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The purpose of this book is to survey the limited scientific
knowledge about how sleep intersects with personality and social
behavior. This edited volume establishes a new interdisciplinary
field of inquiry about sleep that examines sleep processes in the
context of social behavior and social-cognitive processes (e.g.,
liking, respecting, helping, hurting, achieving), as well as
individual differences in personality (i.e., chronic patterns of
emotion, thought, and behavior). Contributors identify key gaps in
scientific knowledge about sleep and its import for
personality-social processes, aiming to shape future research
efforts by scholars in psychology, biology, sociology, and sleep
medicine. Among the topics discussed: How sleep shapes emotion
regulation Sleep and temperament in early childhood Dynamics
between sleep and self-control Implications for task performance
Influence of sleep on social cognition and judgment Sleep,
Personality, and Social Behavior comprehensively examines the role
of sleep in emotion and motivation, the impact of sleep on
social-cognitive processes, the dynamics between sleeping and
relationships functioning, the import of sleep for group behavior,
the role of personality differences in sleep, and the role of sleep
in personality and social development. Researchers in personality
and social psychology, health psychology, and neurology will find
this an insightful book that addresses the significant gaps in
scientific understanding of sleep.
The purpose of this book is to survey the limited scientific
knowledge about how sleep intersects with personality and social
behavior. This edited volume establishes a new interdisciplinary
field of inquiry about sleep that examines sleep processes in the
context of social behavior and social-cognitive processes (e.g.,
liking, respecting, helping, hurting, achieving), as well as
individual differences in personality (i.e., chronic patterns of
emotion, thought, and behavior). Contributors identify key gaps in
scientific knowledge about sleep and its import for
personality-social processes, aiming to shape future research
efforts by scholars in psychology, biology, sociology, and sleep
medicine. Among the topics discussed: How sleep shapes emotion
regulation Sleep and temperament in early childhood Dynamics
between sleep and self-control Implications for task performance
Influence of sleep on social cognition and judgment Sleep,
Personality, and Social Behavior comprehensively examines the role
of sleep in emotion and motivation, the impact of sleep on
social-cognitive processes, the dynamics between sleeping and
relationships functioning, the import of sleep for group behavior,
the role of personality differences in sleep, and the role of sleep
in personality and social development. Researchers in personality
and social psychology, health psychology, and neurology will find
this an insightful book that addresses the significant gaps in
scientific understanding of sleep.
The extent to which we see ourselves as similar or different from
others in our lives plays a key role in getting along and
participating in social life. This volume identifies research
relevant to such communal functions of social comparisons and
summarizes and organizes this research within a single, coherent
conceptual framework. The volume provides an important addition to
current thinking about social comparison, which has often neglected
communal and affiliative functions. Whereas human desire to compare
with others has traditionally been viewed as motivated by
self-centered needs such as self-evaluation, self-enhancement, and
self-improvement, this book presents an eclectic cross-section of
research that illuminates connective, cooperative, and
participatory functions of social comparisons. In this vein, the
book aims both to expose research on currently neglected functions
of social comparisons and to motivate a broader theoretical
integration of social comparison processes.
The extent to which we see ourselves as similar or different from
others in our lives plays a key role in getting along and
participating in social life. This volume identifies research
relevant to such communal functions of social comparisons and
summarizes and organizes this research within a single, coherent
conceptual framework. The volume provides an important addition to
current thinking about social comparison, which has often neglected
communal and affiliative functions. Whereas human desire to compare
with others has traditionally been viewed as motivated by
self-centered needs such as self-evaluation, self-enhancement, and
self-improvement, this book presents an eclectic cross-section of
research that illuminates connective, cooperative, and
participatory functions of social comparisons. In this vein, the
book aims both to expose research on currently neglected functions
of social comparisons and to motivate a broader theoretical
integration of social comparison processes.
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