ABSTRACT
What is an attitude? How do different research approaches characterise 'attitude' and its applications in social psychology?
The Attitude concept has long formed an indispensable construct in social psychology. In this volume, internationally renowned contributors review contemporary developments in research and theory to capture the current metamorphosis of this central concept.
This book draws together the latest developments in the field to provide a scholarly and accessible overview of the study of attitudes, examining the implications for its position as a paradigm of social psychological understanding. Dividing the subject into two main parts, this book first addresses the structural and behavioural properties of attitudes, including the affective-cognitive structure of attitudes, the nature of attitude ambivalence and intention-behaviour relations. The second section focuses on representational and transformational processes, such as meta-cognitive attitudinal processes, the role of implicit and explicit attitudinal processes, cultural influences and attitude change. In a third, concluding section, the editors draw together these contemporary perspectives and elaborate on their impact for future theorising and research into attitudes.
Empirically supported throughout, this collection represents a timely integration of the burgeoning range of approaches to attitude research. It will be of interest to social psychologists, sociologists, political scientists and researchers with an interest in attitudinal phenomena.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
part |2 pages
Part I Attitudes, attitude properties, and behavior
chapter 4|16 pages
Hold still while I measure your attitude: Assessment in the throes of ambivalence STEVEN J. BRECKLER
chapter 8|34 pages
An alternative view of pre-volitional processes in decision making
part |2 pages
Part II Attitude awareness, attitude representations, and change
chapter 12|24 pages
The relationship between implicit attitudes and behavior
chapter 14|20 pages
Putting Humpty together again
chapter 16|24 pages
Investigating attitudes cross-culturally
part |2 pages
Part III Some final thoughts