1st Edition

Advances in Social Cognition, Volume I A Dual Process Model of Impression Formation

Edited By Robert S. Wyer, Jr., Thomas K. Srull Copyright 1988
204 Pages
by Psychology Press

192 Pages
by Psychology Press

This volume presents different perspectives on a dual model of impression formation -- a theory about how people form impressions about other people by combining information about a person with prior knowledge found in long-term memory. This information is of real importance to graduate students and advanced undergraduates in cognitive and social psychology, experimental psychology, social... Read more
Contents: M.B. Brewer, A Dual Process Model of Impression Formation. N.H. Anderson, A Functional Approach to Person Cognition. J. Feldman, Objects in Categories and Objects as Categories. S.T. Fiske, Compare and Contrast: Brewer's Process Model and Fiske et al's Continuum Model. S.E. Hampson, The Dynamics of Categorization and Impression Formation. E.E. Jones, Impression Formation: What Do People Think About? R.L. Klatzy, S.M. Anderson, Category-Specificity Effects in Social Typing and Personalization. L. Zebrowitz-McArthur, Where is the Stimulus Person in Impression Formation? C. McCauley, Awareness and Top-Down Versus Bottom-Up Processing. D.L. Medin, Social Categorization Responses: Structures, Processes, and Purposes. C.S. O'Sullivan, Conditional Responses in Person Perception: The Categories of Our Discontent. M. Rothbart, Categorization and Impression Formation: Capturing the Mind's Flexibility. Y. Schul, E. Burnstein, On Greeks and Horses: Impression Formation with Social and Nonsocial Objects. R.C. Sherman, Are Two Modes Better Than One? A Critique of Brewer's Dual Process Model. E.R. Smith, Impression Formation in a General Framework of Social and Nonsocial Cognition. M.D. Brewer, Reply to Commentaries.

Biography

University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign.

"...a stimulating exchange with multiple perspectives on issues and concerns in the field of social cognition."
American Journal of Psychology