
Advances in Experimental Social Psychology
- 1st Edition, Volume 64 - July 28, 2021
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Editor: Bertram Gawronski
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 1 2 - 8 2 4 5 7 9 - 8
- eBook ISBN:9 7 8 - 0 - 3 2 3 - 8 5 0 4 0 - 7
The Advances in Experimental Social Psychology series is the premier outlet for reviews of mature, high-impact research programs in social psychology. Contributions to the serie… Read more

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Request a sales quoteThe Advances in Experimental Social Psychology series is the premier outlet for reviews of mature, high-impact research programs in social psychology. Contributions to the series provide defining pieces of established research programs, reviewing and integrating thematically related findings by individual scholars or research groups. Topics discussed in Volume 64 include Moral Inference, Coalitional Cognition, Motivated Perception and Self-Regulation, Morality in Impression Development, and Self-Uncertainty and Group Identification.
- Provides one of the most cited series in the field of experimental social psychology
- Contains contributions of major empirical and theoretical interest
- Represents the best and brightest in new research, theory and practice in social psychology
Researchers, librarians, and academics in social psychology and personality
- Cover image
- Title page
- Table of Contents
- Copyright
- Contributors
- Chapter One: The relational logic of moral inference
- Abstract
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Background
- 3: Computational principles of moral inference
- 4: Moral inference from moral principles
- 5: Moral inference from “non-moral” information
- 6: Conclusions and future directions
- Acknowledgment
- Chapter Two: Causes and consequences of coalitional cognition
- Abstract
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Causes
- 3: Consequences
- 4: Interventions
- 5: Conclusion
- Acknowledgments
- Chapter Three: Motivated perception for self-regulation: How visual experience serves and is served by goals
- Abstract
- 1: Motivated visual perception and its historical context
- 2: Strategies for self-regulation
- 3: Distinguishing “perception” from “cognition”
- 4: Methodological techniques used to distinguish perceptual experience from cognitive judgment
- 5: Four properties of visual perception that make it apt for self-regulation
- 6: Goal-promoting perception: A theoretical framework
- 7: Motivated visual processing within three facets of goal pursuit
- 8: General summary and “Call to Action”
- 9: Theoretical and applied value of perception for self-regulation
- 10: Example application
- 11: A note on “dysfunctional” biases and the limits of motivated perception
- 12: Concluding remarks
- Chapter Four: The primacy of morality in impression development: Theory, research, and future directions
- Abstract
- 1: Introduction
- 2: Morality and impression development: Theoretical bases
- 3: Looking for information about others: The centrality of morality in implicit assumptions and information gathering
- 4: Evaluating other individuals and groups: Moral character drives first impressions
- 5: Changing our mind: Morality and impression updating
- 6: Beyond impressions: Morality and social interactions
- 7: A new framework for understanding person and group perception: The moral primacy model (MPM) of impression development
- 8: Concluding summary
- Chapter Five: Self-uncertainty and group identification: Consequences for social identity, group behavior, intergroup relations, and society
- Abstract
- 1: Context and development of uncertainty-identity theory
- 2: Core propositions and associated predictions
- 3: Uncertainty
- 4: Self and self-uncertainty
- 5: Social identity reduces self-uncertainty
- 6: All groups and identities are not equal
- 7: Knowing a group's social identity
- 8: Self-uncertainty's darker side
- 9: Summary and concluding comments
- Edition: 1
- Volume: 64
- Published: July 28, 2021
- No. of pages (Hardback): 324
- No. of pages (eBook): 324
- Imprint: Academic Press
- Language: English
- Hardback ISBN: 9780128245798
- eBook ISBN: 9780323850407
BG
Bertram Gawronski
Dr. Bertram Gawronski, PhD, is Professor of Psychology at the University of Texas at Austin. He received his PhD in psychology from Humboldt-University Berlin (Germany) in 2001. In addition to editing five influential books on a broad range of social psychological topics, Dr. Gawronski has served as Associate Editor of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology and Personality and Social Psychology Review.
Affiliations and expertise
Professor, David Wechsler Regents Chair, Department of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, Austin, TX, USARead Advances in Experimental Social Psychology on ScienceDirect