ABSTRACT

This provocative book provides the first comprehensive and informative overview of the role of various subjective experiences in social cognition and behavior, and argues that the study of such experiences may be one of the key unifying themes of social psychology. Based on recent theoretical and empirical developments in the discipline, this select group of leading international researchers surveys extensive evidence and shows that subjective experiences play a key role in most aspects of social cognition and social behavior. The book contains five main sections, discussing the role of subjective experiences in social information processing (Part 1), their influence on memory (Part 2) and their role in intergroup contexts (Part 3). The role of affective experiences in social thinking and behavior is analyzed (Part 4), and the influence of subjective experiences on the development and change of attitudes and stereotypes is also addressed (Part 5).

part I|96 pages

Subjective Experience and Information Processing

chapter 2|24 pages

On Mere Considering

The Subjective Experience of Truth

chapter 3|15 pages

Of Men and Mackerels

Attention, Subjective Experience, and Automatic Social Behavior

chapter 6|19 pages

Availability as Input

The Experience of Cognitive Effort Can Either Strengthen or Weaken Evaluations

part II|69 pages

Subjective Experience and Memory Phenomena

chapter 7|16 pages

Subjective Experience of Familiarity

Functional Basis in Connectionist Memory

chapter 9|19 pages

The Effects of Subjective Ease of Retrieval on Attitudinal Judgments

The Moderating Role of Processing Motivation

chapter 10|14 pages

Drawing Inferences from Feelings

The Role of Naive Beliefs

part III|103 pages

Affect as a Subjective Experience and Social Cognition

chapter 11|24 pages

Subjective Experience and Mood Regulation

The Role of Information Processing Strategies

chapter 13|24 pages

Negative Affect and Persuasion

The Role of Affect Interpretation

chapter 14|22 pages

The Positive Feeling of Familiarity

Mood as an Information Processing Regulation Mechanism

part IV|112 pages

Subjective Experience, Stereotyping, and Intergroup Behavior

chapter 17|18 pages

Active Search for Information

The Effects of Subjectively Experienced Control on Stereotyping

chapter 19|32 pages

Subjective Experiences and Intergroup Relations

The Role of Positive Affect

chapter 20|21 pages

The Message Within

Toward a Social Psychology of Subjective Experiences