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Control Motivation and Social Cognition
Başlık:
Control Motivation and Social Cognition
ISBN:
9781461383093
Edition:
1st ed. 1993.
Yayın Bilgileri:
New York, NY : Springer New York : Imprint: Springer, 1993.
Fiziksel Tanımlama:
XVI, 344 p. online resource.
Contents:
Section I. Control Motivation: Theoretical Perspectives -- 1. Control, Its Loss, and Psychological Reactance -- Section II. Models of Perceived Control -- 2. Perceptions of Control: Determinants and Mechanisms -- 3. Naturally Occurring Perceptions of Control: A Model of Bounded Flexibility -- 4. The Primacy of Control in Causal Thinking and Attributional Style: An Attributional Functionalism Perspective -- 5. Uncertainty, Mental Models, and Learned Helplessness: An Anatomy of Control Loss -- Section III. Effects of Perceived Control on Social Cognition -- 6. Control Motivation and Attitude Change -- 7. Social Cognition and Power: Some Cognitive Consequences of Social Structure as a Source of Control Deprivation -- 8. Individual Differences in Control Motivation and Social Information Processing -- 9. Control Motivation and Self-Appraisal -- 10. Depression, Control Motivation, and the Processing of Information about Others -- Section IV. Conclusions and Commentary -- 11. The Warm Look in Control Motivation and Social Cognition -- Author Index.
Abstract:
Over the past two decades theorists and researchers have given increasing attention to the effects, both beneficial and harmful, of various control­ related motivations and beliefs. People's notions of how much personal control they have or desire to have over important events in their lives have been used to explain a host of performance and adaptational outcomes, including motivational and performance deficits associated with learned helplessness (Abramson, Seligman, & Teasdale, 1978) and depression (Abramson, Metalsky, & Alloy, 1989), adaptation to aging (Baltes & Baltes, 1986; Rodin, 1986), cardiovascular disease (Matthews, 1982), cancer (Sklar & Anisman, 1979), increased reports of physical symptoms (Pennebaker, 1982), enhanced learning (Savage, Perlmutter, & Monty, 1979), achievement-related behaviors (Dweck & Licht, 1980; Ryckman, 1979), and post abortion adjustment (Mueller & Major, 1989). The notion that control motivation plays a fundamental role in a variety of basic, social psychological processes also has a long historical tradition. A number of theorists (Heider, 1958; Jones & Davis, 1965; Kelley, 1967), for example, have suggested that causal inferences arise from a desire to render the social world predictable and controllable. Similarly, control has been implicated as an important mediator of cognitive dissonance (Wicklund & Brehm, 1976) and attitude phenomena (Brehm & Brehm, 1981; Kiesler, Collins, & Miller, 1969). Despite the apparent centrality of control motivation to a variety of social psychological phenomena, until recently there has been relatively little research explicitly concerned with the effects of control motivation on the cognitive processes underlying such phenomena (cf.
Dil:
English