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The Mental Representation of Trait and Autobiographical Knowledge About the Self - Advances in Social Cognition, Volume V (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R3,883
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The Mental Representation of Trait and Autobiographical Knowledge About the Self - Advances in Social Cognition, Volume V (Hardcover)
Series: Advances in Social Cognition Series
Expected to ship within 12 - 17 working days
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If there is one topic on which we all are experts, it is ourselves.
Psychologists depend upon this expertise, as asking people
questions about themselves is an important means by which they
gather the data that provide much of the evidence for psychological
theory. Personal recollections play an important role in clinical
theorizing; people's thoughts, feelings, and beliefs provide the
principal data for attitudinal research; and judgments of one's
traits and descriptions of one's goals and motivations are
essential for the study of personality. Yet despite their long
dependence on self-report data, psychologists know very little
about this basic resource and the processes that govern it. In
spite of the importance of the self as a concept in psychology,
virtually no empirically-tested representational models of
self-knowledge can be found. Recently, however, several theoretical
accounts of the representation of self-knowledge have been
proposed. These models have been concerned primarily with the
factors underlying a particular type of self knowledge -- our trait
conceptions of ourselves. The models all share the starting
assumption that the source of our knowledge of the traits that
describe us is memory for our past behavior.
The lead article in this volume reviews the available models of
the processes underlying trait self-descriptiveness judgments.
Although these models appear quite different in their basic
representational assumptions, exemplar and abstraction models
sometimes are difficult to distinguish experimentally. Presenting a
series of studies using several new techniques which the authors
believe are effective for assessing whether people recruit specific
exemplars or abstract trait summaries when making trait judgments
about themselves, they conclude that specific behavioral exemplars
play a far smaller role in the representation of trait knowledge
than previously has been assumed. Finally, the limitations of
social cognition paradigms as methods for studying the
representation of long-term social knowledge are discussed, and the
implications of the research for both existing and future social
psychological research are explored.
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