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Advances in Experimental Social Psychology. Volume 63

  • Book

  • February 2021
  • Elsevier Science and Technology
  • ID: 5146490

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 series provide defining pieces of established research programs, reviewing and integrating thematically related findings by individual scholars or research groups. Topics discussed in Volume 63 include Social Evaluation, Whole Traits, Paradoxical Thinking and Intractable Conflicts, Face Perception, and Social Perception.

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Table of Contents

1. Social evaluation: Comparing models across interpersonal, intragroup, intergroup, several-group, and many-group contexts

Alex Koch, Vincent Yzerbyt, Andrea Abele, Naomi Ellemers and Susan T. Fiske

2. Whole traits: Revealing the social-cognitive mechanisms constituting personality's central variable

William Fleeson and Eranda Jayawickreme

3. Paradoxical thinking as a paradigm of attitude change in the context of intractable conflict

Daniel Bar-Tal, Boaz Hameiri and Eran Halperin

4. The structure and perceptual basis of social judgments from faces

Alexander Todorov and DongWon Oh

5. On the utility of the self in social perception: An egocentric tactician model

Constantine Sedikides, Mark D. Alicke and John J. Skowronski

Authors

Bertram Gawronski Professor of Psychology, University of Texas at Austin, USA. 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.