Results 371 to 380 of about 8,290,666 (397)
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Implicit measures in social cognition. research: their meaning and use.

Annual Review of Psychology, 2003
Behavioral scientists have long sought measures of important psychological constructs that avoid response biases and other problems associated with direct reports. Recently, a large number of such indirect, or "implicit," measures have emerged. We review
R. Fazio, M. Olson
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Social cognition, joint attention, and communicative competence from 9 to 15 months of age.

Monographs of the Society for Research in Child Development, 1998
At around 1 year of age, human infants display a number of new behaviors that seem to indicate a newly emerging understanding of other persons as intentional beings whose attention to outside objects may be shared, followed into, and directed in various ...
M. Carpenter   +2 more
semanticscholar   +1 more source

Chimpanzee social cognition [PDF]

open access: possibleTrends in Cognitive Sciences, 2001
In the late 1970s, Premack and Woodruff asked whether chimpanzees had a theory of mind. The answer to this question has remained elusive. Whereas some authors argue that chimpanzees are capable of mental state attribution, others maintain that they simply learn certain cues in ertain situations. Recent studies challenge both views.
openaire   +2 more sources

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
Gün R. Semin, Eliot R. Smith
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Comparative Social Cognition

Annual Review of Psychology, 2009
Theory of mind is said to be uniquely human. Is this statement justified? Thirty years of research on a variety of species has produced differences in opinion, from unequivocal positive evidence to no evidence at all for mental attribution in animals.
Nathan J. Emery, Nicola S. Clayton
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Cognition and Social Cognitive Theory

2013
Social cognition refers to the ways in which people “make sense” of themselves, other people, and the world around them. Building on social psychological contributions, this entry summarizes processes through which we perceive, interpret, remember, and apply information in our efforts to render meaning and to interact.
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Social Cognition

Intraoperative Mapping of Cognitive Networks, 2021
Riho Nakajima   +3 more
semanticscholar   +2 more sources

Social Cognition

, 2022
E. Higgins, C. Herman, M. Zanna
semanticscholar   +1 more source

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 personal constructs of others in social situations more efficiently ...
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Social cognition and social robots

Pragmatics & Cognition, 2007
Social robots are robots designed to interact with humans or with each other in ways that approximate human social interaction. It seems clear that one question relevant to the project of designing such robots concerns how humans themselves interact to achieve social understanding.
openaire   +3 more sources

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