1st Edition
Advances in Social Cognition, Volume I A Dual Process Model of Impression Formation
204 Pages
by
Psychology Press
192 Pages
by
Psychology Press
Also available as eBook on:
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






