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Advances in experimental social psychology. Volume 50 /

Advances in Experimental Social Psychology continues to be one of the most sought after and most cited series in this field. Containing contributions of major empirical and theoretical interest, this series represents the best and the brightest in new research, theory, and practice in social psychol...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Otros Autores: Olson, James M. (Editor ), Zanna, Mark P. (Editor )
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Amsterdam : Academic Press, 2014.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Front Cover; Advances in Experimental Social Psychology; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Chapter One: Recent Research on Free Will: Conceptualizations, Beliefs, and Processes; 1. Social Psychology� s Contribution to the Free Will Debate; 2. Understanding Free Will; 2.1. Layperson concepts of free will; 2.2. What must free will theory accomplish?; 2.3. Cultural animal framework; 2.4. Evolution of free will; 2.5. Responsible autonomy; 2.6. Conclusion; 3. Beliefs About Free Will; 3.1. Consequences of belief; 3.2. Correlates of belief: Who believes in free will?
  • 3.3. Causes of belief: Why do people believe in free will?3.4. Conclusion; 4. Freedom and Human Volition; 4.1. Self-regulation and self-control; 4.2. Basic features of self-control; 4.3. Relevance to free will; 4.4. How self-control works: Elucidating the strength model; 4.5. Competing theories about self-regulatory depletion; 4.6. Rational choice; 4.7. Conclusion; 4.8. Initiative versus passivity; 4.9. Conclusion and implications; 4.10. Planning; 5. Conclusions; References; Chapter Two: The Intuitive Traditionalist: How Biases for Existence and Longevity Promote the Status Quo
  • 1. Introduction2. Existence and Longevity Biases in History; 2.1. Hume and the is-ought problem; 2.2. Burke and the wisdom of the ages; 2.3. Intuitions of goodness and rightness from precedent; 3. Other Causes of Status Quo Preference; 3.1. Processes related to experience and exposure; 3.2. Processes related to change resistance; 3.3. Motivated accounts of status quo defense; 3.4. Processes of rational choice; 3.5. Summary; 4. Evidence for Existence and Longevity Biases; 4.1. Is is ought; 4.2. Longer is better; 5. Direct Evidence for Heuristic Processing; 5.1. Overapplication; 5.2. Efficiency
  • 5.3. Lack of awareness5.4. Intuitive; 5.5. Systematic processing moderates existence bias; 6. Attributional Underpinnings of Existence and Longevity Biases; 6.1. Overreliance on inherent features; 6.2. Inherent features are first; 6.3. The antagonism of time; 6.4. Rendering external forces salient; 7. Automatic Thinking, Status Quo Preference, and Conservative Ideology; 7.1. Other automatic processes that favor the status quo; 7.2. Automatic processing and political conservatism; 7.3. Evidence; 7.4. Summary; 8. Higher Standards for Change
  • 9. Social and Ideological Consequences of Existence and Longevity Biases9.1. Incumbency effects; 9.2. Comformity and social norms; 9.3. Justification of inequality; 10. The Other Side and the Outer Limits; 11. Conclusions; Acknowledgments; References; Chapter Three: Social Psychology and the Fight Against AIDS: An Information-Motivation-Behavioral Skills Model for the Pred ...; 1. Introduction; 2. The AIDS Epidemic Context: Sudden Emergence of an Always Fatal Sexually Transmitted Disease; 3. Applying Social Psychological Theory in the Fight Against HIV/AIDS