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Cantwell, Allison M.; Martiny, Sarah E. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
As indicated by Deaux and Burke (this volume), sociology and psychology have shared a tradition of discourse allowing social psychologists to build upon each other's ideas. A conversation between social identity theory and identity theory was initiated fifteen years ago and addressed the similarities and differences between these theories. This…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Identification (Psychology), Sociology, Psychology
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Friedman, Asia; Waggoner, Ashley S. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Cognition offers a natural setting for the intersection of the research interests of both sociologists and psychologists. The study of cultural influences on automatic processing highlights the shared interests of social psychologists from both disciplines. In particular, the examination of subcultural differences in person perception is a…
Descriptors: Interpersonal Communication, Psychologists, Interests, Social Cognition
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Zerubavel, Eviatar; Smith, Eliot R. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Advancing knowledge in many areas of psychology and neuroscience, underlined by dazzling images of brain scans, appear to many professionals and to the public to show that people are on the way to explaining cognition purely in terms of processes within the individual's head. Yet while such cognitive individualism still dominates the popular…
Descriptors: Individualism, Cognitive Processes, Group Dynamics, Psychology
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Harkness, Sarah K.; Hall, Deborah L. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Gender is one of the primary organizers of social life. Given this importance, gender has been studied from multiple vantages, including biological, sociocognitive, interpersonal, network, and institutional perspectives. The diversity of these approaches illustrates the complex nature of gender as a multilevel social construction and that the…
Descriptors: Social Life, Psychologists, Gender Differences, Social Scientists
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Dimaggio, Paul; Markus, Hazel Rose – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Views of culture in psychology and sociology have converged markedly in the past two decades. Both have rejected what Adams and Markus (2004) refer to as the "entity" conception of culture--the view that culture is coherent, stable, and located in the heads of collectivities' members--in favor of more supple and dynamic constructs. Culture, in…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Social Psychology, Psychology, Social Cognition
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Wood, Wendy; Ridgeway, Cecilia L. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
This article is intended to identify research opportunities for gender scholars in all disciplines. The authors explain why a truly interdisciplinary approach is necessary to study gender and offer their current thinking about how to pursue this goal. They first provide a description of gender as it plays out at the individual, interpersonal, and…
Descriptors: Sex Role, Scholarship, Interdisciplinary Approach, Research Opportunities
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Melamed, David; North, Michael S. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2010
Recently an article in "Personality and Social Psychology Review" urged social psychologists to reacquire their "sociological imagination" and incorporate broader, structural factors in their work (Oishi, Kesebir, and Snyder 2009). Studies of social inequality in particular seem ripe for this kind of collaboration. Psychological investigations…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Social Psychology, Social Systems, Sociology
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Camic, Charles – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008
They seem the perfect bookends for the social psychologist's collection of "classics" of the field. Two volumes, nearly identical in shape and weight and exactly a century old in 2008--each professing to usher "social psychology" into the world as they both place the hybrid expression square in their titles but then proceed to stake out the field…
Descriptors: Social Psychology, Psychologists, Reading Materials, Reputation
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Cook, Karen S.; Yamagishi, Toshio – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008
A debate is emerging concerning the use of deception in social science research (especially when it employs experimental methods), driven primarily by the relatively recent move by many economists into experimental work. These economists generally argue that deception should be banned. Deception includes a variety of practices in social science…
Descriptors: Social Science Research, Psychologists, Economics, Professional Occupations
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House, James S. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008
Stimulated by social scientists' and especially social psychologists' contributions during World War II, as well as by America's post-war economic and population growth, the period from 1945 to 1970 was widely viewed as a "Golden Age" for American social science. Interdisciplinary social psychology arguably was in the vanguard of these…
Descriptors: Social Scientists, Interdisciplinary Approach, Social Psychology, Psychologists
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Tetlock, Philip E.; Mitchell, Gregory – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2008
Psychological social psychologists have devoted great effort to measuring the elusive construct of unconscious prejudice. However, recent work underscores both the psychometric flaws of these measures and the weaknesses in claims that they predict behavior in realistic organizational settings. Before accepting unconscious prejudice as an…
Descriptors: Psychologists, Psychometrics, Accountability, Social Bias
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Simpson, Brent; Borch, Casey – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
This research investigates competing arguments about the relationship between power and perception in social networks. One line of research predicts that occupants of structurally advantaged positions have more accurate perceptions of ties in their networks (i.e., who is tied to whom); another line asserts that lower-power actors have more…
Descriptors: Social Networks, Perception, Correlation, Individual Power
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Gibson, David R. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Speaking involves "linearizing" a message into a string of words. This process leaves us vulnerable to being interrupted in such a way that the aborted turn is a misrepresentation of the intended message. Further, because we linearize our messages in standard ways, we are recurrently vulnerable to interruptions at particular…
Descriptors: English (Second Language), English Instruction, Universities, Psychologists
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Gailey, Jeannine A.; Lee, Matthew T. – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Sociologists and psychologists have spent several decades attempting to improve our understanding of the factors that influence how people attribute responsibility for outcomes of social action, particularly wrongdoing. Members of two disciplines continue to refine Heider's seminal work in distinct ways, but have not developed a definitive test of…
Descriptors: Psychological Studies, Psychologists, Social Action, Parent Child Relationship
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Cook, Karen Schweers – Social Psychology Quarterly, 2005
Networks of trust relations often emerge under conditions of uncertainty or risk to facilitate social exchange. Under some conditions, such networks represent a form of social capital that can be mobilized in support of general social cooperation in the society. Under other conditions, however, such networks may have negative effects on the degree…
Descriptors: Trust (Psychology), Social Psychology, Social Capital, Social Networks