Advances in Experimental Social PsychologyAdvances in Experimental Social Psychology |
From inside the book
Page 11
... example, Tyler (1980) compared the effects of personal crime victimization and mediated, indirect experience with crime on judgments of risk. Tyler found that personal experience affected people's estimates of their own personal ...
... example, Tyler (1980) compared the effects of personal crime victimization and mediated, indirect experience with crime on judgments of risk. Tyler found that personal experience affected people's estimates of their own personal ...
Page 12
... example, social psychologists' few attempts at comprehensive taxonomies of the bases of attitudes do not put self-interest in any especially prominent position. The assumption of rationality has a strong tradition in psychology, but it ...
... example, social psychologists' few attempts at comprehensive taxonomies of the bases of attitudes do not put self-interest in any especially prominent position. The assumption of rationality has a strong tradition in psychology, but it ...
Page 13
... example, attitudes toward "forced busing" to integrate whites and blacks would depend on affects toward such symbols as "force," "busing," "integration," and "blacks." We have assumed that the processing of such political symbols is ...
... example, attitudes toward "forced busing" to integrate whites and blacks would depend on affects toward such symbols as "force," "busing," "integration," and "blacks." We have assumed that the processing of such political symbols is ...
Page 15
... example, a voter evaluates the president in terms of whether or not he has presided over a healthy economy and a nation at peace rather than whether or not the voter has prospered and been unharmed by war (Kinder & Kiewiet, 1979). We ...
... example, a voter evaluates the president in terms of whether or not he has presided over a healthy economy and a nation at peace rather than whether or not the voter has prospered and been unharmed by war (Kinder & Kiewiet, 1979). We ...
Page 16
... example, a worker with no health insurance might have self-interested reasons for supporting a legislative proposal that would mandate all firms to provide health coverage (material well-being) to their employees (own personal life) ...
... example, a worker with no health insurance might have self-interested reasons for supporting a legislative proposal that would mandate all firms to provide health coverage (material well-being) to their employees (own personal life) ...
Contents
1 | |
The Psychological Functions of SelfEsteem and Cultural Worldviews | 93 |
Affective States Influence the Processing of Persuasive Communications | 161 |
A Theoretical Refinement and Reevaluation of the Role of Norms in Human Behavior | 201 |
Chapter 5 The Effects of Interaction Goals on Person Perception | 235 |
Chapter 6 Studying Social Interaction with the Rochester Interaction Record | 269 |
Chapter 7 Subjective Construal Social Inference and Human Misunderstanding | 319 |
Index | 361 |
Contents of Other Volumes | 373 |
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affirmative action analysis assessment set attitude change attribution Attribution theory bad mood Bargh Berkowitz biases busing classical conditioning concept concerns consistent construal correlations cues cultural anxiety buffer cultural worldview depressed mood descriptive norm economic elaboration likelihood model emotional environment evaluation evidence example expected experience Experimental Social Psychology false consensus effect fellow interactants focus focused global Greenberg heuristic hypothesis impact important impression individuals influence injunctive norm interac interest issues Journal of Personality littering message quality mood mood mortality salience motivation negative one's one’s outcomes partners perceivers Personality and Social persuasion Political Science positive predictions problems processing Pyszczynski questionnaire racial recipients relationship relevant Review role Schwarz Sears self-esteem self-interest effects significant situation social behavior social interaction social perception specific studies subjects suggests symbolic predispositions target tax revolt terror management theory threat tion variables voting weak arguments York