Course Description
This module is concerned with contemporary concepts, theories and findings in this broad area of social psychology and how they may be applied with benefits for individuals, groups and society. We will address the question how individuals form and maintain an understanding of themselves, other people, and the world they are living in. Drawing on cognitive principles, we will study the processes that underlie human judgments, behaviour, and decision making in real-life contexts. Students will have the opportunity to develop new research to address an unanswered research question.
The module gives students grounding in methods, techniques and issues of cognitive neuroscience. Focusing on vision, attention, memory, problem solving and language, the module examines how cognitive processes are instantiated in the human brain
Learning Outcome
- Knowledge
and understanding of contemporary concepts, theories and findings in attitudes
and social cognition
- Critically
evaluating concepts, theories and findings in attitudes and social cognition
- Conceiving
research to address limitations and gaps in concepts, theories and findings in
attitudes and social cognition
- Identifying
gaps and limitations in the ways concepts, theories and findings in attitudes
and social cognition are presented to the wider public
- Demonstrating
an awareness of how concepts, theories and findings in attitudes and social
cognition may be applied with benefits for individuals, groups, and society
- Develop
an appreciation of the historical and conceptual issues in the study of
Attitudes and Social Cognition
Course Content
- Introduction
and History of Social History
- Social
Knowledge
- Biases
- Automaticity
- Schema
and Categories
- Social
identity perspective
- Memory
- Stereotypes
and expectancies
- Culture
Compulsory Reading Materials
- Kunda,
Z. (1999). Social cognition: Making sense of people. London: MIT Press.
- Bless, H., Fiedler, K., &Strack, F. (2004). Social cognition: How
individuals construct social reality. Hove: Psychology Press.
- Maio, G. R. & Haddock, G. G. (2010). The Psychology of Attitudes and
Attitude Change. London, UK: Sage.
- Bandura, A. (1999). A social
cognitive theory of personality. In L. Pervin& O. John (Ed.), Handbook of
personality (2nd ed., pp. 154-196). New York: Guilford Publications.
Optional Reading Materials
- M S
Gazzaniga, R B Ivry& G R Mangun (Eds.), Cognitive Neuroscience: The Biology
of the Mind (3rd edition). Norton, 2008
- Levine,
J. M., Resnick, L. B., Higgins, E. T. (1993). Social foundations of cognition.
Annual Review of Psychology, 44, 585-612.
Course description
This course centers on understanding the self-embedded in the social context. We will integrate knowledge from various areas of psychology (developmental, cognitive, social cognition) with a main focus in social psychology. This course will provide the opportunity to gain an understanding of research in the following areas: the development of self in a social context, the relationship between the self and the broader socio-cultural context. The course will provide surprising insights about basic psychological phenomena centering on the topic of self.This course provides a review of the central concept in the lives of even the most altruistic of us: the self. We begin the course by considering the definition of self and review a set of select topics on it’s on to genetic development.
Learning Outcome
At the end of the course, students should be b able to:
- Examine
the dynamics and cues of social dominance and perceived control
- Discuss
the ways in which making free choices, and thus exercising one’s control,
affects future preferences and well being
- Analyze
the interpersonal socio-cognitive theory of the self
- Discuss
the biases that self-involvement creates, for better or for worse
- Examine
the effects of self-involvement on value, memory, and predictions about the
future
- Explore the concept of personality as it is studied using modern approaches to individual differences
Course Content
- Constructing
the Social Self
- Defining
the self
- Perceiving
one’s own and others’ actions
- Dialectic
of self and other mind perception
- Social
cues to personal agency – power and control
- he
origin and perpetuation of personal preferences
- Making
choices– health benefits of being in control
- Relational
self within and across cultures
- The
self and memory (self-reference and implicit self-esteem)
- Self
and value (ownership and free choice)
- Optimism
Bias
- Personality
in context
- Self-discrepancy
theory
- The self resisting adversity
Compulsory Reading Materials
- Abrams, D., & Hogg, M. A.
(1990). Social identity theory: Constructive and critical advances. London:
Harvester-Wheatsheaf.
- Bandura, A. (1982). Self-efficacy
mechanism in human agency. American Psychologist, 37, 122-147
- Bandura, A. (1995). Exercise of
personal and collective efficacy in changing societies. In A. Bandura (Ed.),
Self-efficacy in changing societies (pp. 1-45). New York: Cambridge University
Press.
Optional Reading Materials
- Klein, S. B. (2012). "What is
the self?": Approaches to a very elusive question. Social Cognition,
30(4), 363-366.
- Swann, W., Stein-Seroussi, A.,
&Giesler, B. (1992). Why people self-verify. Journal of Personality and
Social Psychology, 62(3), 392-401.
- Wilson, T. D. (2002). Strangers to
ourselves : discovering the adaptive unconscious. Cambridge, Mass.: Belknap
Press of Harvard University Press.[Selection: Chapter 9: , pp. 183-202]
- Wheeler, S. C., DeMarree, K. G.,
& Petty, R. E. (2007). Understanding the role of the self in
prime-to-behavior effects: The Active-Self account. Personality and Social
Psychology Review, 11(3), 234-261
Course Description
We typically think of perception as among the most fundamental forms of lower-level cognition and social cognition as among the most advanced forms of higher-level cognition. In this course, we will explore how these two aspects of the mind connect. The course will explore how social influences do and do not influence what we see, and how perception itself is specialized for social information. Readings will be drawn from several different areas of psychology including cognitive psychology, vision science, social psychology, cognitive neuroscience, and infant cognition. Specific topics include the perception of animacy, agency, and intentionality, biological motion, face perception, gaze processing, attention, race perception, social color vision social olfaction, and social and cultural influences on perception
Learning Outcome
At the end of the course, student should be able to:
Course Content
- Perceptual
Stereotyping
- Organizational
meeting
- Social
factors
- Culture
change
- Social
Color Vision
- Animacy
and Intentionality
- Perceiving
Social Information
- Social
Olfaction
- Social
Vision
Compulsory Reading Materials
- Anzures,
G., Quinn, P. C., Pascalis, O., Slater, A. M., Tanaka, J. W., & Lee, K.
(2013). Developmental origins of the other-race effect. Current directions in
psychological science, 22(3), 173-178.
- Levin, D., & Banaji, M. (2006). Distortions in the perceived lightness of faces: The role of race categories. Journal of Experimental Psychology: General, 135, 501–512.
- Schnall, S., Harber, K., Stefanucci, J., & Proffitt, D. (2008). Social support and the perception of geographical slant. Journal of Experimental Social Psychology, 44, 1246-1255.
Optional
Reading Materials
- Barrett,
H. C., Todd, P., Miller, G., & Blythe, P. (2005). Accurate judgments of
intention from motion cues alone: A cross-cultural study. Evolution and Human
Behavior, 26, 313-331.
- Gao, T., McCarthy, G., & Scholl, B. (2010).
The Wolfpack effect: Perception of animacy irresistibly influences interactive
behavior. Psychological Science, 21, 1845-1853