
Social psychology uses clever, even ingenious, research methods to explore the most essential questions of the human psyche: Why do we help some people and harm others? Why do we pay so much more attention to high-powered people than they pay to us? If humans evolved from great apes, why are human selves so much more elaborate? How does our attachment to our parents when we are infants influence the success or failure of our romantic relationships when we are adults? Can behaving morally "license" us to behave immorally shortly afterward? How do social relationships make us more versus less prone toward physical illness?This volume -- an update to the original, 2010 edition -- provides a graduate-level introduction to social psychology. The target audience consists of first-year graduate students (MA or PhD) in social psychology and related disciplines (marketing, organizational behavior, etc.), although it is also appropriate for upper-level undergraduate courses. The authors are world-renowned leaders on their topic, and they have written state-of-the-art overviews of the discipline's major research domains. The chapters are not only scientifically rigorous, but also accessible and engaging. They convey the joy, excitement, and promise of scientific investigations into human sociality.
This volume investigates the core mechanisms of human social interaction by synthesizing contemporary research findings into a comprehensive graduate-level framework. The authors, recognized experts in the field, utilize empirical data and established psychological theories to address fundamental questions regarding human behavior, social cognition, and interpersonal relationships. The text serves as an updated survey of the discipline, designed to bridge the gap between foundational concepts and current scientific inquiry.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts identify this text as a standard resource for graduate-level instruction due to its rigorous synthesis of the field. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which is balanced by the authors' ability to present complex research in an accessible manner.
Page Count:
591
Publication Date:
2019-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190635614
ISBN-13:
9780190635619
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