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We have 35 results for Social cognition.
1 | 2 | 3 | Next1 Citation Even though I am a more analytic trader, looking at data to find an edge, I recognize that talking about the trading issues helps a lot to clarify my thinking. Talking it out also helps to show me what I don?t understand about what I am about to do. So it lights up the dark corners where the mind doesn?t want to go on its own. Note here that the trader Dr. Steenbarger worked with had a colleague that ?was trying to tell him that for weeks? but it was when the doctor pointed it out that the, technorati.com
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Prayer in devoutly religious people recruits social cognition brain areas. 1 Citation Schjoedt et al. suggest that praying to God is an intersubjective experience comparable to ?normal? interpersonal interaction., technorati.com
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You want to know the truth? Then don't mimic! 1 Citation We usually feel that expressing empathy by mimicking another person's face and body movements facilitates our understanding of their true emotions. Not so, apparently, if they are lying. Stel et al. have done experiments with two interacting people as follows: ...targets either lied or told the truth, while observers mimicked or did not mimic the targets' facial and behavioral movements. Detection of deception was measured directly by observers' judgments of the extent to which they thought, technorati.com
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Aging, isolation, and internet social networks 1 Citation An article by Stephanie Clifford on isolated older adults finding social sustenance through internet social sites., technorati.com
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Money, social distress, and physical pain 1 Citation The Symbolic Power of Money: Reminders of Money Alter Social Distress and Physical Pain, technorati.com
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Questioning the link between brain size and sociality 1 Citation Almost any lecture on brain evolution includes the assertion that larger brains evolved to serve communication demands of larger social groups. Finarelli and Flynn question this for the carnivores (cats, dogs, bears, weasels, and their relatives)., technorati.com
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Self-verification strategies in human?computer interaction 1 Citation People believe many things about themselves. Having an accurate view of oneself is valuable because it can be used to generate both expectations that will be fulfilled and plans that can be successfully executed. But in being cognitively limited agents, there is pressure for us humans to not only have accurate self-views, but to have efficient ones. In his new book, How We Get Along , philosopher David Velleman puts it this way: At one extreme, I have a way of interpreting myself, a way tha, technorati.com
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1 Citation SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY AN OVERVIEW OF THE SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY The Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) was developed by, a Canadian psychologist, in the mid-1980s (, 2004). (1998) argued that the SCT defines human behavior as a triadic, dynamic, and reciprocal interaction of personal factors, behavior, and the environment. According to this theory, an individual's behavior is uniquely determined by each of these three factors. While the SCT upholds the behaviorist notion that response consequences, technorati.com
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1 Citation SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY AN OVERVIEW OF THE SOCIAL COGNITIVE THEORY The Social Cognitive Theory (SCT) was developed by , a Canadian psychologist, in the mid-1980s (2004). (1998) argued that the SCT defines human behavior as a triadic, dynamic, and reciprocal interaction of personal factors, behavior, and the environment. According to this theory, an individual's behavior is uniquely determined by each of these three factors. While the SCT upholds the behaviorist notion that response consequences, technorati.com
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Neural correlates of vicarious reward. 1 Citation Interesting observations from Mobbs et al. The experiments involved brain imaging of participants reacting to game winning by contestants with whom they were or were not sympathetic. Their abstract (slightly edited): Humans appear to have an inherent prosocial tendency toward one another in that we often take pleasure in seeing others succeed. This fact is almost certainly exploited by game shows, yet why watching others win elicits a pleasurable vicarious rewarding feeling in the absence of, technorati.com
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