Studies of social judgments have demonstrated a number of diverse phenomena that were so far difficult to explain within a single theoretical framework. Prominent examples are false consensus and false uniqueness, as well as self-enhancement and self-depreciation. Here we show that these seemingly complex phenomena can be a product of an interplay between basic cognitive processes and the structure of social and task environments. We propose and test a new process model of social judgment, the social sampling model (SSM), which provides a parsimonious quantitative account of different types of social judgments. In the SSM, judgments about characteristics of broader social environments are based on sampling of social instances from memory, w...
Subjects read paragraphs suggesting that a fictitious person (O) either did or did not possess an at...
According to social judgeability theory (SJT), people rely upon a series of naive theories in order ...
Evidence from four studies demonstrates that social observers tend to perceive a “false consensus ” ...
2018-08-06Mindreading has been one of the central topics in psychology for a long time. Recently, th...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
According to social judgeability theory, people rely on naive theories of judgment to make decisions...
The book is organized into three major parts. Part I considers recent evidence for the important rol...
Developments in social judgment research during the last two decades have broadened the explanatory ...
This thesis examines the process of thought social perceivers go through when drawing a social infer...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Fluency is a meta-cognitive process whereby people ap...
A cognitive model of social influence (Social Sampling Theory: SST) is developed and applied to seve...
Research on person perception typically emphasizes cognitive processes of information selection and ...
The present research explores a new mechanism for ease of retrieval effects in social judgment. It i...
Why is he poor? Why is she failing academically? Why is he so generous? Why is she so conscientious?...
Categorization is widely accepted in social psychology as integral to group-based perception. Howev...
Subjects read paragraphs suggesting that a fictitious person (O) either did or did not possess an at...
According to social judgeability theory (SJT), people rely upon a series of naive theories in order ...
Evidence from four studies demonstrates that social observers tend to perceive a “false consensus ” ...
2018-08-06Mindreading has been one of the central topics in psychology for a long time. Recently, th...
Human judgment is basically comparative, with self-judgments in particular being based on social com...
According to social judgeability theory, people rely on naive theories of judgment to make decisions...
The book is organized into three major parts. Part I considers recent evidence for the important rol...
Developments in social judgment research during the last two decades have broadened the explanatory ...
This thesis examines the process of thought social perceivers go through when drawing a social infer...
Research Doctorate - Doctor of Philosophy (PhD)Fluency is a meta-cognitive process whereby people ap...
A cognitive model of social influence (Social Sampling Theory: SST) is developed and applied to seve...
Research on person perception typically emphasizes cognitive processes of information selection and ...
The present research explores a new mechanism for ease of retrieval effects in social judgment. It i...
Why is he poor? Why is she failing academically? Why is he so generous? Why is she so conscientious?...
Categorization is widely accepted in social psychology as integral to group-based perception. Howev...
Subjects read paragraphs suggesting that a fictitious person (O) either did or did not possess an at...
According to social judgeability theory (SJT), people rely upon a series of naive theories in order ...
Evidence from four studies demonstrates that social observers tend to perceive a “false consensus ” ...