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"Social" Cognition and Social Cognition

Small Group Research, 1994
Following Kuhn, it is proposed that there are two major paradigms for the study of social cognition. The first and most traditional paradigm relies on single-subject designs, and is therefore limited to the study of subjective phenomena. It prescribes that subjects 'responses be kept independent, and treats any interdependence in these responses as a ...
William Ickes, Richard Gonzalez
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Social cognition

2020
Social cognition refers to a complex set of mental abilities underlying social stimulus perception, processing, interpretation, and response. Together, these abilities support the development of adequate social competence and adaptation. Social cognition has a protracted development through infancy to adulthood.
Cindy, Beaudoin, Miriam H, Beauchamp
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Social Cognition and Social Perception

Annual Review of Psychology, 1987
constructs that represent them, no matter what the person's process­ ing goals during priming. Bargh & Pietromonaco ( 1982, Bargh et al 1986) showed that trait adjectives prime relevant trait constructs even when those adjectives are presented subliminally so that subjects are unaware of even the presence of the priming stimuli. Once a social construct
E T, Higgins, J A, Bargh
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Social cognition in insects

Trends in Cognitive Sciences, 2022
Insects feature some of the most complex societies in the animal kingdom, but a historic perception persists that such complexity emerges from interactions between individuals whose behaviours are largely guided by innate routines. Challenging this perception, recent work shows that insects feature many aspects of social intelligence found in ...
Lars Chittka, Natacha Rossi
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Social Cognition

2015
Social cognition is a major problem underlying deficiencies in interpersonal relationships in several psychiatric populations. And yet there is currently no gold standard for pharmacological treatment of psychiatric illness that directly targets these social cognitive areas.
Alexandra, Patin, René, Hurlemann
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Social spatial cognition

Neuroscience & Biobehavioral Reviews, 2021
Social spatial cognition refers to the interaction between self, place, and partners, with emphasis on the impact of the social environment on spatial behavior and on how individual spatial representations converge to form collective spatial behavior - i.e., common places and routes.
Alex Dorfman   +4 more
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Socially Situated Cognition: Cognition in its Social Context

2004
Publisher Summary This chapter proposes a new integration of social psychology and situated cognition—that is, socially situated cognition (SSC). This new approach rests directly on recent developments in psychology and cognitive science captured by the label situated cognition. It highlights four core assumptions that are common to social psychology
Smith, E.R., Semin, G.R.
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Social cognition in schizophrenia

Nature Reviews Neuroscience, 2015
Individuals with schizophrenia exhibit impaired social cognition, which manifests as difficulties in identifying emotions, feeing connected to others, inferring people's thoughts and reacting emotionally to others. These social cognitive impairments interfere with social connections and are strong determinants of the degree of impaired daily ...
Michael F, Green   +2 more
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Cognitive Complexity and Sociality

British Journal of Social and Clinical Psychology, 1969
A discussion of Bieri's definition of ‘cognitive complexity’ within the general framework of Personal Construct Theory, and specifically in terms of the theoretical implications of Kelly's Sociality Corollary , led to the hypothesis that relatively cognitively complex persons infer the ...
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Mechanisms of Social Cognition

Annual Review of Psychology, 2012
Social animals including humans share a range of social mechanisms that are automatic and implicit and enable learning by observation. Learning from others includes imitation of actions and mirroring of emotions. Learning about others, such as their group membership and reputation, is crucial for social interactions that depend on trust.
Chris D, Frith, Uta, Frith
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