Abstract: Social cognition consists of the psychological processes through which individuals construct a meaningful understanding of their social environment. A key assumption of this approach is that it is the perceiver's subjective construal of the social world—rather than the objective circumstances—that controls much of human behavior. However, subjective understandings often emerge quite rapidly and automatically, with little effort or intention on the perceiver's part. We review the core processes through which these subjective understandings are constructed and used. In particular, we examine the roles of commonsense reasoning processes, automatic inferences based on appearance and behavior cues, egocentric projection, and stereotyping in constructing social impressions. We also review theoretical approaches that situate person perception in various contexts of social interdependence and interpersonal relationships. We conclude by considering some of the ways in which ostensibly basic processes of social cognition are shaped by cultural conditioning, producing cross-cultural variations in the nature of person perception.
Publication Year: 2012
Publication Date: 2012-09-26
Language: en
Type: other
Indexed In: ['crossref']
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Cited By Count: 15
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