Dual-process theories of the social mind / edited by Jeffrey W. Sherman, Bertram Gawronski, Yaacov Trope.

"This volume provides an authoritative synthesis of a dynamic, influential area of psychological research. Leading investigators address all aspects of dual-process theories: their core assumptions, conceptual foundations, and applications to a wide range of social phenomena. In 38 chapters, th...

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Bibliographic Details
Other Authors: Sherman, Jeffrey W. (Editor), Gawronski, Bertram (Editor), Trope, Yaacov (Editor)
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: New York : The Guilford Press, [2014]
Subjects:
Online Access:Click for online access
Table of Contents:
  • Cover
  • Half Title Page
  • Title Page
  • Copyright Page
  • About the Editors
  • Contributors
  • Preface
  • Contents
  • Part I. The Basics
  • 1. Two of What?: A Conceptual Analysis of Dual-Process Theories
  • 2. Examining the Mapping Problem in Dual-Process Models
  • 3. Conscious and Unconscious: Toward an Integrative Understanding of Human Mental Life and Action
  • 4. What Is Control?: A Conceptual Analysis
  • Part II. Dual-Systems Models
  • 5. Two Systems of Reasoning: An Update
  • 6. Rationality, Intelligence, and the Defining Features of Type 1 and Type 2 Processing
  • 7. The Reflective-Impulsive Model
  • Part III. Measurement and Formal Modeling
  • 8. Dual-Process Theory from a Process Dissociation Perspective
  • 9. Process Models Require Process Measures
  • 10. Random-Walk and Diffusion Models
  • Part IV. Attitudes and Evaluation
  • 11. The MODE Model: Attitude-Behavior Processes as a Function of Motivation and Opportunity
  • 12. The Elaboration Likelihood and Metacognitive Models of Attitudes: Implications for Prejudice, the Self, and Beyond
  • 13. The Associative-Propositional Evaluation Model: Operating Principles and Operating Conditions of Evaluation
  • 14. The Systems of Evaluation Model: A Dual-Systems Approach to Attitudes
  • Part V. Social Perception
  • 15. Controlled Processing and Automatic Processing in the Formation of Spontaneous Trait Inferences
  • 16. The Dynamic Interactive Model of Person Construal: Coordinating Sensory and Social Processes
  • 17. Person Perception: Integrating Category- and Individual-Level Information in Face Construal
  • 18. Dual-Process Models of Trait Judgments of Self and Others: An Overview and Critique
  • 19. Automaticity, Control, and the Social Brain
  • Part VI. Thinking and Reasoning
  • 20. The Human Unconscious: A Functional Perspective
  • 21. Metacognitive Processes and Subjective Experiences.
  • 22. Same or Different?: How Similarity versus Dissimilarity Focus Shapes Social Information Processing
  • 23. Visual versus Verbal Thinking and Dual-Process Moral Cognition
  • 24. Prolonged Thought: Proposing Type 3 Processing
  • Part VII. Habits, Goals, and Motivation
  • 25. Habits in Dual-Process Models
  • 26. Conscious and Unconscious Goal Pursuit: Similar Functions, Different Processes?
  • 27. The Implicit Volition Model: The Unconscious Nature of Goal Pursuit
  • 28. Promotion and Prevention: How "0" Can Create Dual Motivational Forces
  • Part VIII. Self-Regulation and Control
  • 29. Beyond Control versus Automaticity: Psychological Processes Driving Postsuppressional Rebound
  • 30. The Explicit and Implicit Ways of Overcoming Temptation
  • 31. Breaking the Prejudice Habit: Automaticity and Control in the Context of a Long-Term Goal
  • 32. Emotion Generation and Emotion Regulation: Moving Beyond Traditional Dual-Process Accounts
  • Part IX. Criticism and Alternatives
  • 33. The Limits of Automaticity
  • 34. The Unimodel Unfolding
  • 35. Why a Propositional Single-Process Model of Associative Learning Deserves to Be Defended
  • 36. How Many Processes Does It Take to Ground a Concept?
  • 37. Dual Experiences, Multiple Processes: Looking Beyond Dualities for Mechanisms of the Mind
  • 38. Rethinking Duality: Criticisms and Ways Forward
  • Author Index
  • Subject Index.