuroscience approach Matthew Lieberman; 4. Decomposing the person
perception process: cerebral hemispheric asymmetries in social perception
Michael A. Zarate and Colby J. Stoever; 5. The psychodynamics of social
judgments: an attachment theory perspective Phillip R. Shaver and Mario
Mikulincer; 6. Towards a social psychology of person judgments:
implications for person perception accuracy and self-knowledge David C.
Funder; 7. A parametric unimodel: of human judgment: integrating
dual-process frameworks in cognition from a single-mode perspective Arie W.
Kruglanski, Wo Young Chun, Hans Peter Erb, Antonio Peirro, Lucia Mannetti
and Scott Spiegel; 8. Social judgments based on pseudo-contingencies: a
forgotten phenomenon Klaus Fiedler and Peter Freytag; 9. The size of
context effects in social judgment Herbert Bless, Norbert Schwarz and
Michaela Wanke; 10. Affective influences on social judgments and decisions:
implicit and explicit processes Joseph P. Forgas and Rebekah East; 11. Hot
cognition and social judgments: when and why do descriptions influence our
feelings? Diederik A. Stapel; 12. Attitudinal process vs. content: the role
of information processing biases in social judgment and behavior William
von Hippel, Patrick Vargas and Denise Sekaquaptewa; 13. The importance of
the question in the judgment of abilities and opinions via social
comparison Jerry Suls, Rene Martin and Ladd Wheeler; 14. Consequences of
automatic goal pursuit and the case of nonconscious mimicry Tanya L.
Chartrand and Valerie E. Jefferis; 15. Implicit and explicit processes in
social judgments: the role of goal-based explanations John McClure, Robbie
M. Sutton and Denis J. Hilton; 16. Impact of ostracism on social judgments
and decisions: explicit and implicit processes Kipling D. Williams, Trevor
I. Case and Cassandra Govan; 17. To control or not to control stereotypes:
separating the implicit and explicit process of perspective-taking and
suppression Adam D. Galinsky, Paul V. Martorana and Gillian Ku; 18.
Responding to the social world: attributions and stereotype-based judgments
Lucy Johnston and Lynden Miles; 19. Implicit and explicit process in social
judgment: deep and high Marilynn B. Brewer.
1. Responding to the social world: explicit and implicit processes in
social judgments Joseph P. Forgas; 2. Biases in social judgment: design
flaws or design features? Martie G. Haselton and David M. Buss; 3.
Reflexive and reflective judgment processes: a social cognitive
neuroscience approach Matthew Lieberman; 4. Decomposing the person
perception process: cerebral hemispheric asymmetries in social perception
Michael A. Zarate and Colby J. Stoever; 5. The psychodynamics of social
judgments: an attachment theory perspective Phillip R. Shaver and Mario
Mikulincer; 6. Towards a social psychology of person judgments:
implications for person perception accuracy and self-knowledge David C.
Funder; 7. A parametric unimodel: of human judgment: integrating
dual-process frameworks in cognition from a single-mode perspective Arie W.
Kruglanski, Wo Young Chun, Hans Peter Erb, Antonio Peirro, Lucia Mannetti
and Scott Spiegel; 8. Social judgments based on pseudo-contingencies: a
forgotten phenomenon Klaus Fiedler and Peter Freytag; 9. The size of
context effects in social judgment Herbert Bless, Norbert Schwarz and
Michaela Wanke; 10. Affective influences on social judgments and decisions:
implicit and explicit processes Joseph P. Forgas and Rebekah East; 11. Hot
cognition and social judgments: when and why do descriptions influence our
feelings? Diederik A. Stapel; 12. Attitudinal process vs. content: the role
of information processing biases in social judgment and behavior William
von Hippel, Patrick Vargas and Denise Sekaquaptewa; 13. The importance of
the question in the judgment of abilities and opinions via social
comparison Jerry Suls, Rene Martin and Ladd Wheeler; 14. Consequences of
automatic goal pursuit and the case of nonconscious mimicry Tanya L.
Chartrand and Valerie E. Jefferis; 15. Implicit and explicit processes in
social judgments: the role of goal-based explanations John McClure, Robbie
M. Sutton and Denis J. Hilton; 16. Impact of ostracism on social judgments
and decisions: explicit and implicit processes Kipling D. Williams, Trevor
I. Case and Cassandra Govan; 17. To control or not to control stereotypes:
separating the implicit and explicit process of perspective-taking and
suppression Adam D. Galinsky, Paul V. Martorana and Gillian Ku; 18.
Responding to the social world: attributions and stereotype-based judgments
Lucy Johnston and Lynden Miles; 19. Implicit and explicit process in social
judgment: deep and high Marilynn B. Brewer.
social judgments Joseph P. Forgas; 2. Biases in social judgment: design
flaws or design features? Martie G. Haselton and David M. Buss; 3.
Reflexive and reflective judgment processes: a social cognitive
neuroscience approach Matthew Lieberman; 4. Decomposing the person
perception process: cerebral hemispheric asymmetries in social perception
Michael A. Zarate and Colby J. Stoever; 5. The psychodynamics of social
judgments: an attachment theory perspective Phillip R. Shaver and Mario
Mikulincer; 6. Towards a social psychology of person judgments:
implications for person perception accuracy and self-knowledge David C.
Funder; 7. A parametric unimodel: of human judgment: integrating
dual-process frameworks in cognition from a single-mode perspective Arie W.
Kruglanski, Wo Young Chun, Hans Peter Erb, Antonio Peirro, Lucia Mannetti
and Scott Spiegel; 8. Social judgments based on pseudo-contingencies: a
forgotten phenomenon Klaus Fiedler and Peter Freytag; 9. The size of
context effects in social judgment Herbert Bless, Norbert Schwarz and
Michaela Wanke; 10. Affective influences on social judgments and decisions:
implicit and explicit processes Joseph P. Forgas and Rebekah East; 11. Hot
cognition and social judgments: when and why do descriptions influence our
feelings? Diederik A. Stapel; 12. Attitudinal process vs. content: the role
of information processing biases in social judgment and behavior William
von Hippel, Patrick Vargas and Denise Sekaquaptewa; 13. The importance of
the question in the judgment of abilities and opinions via social
comparison Jerry Suls, Rene Martin and Ladd Wheeler; 14. Consequences of
automatic goal pursuit and the case of nonconscious mimicry Tanya L.
Chartrand and Valerie E. Jefferis; 15. Implicit and explicit processes in
social judgments: the role of goal-based explanations John McClure, Robbie
M. Sutton and Denis J. Hilton; 16. Impact of ostracism on social judgments
and decisions: explicit and implicit processes Kipling D. Williams, Trevor
I. Case and Cassandra Govan; 17. To control or not to control stereotypes:
separating the implicit and explicit process of perspective-taking and
suppression Adam D. Galinsky, Paul V. Martorana and Gillian Ku; 18.
Responding to the social world: attributions and stereotype-based judgments
Lucy Johnston and Lynden Miles; 19. Implicit and explicit process in social
judgment: deep and high Marilynn B. Brewer.