ISBN:
9781841690629
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (424 p)
Series Statement:
Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology
Series Statement:
Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology Ser
Parallel Title:
Print version The Social Self : Cognitive, Interpersonal and Intergroup Perspectives
DDC:
155.2
Keywords:
Social interaction
;
Social interaction
;
Electronic books
;
Electronic books
Abstract:
What is the nature of the 'self', how do everyday experiences shape it, and how does it influence our thinking, judgements and behaviors? Such questions constitute enduring puzzles in psychology, and are also of critical practical importance for applied domains such as clinical, counseling, educational and organizational psychology. In this book a select group of eminent international researchers survey the most recent advances in research of the self. In particular, they discuss the influence of cognitive and intra-psychic processes (Part 1), interpersonal and relational variables (Part 2)
Description / Table of Contents:
Cover; Half Title; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication; Table of Contents; About the Editors; Contributors; Preface; 1 The Social Self: Introduction and Overview; Introduction; The Evolutionary Origins of the Self; The Self as a Symbolic Social Construction: The Symbolic Interactionist Tradition; Integrative Themes: Linking the Individual, Relational, and Collective Aspects of the Self; Overview of the Volume; Part I. Individual and Intrapsychic Aspects of the Self; Part II. Interpersonal and Relational Aspects of the Self; Part III. Intergroup, Cultural, and Collective Aspects of the Self
Description / Table of Contents:
SummaryI. INDIVIDUAL AND INTRAPSYCHIC ASPECTS OF THE SELF; 2 Overlapping Mental Representations of Self and Group: Evidence and Implications; Introduction; Connectionism; Autoassociative Connectionist Memory; Reconstruction of the Social Self; The Reconstructed Self and Intergroup Relations; Conclusion; 3 Egocentrism and the Social Self: Anchoring (and Adjustment) in Self and Social Judgments; Introduction; The Spotlight Effect: Empirical Evidence; The Spotlight Effect and the Social Self; The Spotlight Effect as Insufficient Adjustment
Description / Table of Contents:
Do Anchoring Effects Result from Insufficient Adjustment?Anchoring Effects with Self-Generated Anchors; Are Adjustments from Self-Generated Anchors Typically Insufficent?; Anchoring in Egocentric Social Judgments; 4 Judgment Standards and the Social Self: A Shifting Standards Perspective; Introduction; The Shifting Standards Model; Shifting Standards and the Self; Some Relevant Research; Implications and Extensions; Summary; 5 Affective Influences on Self-Perception and Self-Disclosure; Introduction; Background; Cognitive Mechanisms of Affective Influences on the Self
Description / Table of Contents:
Affective Influences on Self-JudgmentsModerating Influences; Motivational Effects: Elimination and Reversal of Affect Congruence in Self-Judgments; Affective Influences on Communicating about the Self: Self-Disclosure; Summary and Conclusions; 6 Positioning Self-Handicapping within the Self-Zoo: Just What Kind of Animal Are We Dealing With?; Introduction; The "Self-Zoo"; What about Self-Handicapping?; Why Self-Handicap?; Study 1: The Role of Ability Ratings (McCrea & Hirt, 2001); Study 2: The Substitutability Question (McCrea, 1999)
Description / Table of Contents:
Study 3: What Do These Affirmations Really Do? (McCrea & Hirt, 2000)Implications for Understanding the Goals of Self-Protective Mechanisms; Self-Handicapping and the Social Self; 7 Self-Handicapping and the Social Self: The Cost and Rewards of Interpersonal Self-Construction; Introduction; The Self-Handicapping Process; Self-Solicitation and the Discounted Self; II. INTERPERSONAL AND RELATIONAL ASPECTS OF THE SELF; 8 The Interpersonal Basis of Self-Esteem: Death, Devaluation, or Deference?; Introduction; Terror Management Theory; Sociometer Theory; Dominance Theory; Conclusions
Description / Table of Contents:
9 The Inner World of Rejection: Effects of Social Exclusion on Emotion, Cognition, and Self-Regulation
Note:
Description based upon print version of record
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