ISBN:
9781118001868
,
9781283372596
,
9780470881033
Language:
English
Pages:
Online-Ressource (xvii, 649 p.)
,
ill.
Edition:
Online-Ausg. Electronic reproduction; Mode of access: World Wide Web
Parallel Title:
Print version Handbook of Interpersonal Psychology
DDC:
302.01
Keywords:
Psychology, Applied
;
Interpersonal relations
;
Social psychology
;
Behavior
;
Personality
;
Interpersonal Relations
;
Psychological Theory
;
Aufsatzsammlung
Abstract:
Modern interpersonal psychology is now at a point where recent advances need to be organized so that researchers, practitioners, and students can understand what is new, different, and state-of-the art. This field-defining volume examines the history of interpersonal psychology and explores influential theories of normal-abnormal behaviors, widely-used assessment measures, recent methodological advances, and current interpersonal strategies for changing problematic behaviors. Featuring original contributions from field luminaries including Aaron Pincus, John Clarkin, David Buss, Louis Castongu
Description / Table of Contents:
Cover; Title Page; Copyright; Dedication; Foreword; Contributors; 1. Introduction; History of Modern Interpersonal Psychology; Putting the Handbook Together; Organization and Content; Part I: Theoretical Perspectives; 2. An Attachment-Theory Framework for Conceptualizing Interpersonal Behavior; Basic Concepts in Attachment Theory and Research; Attachment-Style Differences in Interpersonal Behavior; Attachment-Related Cognitive-Motivational Predispositions; Attachment-Related Differences in the Processing of Social Information; Antecedents of Individual Differences in Attachment Style
Description / Table of Contents:
Concluding Remarks3. Relatedness and Self-Definition in Normal and Disrupted Personality Development; Relatedness and Self-Definition in Contemporary Interpersonal and Attachment Theories; The Two-Configurations Model of Personality Development and Psychopathology; Implications for the Conceptualization and Classification of Psychopathology; Relatedness and Self-Definition and Processes of Therapeutic Change; Conclusions; 4. Origins and Applications of the Interpersonal Circumplex; Conclusion; Appendix; 5. Evolution, Life History Theory, and Personality
Description / Table of Contents:
Evolution, Life History Theory, and PersonalitySection 1: Key Features of an Evolutionary Approach; Section 2: Interpersonal Models and Explanations of Why Personality Exists; Section 3: Why Is There Variability in Personality?; Section 4: Sociosexuality as an Example of an Adaptive Cluster of Traits; 6. The Five-Factor Model, Five-Factor Theory, and Interpersonal Psychology; Traits; The Personality System; FFT at the Interpersonal Level; The Origins of Interpersonal Orientations and Attachments; Summary and Conclusions; Part II: Basic Interpersonal Processes and Mechanisms
Description / Table of Contents:
7. Interpersonal MotivationInterpersonal Motivation; Interpersonal Goals; Interpersonal Goals/Values and Interpersonal Problems; Interpersonal Motivation in Clinical Practice; Conclusion; 8. Interpersonal Complementarity; Empirical Evidence for Complementarity; Complementarity as Interdependent Shifts, Bursts, and Oscillations; Summary and Conclusions; 9. Empathic Accuracy and Inaccuracy; Measuring Empathic Accuracy: Three Paradigms; Explorations of Gender Differences and Acquaintanceship Effects; Empathic Accuracy and Psychotherapy; Summary and Implications
Description / Table of Contents:
10. Person Perception, Dispositional Inferences, and Social JudgmentPerson Perception, Dispositional Inferences, and Social Judgment; Two Useful Models of Person Perception; Factors That Influence Dispositional Inferences; Conclusion; 11. The Role of Nonverbal Communication in Interpersonal Relations; A Brief History; Evolutionary Bases of Nonverbal Communication; Social Psychological Theories of Nonverbal Communication; Research Methods; How Encoding and Decoding Are Related; Ten Troublesome Complexities; Influences on Nonverbal Communication; Contexts of Nonverbal Communication
Description / Table of Contents:
Using Nonverbal Behavior to Predict Interpersonal Outcomes
Note:
Includes bibliographical references and indexes
,
Front MatterIntroduction
,
Theoretical Perspectives. Part Introduction ; An Attachment-Theory Framework for Conceptualizing Interpersonal Behavior
,
Relatedness and Self-Definition in Normal and Disrupted Personality Development
,
Origins and Applications of the Interpersonal Circumplex
,
Evolution, Life History Theory, and Personality
,
The Five-Factor Model, Five-Factor Theory, and Interpersonal Psychology
,
Basic Interpersonal Processes and Mechanisms. Part Introduction ; Interpersonal Motivation
,
Interpersonal Complementarity
,
Empathic Accuracy and Inaccuracy
,
Person Perception, Dispositional Inferences, and Social Judgment
,
The Role of Nonverbal Communication in Interpersonal Relations
,
Personality and Interpersonal Interactions. Part Introduction ; Trust as Motivational Gatekeeper in Adult Romantic Relationships
,
An Attachment-Theory Perspective on Social Support in Close Relationships
,
Conceptualizing Relationship Violence as a Dyadic Process
,
Differentiating the Dark Triad Within the Interpersonal Circumplex
,
Social Allergens
,
Social Domains, Personality, and Interpersonal Functioning
,
Assessment of Interpersonal Characteristics. Part Introduction ; Circular Reasoning About Circular Assessment
,
Circumplex Measures of Interpersonal Constructs
,
Structural Analysis of Social Behavior (SASB)
,
Interview Measures of Interpersonal Functioning and Quality of Object Relations
,
Psychopathology and Health. Part Introduction ; Interpersonal Diagnosis of Psychopathology
,
Personality Disorders
,
Interpersonal Process and Trauma: An Interactional Model
,
Depressive Disorders and Interpersonal Processes
,
Interpersonal Processes in the Anxiety Disorders
,
An Interpersonal Perspective on Risk for Coronary Heart Disease
,
Interpersonal Therapeutic Interventions. Part Introduction ; Interpersonal Issues in Treating Children and Adolescents
,
The Therapeutic Alliance: Research and Theory
,
Interpersonal Interventions for Maintaining an Alliance
,
Interpersonal Psychotherapy (IPT)
,
Time-Limited Dynamic Psychotherapy
,
Group Therapies
,
Summary and Concluding Remarks
,
Author Index ; Subject Index ; .
,
Electronic reproduction; Mode of access: World Wide Web
DOI:
10.1002/9781118001868
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