Results 241 to 250 of about 2,869,935 (306)

Thinking Socially

Topics in Language Disorders, 2016
This article addresses the complexity of what it means to “be social” from the perspective of social thinking. This perspective recognizes social cognitive processing abilities as the foundation for social knowledge and, in turn, social behaviors. The article further describes variables that influence how one understands how to do what is expected in ...
Pamela J. Crooke   +2 more
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Critical social thinking

Organizational Psychology Review, 2014
As technology, globalization, changing work demands, and a growing reliance on teams are changing the work environment, the social complexity surrounding work functions is increasing dramatically. While a variety of socially relevant knowledge, skills, and abilities (KSAs) have been examined, we argue that studying them in isolation is no longer ...
Grossman, Rebecca   +4 more
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Improve social thinking

Primary Teacher Update, 2013
Can a teacher help an unpopular child? Stephanie Thornton looks at research that views social problems as a learning difficulty and offers practical things you can do.
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Thinking is Social

Journal of Conflict Resolution, 1998
Robert Axelrod's model of the spread of culture is extended to demonstrate that social interaction can function as an algorithm for optimizing cognition. Mental structures can be represented as strings of symbols that can be evaluated according to some criterion of goodness.
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Thinking Is Social

2001
Neural networks, simulated annealing, cultural algorithms, ant colony optimization, and evolutionary algorithms are several instances where psychological, physical, and biological theories have influenced the development of computational methods for problem solving. This chapter takes simulation from the social sciences and shows how it can be modified
James Kennedy   +2 more
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THINKING ABOUT SOCIAL NORMS

National Institute Economic Review, 2022
AbstractThis article argues that it is a waste of time seeking to treat populists as examples of homo economicus when seeking to persuade them that the conspiracy theories to which they subscribe are big lies. But it does not follow that homo economicus is worthless in this context.
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The Social Character of Thinking

Journal of the American Psychoanalytic Association, 2003
What Freud called “the reality principle,” or judgment, presumes on the part of the child who has arrived at judgment the implicit grasp of a complex of concepts: truth and falsity, belief, subjective and objective, the objectively real, my perspective and yours.
openaire   +2 more sources

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