94,030 results on '"Social Perception"'
Search Results
2. Does Terminology Matter? Perspectives From People With Limb Difference, Clinicians, and Researchers
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Finco, M.G., McDonald, Cody L., and Moudy, Sarah C.
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- 2025
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3. Social representations of breastfeeding in health science students: A first step to strengthening their training
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Grover-Baltzar, Gabriela Alejandra, Sandoval-Rodríguez, Ana, Macedo-Ojeda, Gabriela, Chavira-Trujillo, Gabriel, Corona-Ortiz, Marco Julián, de Alba, Marta, and Vizmanos, Barbara
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- 2024
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4. Converging evidence that left extrastriate body area supports visual sensitivity to social interactions
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Gandolfo, Marco, Abassi, Etienne, Balgova, Eva, Downing, Paul E., Papeo, Liuba, and Koldewyn, Kami
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- 2024
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5. Hiding and Seeking Knowledge-Providing Ties from Rivals: A Strategic Perspective on Network Perceptions.
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Kilduff, Martin, Wang, Kun, Lee, Sun Young, Tsai, Wenpin, Chuang, You-Ta, and Tsai, Fu-Sheng
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COMPETITION (Psychology) ,DECEPTION ,COWORKER relationships ,SOCIAL perception ,MOTIVATION (Psychology) ,SOCIAL status ,SOCIAL cohesion ,ORGANIZATIONAL behavior - Abstract
Rivalry is endemic in society and organizations, fueling competitive intentions and behaviors. According to social network theory, rivalry emerges among people who, like siblings, have many of the same connections to others. For this structurally equivalent rivalry to have its effects, the individual must see the other person as a rival. We ask whether, in the context of competition, people seek to identify the knowledge providers of their rivals while striving to hide their own knowledge providers from perceived rivals. We conducted two experiments that showed, for the first time, that structural equivalence does induce feelings of rivalry and does lead people to take action with respect to perceived rivals, namely to hide and seek knowledge providers. Our analysis of time-separated social network and outcome data from all 73 employees in the headquarters of a chemical company found support for these patterns of hiding and seeking in relation to perceived rivals. We also found limited evidence that career outcomes may be influenced by individuals' success in hiding and seeking. Bringing together research on rivalry and network cognition, we provide a new approach to the strategic deployment of deception and detection in social networks. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Racial biases, facial trustworthiness, and resting heart rate variability: unravelling complexities in pain recognition.
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Ceccarelli, Ilenia, Bagnis, Arianna, Ottaviani, Cristina, Thayer, Julian, and Mattarozzi, Katia
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Appearance-based trustworthiness ,Facial appearance ,Healthcare ,Heart rate variability ,Pain recognition ,Adult ,Female ,Humans ,Male ,Young Adult ,Facial Expression ,Facial Recognition ,Heart Rate ,Pain Perception ,Racism ,Recognition ,Psychology ,Social Perception ,Students ,Medical ,Trust ,White People ,Black People - Abstract
The study explores whether racial identity and appearance-based trustworthiness judgments can affect recognition of pain in medical students differing in levels of resting heart rate variability (HRV), a measure of parasympathetic control of the heart. After undergoing HRV assessment, 68 medical students (37 females) participated in a dynamic pain recognition task, viewing video clips of White and Black faces, which differed in perceived trustworthiness based on facial appearance, transitioning from neutral to intense pain expressions. Response time, pain intensity attribution and treatment recommendations were analyzed. Pain was recognized slower and estimated as less intense in Black compared to White faces, leading to a lower likelihood of recommending therapy. Pain recognition was faster for untrustworthy-looking White faces compared to trustworthy ones, while perceived trustworthiness had a minimal impact on the speed of pain recognition in Black faces. However, untrustworthy-looking faces were estimated to express more pain, particularly for Black faces. Notably, these biases were more pronounced in individuals with low, rather than high, resting HRV. Considering that therapeutic decisions mirrored pain intensity attribution, it would be important to increase awareness of these biases during medical training in order to promote equity in future pain assessment and treatment.
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- 2024
7. Partisans process policy-based and identity-based messages using dissociable neural systems
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Jacoby, Nir, Landau-Wells, Marika, Pearl, Jacob, Paul, Alexandra, Falk, Emily B, Bruneau, Emile G, and Ochsner, Kevin N
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Neurosciences ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Humans ,Politics ,Male ,Female ,Young Adult ,Brain ,Adult ,Magnetic Resonance Imaging ,Brain Mapping ,Social Perception ,Social Identification ,neural synchrony ,neuroimaging ,political partisanship ,social neuroscience ,Cognitive Sciences ,Experimental Psychology ,Biological psychology ,Cognitive and computational psychology - Abstract
Political partisanship is often conceived as a lens through which people view politics. Behavioral research has distinguished two types of "partisan lenses"-policy-based and identity-based-that may influence peoples' perception of political events. Little is known, however, about the mechanisms through which partisan discourse appealing to policy beliefs or targeting partisan identities operate within individuals. We addressed this question by collecting neuroimaging data while participants watched videos of speakers expressing partisan views. A "partisan lens effect" was identified as the difference in neural synchrony between each participant's brain response and that of their partisan ingroup vs. outgroup. When processing policy-based messaging, a partisan lens effect was observed in socio-political reasoning and affective responding brain regions. When processing negative identity-based attacks, a partisan lens effect was observed in mentalizing and affective responding brain regions. These data suggest that the processing of political discourse that appeals to different forms of partisanship is supported by related but distinguishable neural-and therefore psychological-mechanisms, which may have implications for how we characterize partisanship and ameliorate its deleterious impacts.
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- 2024
8. Dimensions of wisdom perception across twelve countries on five continents.
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Rudnev, M, Barrett, Harold, Buckwalter, W, Machery, E, Stich, S, Barr, K, Bencherifa, A, Clancy, R, Crone, D, Deguchi, Y, Fabiano, E, Fodeman, A, Guennoun, B, Halamová, J, Hashimoto, T, Homan, J, Kanovský, M, Karasawa, K, Kim, H, Kiper, J, Lee, M, Liu, X, Mitova, V, Nair, R, Pantovic, L, Porter, B, Quintanilla, P, Reijer, J, Romero, P, Singh, P, Tber, S, Wilkenfeld, D, Yi, L, and Grossmann, I
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Humans ,Female ,Male ,Adult ,Judgment ,Young Adult ,Emotions ,Knowledge ,Cross-Cultural Comparison ,Cognition ,Middle Aged ,Social Perception ,Adolescent ,Perception - Abstract
Wisdom is the hallmark of social judgment, but how people across cultures recognize wisdom remains unclear-distinct philosophical traditions suggest different views of wisdoms cardinal features. We explore perception of wise minds across 16 socio-economically and culturally diverse convenience samples from 12 countries. Participants assessed wisdom exemplars, non-exemplars, and themselves on 19 socio-cognitive characteristics, subsequently rating targets wisdom, knowledge, and understanding. Analyses reveal two positively related dimensions-Reflective Orientation and Socio-Emotional Awareness. These dimensions are consistent across the studied cultural regions and interact when informing wisdom ratings: wisest targets-as perceived by participants-score high on both dimensions, whereas the least wise are not reflective but moderately socio-emotional. Additionally, individuals view themselves as less reflective but more socio-emotionally aware than most wisdom exemplars. Our findings expand folk psychology and social judgment research beyond the Global North, showing how individuals perceive desirable cognitive and socio-emotional qualities, and contribute to an understanding of mind perception.
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- 2024
9. How experts and novices judge other peoples knowledgeability from language use.
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Bower, Alexander, Han, Nicole, Soni, Ansh, Eckstein, Miguel, and Steyvers, Mark
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Decision-making ,Knowledge ,Language ,Mindreading ,Theory of mind ,Humans ,Judgment ,Adult ,Knowledge ,Language ,Social Perception ,Female ,Male ,Young Adult - Abstract
How accurate are people in judging someone elses knowledge based on their language use, and do more knowledgeable people use different cues to make these judgments? We address this by recruiting a group of participants (informants) to answer general knowledge questions and describe various images belonging to different categories (e.g., cartoons, basketball). A second group of participants (evaluators) also answer general knowledge questions and decide who is more knowledgeable within pairs of informants, based on these descriptions. Evaluators perform above chance at identifying the most knowledgeable informants (65% with only one description available). The less knowledgeable evaluators base their decisions on the number of specific statements, regardless of whether the statements are true or false. The more knowledgeable evaluators treat true and false statements differently and penalize the knowledge they attribute to informants who produce specific yet false statements. Our findings demonstrate the power of a few words when assessing others knowledge and have implications for how misinformation is processed differently between experts and novices.
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- 2024
10. Rethinking Harlow Gale: The Psychical Influences on His Contributions to Advertising and Their Enduring Reverberations.
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Tadajewski, Mark
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PARAPSYCHOLOGY ,SOCIAL perception ,MARKETING theory ,NINETEENTH century ,THEORY-practice relationship - Abstract
Harlow Gale is often depicted as the first experimentalist in advertising thought. This positioning elides influences which impacted upon his thinking. In this article, we outline Gale's involvement with psychical research and its implications for advertising. These narratives are situated within a genealogy of subliminal processes across advertising and marketing theory from the late nineteenth century through to social cognition studies today. Gale's connection with psychical research, in conjunction with early practitioner reflections on the unconscious, formed the enabling conditions for his major contributions to advertising. Psychical scholarship spotlighted the centrality of the "multiplex self" to human functioning. While psychical framings scaffolded Gale's empirical, conceptual, and theoretical work, it also limited greater engagement with his insights. However, subsequent modifications of advertising theory and practice are underwritten by levels of continuity and discontinuity that facilitate the identification of psychically indebted bodies of thought from Gale's time to the present day. Taken together, these analytic associations provide a substantive reorientation of historical and contemporary accounts of advertising theory and practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Comparing National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II Athletes' Perceptions of Social Support Following Injury, Illness, and Other Identified Stressors.
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Anderson, Martha J., Ingram, Yvette, Meyer, Linda, West, Thomas, and West, Ellen
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SOCIAL support ,SOCIAL perception ,COACH-athlete relationships ,ATHLETIC associations ,PERCEIVED Stress Scale ,OLDER athletes ,MULTIDIMENSIONAL scaling - Abstract
Collegiate athletes have demonstrated a need for social support to help cope with their daily responsibilities. The purpose of this research was to explore National Collegiate Athletic Association Division II athletes' perception of social support from friends, teammates, family, coaches, significant others, and athletic trainers following injury, illness, or other identified life stressors. There were 546 participants who completed a five-part survey using the University Stress Scale, the Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, the Athletic Multidimensional Scale of Perceived Social Support, the Perceived Stress Scale, and a demographic section. Of the participants, 352 (64.5%) stated that they experienced moderate stress levels, and all participants indicated experiencing an identified life stressor within the last 12 months. The results indicated statistically significant differences when comparing providers of social support: females preferred the support of friends, significant others, and athletic trainers, and freshmen and sophomores perceived more social support from friends than did juniors and seniors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. Cognitive Mechanisms of Being Imitated
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Wicher, Paula, Farmer, Harry, Hamilton, Antonia, Genschow, Oliver, editor, and Cracco, Emiel, editor
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- 2025
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13. Sex ratios in vocal ensembles affect perceptions of threat and belonging.
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Neuenswander, Kelsey, Goodale, Brianna, Bryant, Gregory, and Johnson, Kerri
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Auditory perception ,Ensemble coding ,Group perception ,Social cognition ,Humans ,Male ,Female ,Adult ,Voice ,Sex Ratio ,Social Perception ,Young Adult ,Auditory Perception ,Interpersonal Relations ,Social Interaction - Abstract
People often interact with groups (i.e., ensembles) during social interactions. Given that group-level information is important in navigating social environments, we expect perceptual sensitivity to aspects of groups that are relevant for personal threat as well as social belonging. Most ensemble perception research has focused on visual ensembles, with little research looking at auditory or vocal ensembles. Across four studies, we present evidence that (i) perceivers accurately extract the sex composition of a group from voices alone, (ii) judgments of threat increase concomitantly with the number of men, and (iii) listeners sense of belonging depends on the number of same-sex others in the group. This work advances our understanding of social cognition, interpersonal communication, and ensemble coding to include auditory information, and reveals peoples ability to extract relevant social information from brief exposures to vocalizing groups.
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- 2024
14. Expanding understanding of adolescent neural sensitivity to peers: Using social information processing theory to generate new lines of research
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Venticinque, Joseph S, McMillan, Sarah J, and Guyer, Amanda E
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Biological Psychology ,Psychology ,Basic Behavioral and Social Science ,Behavioral and Social Science ,Clinical Research ,Pediatric ,Neurosciences ,1.2 Psychological and socioeconomic processes ,Mental health ,Humans ,Adolescent ,Peer Group ,Brain ,Social Cognition ,Adolescent Behavior ,Peer Influence ,Social Behavior ,Social Perception ,Adolescent Development ,Peer influence ,FMRI ,Adolescence ,Individual differences ,Behavior ,Clinical Sciences ,Cognitive Sciences ,Biological psychology ,Clinical and health psychology - Abstract
Adolescence is a period of normative heightened sensitivity to peer influence. Individual differences in susceptibility to peers is related to individual differences in neural sensitivity, particularly in brain regions that support an increasingly greater orientation toward peers. Despite these empirically-established patterns, the more specific psychosocial and socio-cognitive factors associated with individual differences in neural sensitivity to peer influence are just beginning to gain research attention. Specific features of the factors that contribute to how adolescents process social information can inform understanding of the psychological and neurobiological processes involved in what renders adolescents to be more or less susceptible to peer influences. In this paper, we (1) review the literature about peer, family, and broader contextual influences on sensitivity to peers' positive and negative behaviors, (2) outline components of social information processing theories, and (3) discuss features of these models from the perspectives and social cognitive development and social neuroscience. We identify gaps in the current literature that need to be addressed in order to gain a more comprehensive view of adolescent neural sensitivity to peer influence. We conclude by suggesting how future neuroimaging studies can adopt components of this social information processing model to generate new lines of research.
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- 2024
15. Similarity Among Friends Serves as a Social Prior: The Assumption That Birds of a Feather Flock Together Shapes Social Decisions and Relationship Beliefs.
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Schwyck, Miriam, Du, Meng, Li, Yuchen, Chang, Luke, and Parkinson, Carolyn
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decision-making ,interpersonal relationships ,social cognition ,social networks ,third-party relationships ,Humans ,Male ,Friends ,Female ,Trust ,Adult ,Young Adult ,Interpersonal Relations ,Social Interaction ,Social Behavior ,Social Perception - Abstract
Social interactions unfold within networks of relationships. How do beliefs about others social ties shape-and how are they shaped by-expectations about how others will behave? Here, participants joined a fictive online game-playing community and interacted with its purported members, who varied in terms of their trustworthiness and apparent relationships with one another. Participants were less trusting of partners with untrustworthy friends, even after they consistently showed themselves to be trustworthy, and were less willing to engage with them in the future. To test whether people not only expect friends to behave similarly but also expect those who behave similarly to be friends, an incidental memory test was given. Participants were exceptionally likely to falsely remember similarly behaving partners as friends. Thus, people expect friendship to predict similar behavior and vice versa. These results suggest that knowledge of social networks and others behavioral tendencies reciprocally interact to shape social thought and behavior.
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- 2024
16. Extension workers' perception of information and communication technology utilisation for extension services in Vietnam
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Trinh, Sen Thi, Hoang, Hung Gia, and Drysdale, Douglas
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- 2023
17. Peer victimization but not social anxiety negatively influences predicted enjoyment during peer interactions
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Leiva, Isabel, Reisman, Samantha S., Helion, Chelsea, Murty, Vishnu P., and Jarcho, Johanna
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- 2025
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18. Functional connectivity induced by social cognition task predict individual differences in loneliness.
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Geng, Li, Meng, Jie, Feng, Qiuyang, Li, Yu, and Qiu, Jiang
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DEFAULT mode network , *THEORY of mind , *SOCIAL perception , *FUNCTIONAL connectivity , *SOCIAL processes - Abstract
• Theory of mind tasks induce FC in key social cognition areas. • Machine learning reveals task-induced FC patterns could predict loneliness. • Loneliness links FC in social, default, and somatomotor networks. Loneliness is intricately connected to social cognition, yet the precise brain mechanisms that underscore their relationship need further exploration. The present study employed a theory of mind processing task that engaged participants in assessing the trajectories of geometric shapes while undergoing fMRI scans. The comprehensive data pool encompassed loneliness assessments and brain imaging data from a cohort of 157 participants. Utilizing a machine learning approach, task-induced functional connectivity data was used to forecast individuals' loneliness scores. The findings unveil that specific patterns of task-induced alterations in brain functional connectivity hold a remarkable capability to anticipate loneliness scores. Further dissection of the data disclosed pivotal nodes, including the prefrontal cortex, temporoparietal junction, and amygdala, among other cerebral regions. Furthermore, functional connectivity among the social network, the default mode network, and somatomotor networks emerged as crucial factors in prediction. Brain regions contributed strongly in prediction are involved in a variety of social cognitive processes, including intention inference, empathy, and information integration. The results illuminate the association between brain functional connectivity induced by social cognition and loneliness, which enhance the comprehensive understanding of this complex emotional state and may have implications for its diagnosis and intervention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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19. Constructs across a hierarchical, dimensional model of psychopathology show differential associations with social and general cognitive ability.
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Blain, Scott D., Kent, Jerillyn S., Allen, Timothy A., Lasagna, Carly A., Peyromaure de Bord, Chloe A., Udochi, Aisha L., Sponheim, Scott R., DeYoung, Colin G., and Tso, Ivy F.
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PATHOLOGICAL psychology , *COGNITIVE ability , *SOCIAL perception , *EMOTION recognition , *STRUCTURAL equation modeling - Abstract
Many psychiatric disorders and associated psychopathology dimensions are related to social cognitive deficits and reduced general cognitive ability. The current study applied a hierarchical, dimensional approach to better understand associations among psychopathology, social cognition, and general cognitive ability. Data were collected from two samples (n = 653), including psychosis-spectrum patients, their first-degree relatives, and individuals from community sources. Participants completed dimensional psychopathology measures and social cognition tasks (e.g., emotion perception and mentalizing). Data were analyzed using bi-factor exploratory structural equation modeling. Detachment—a psychopathology dimension conceptually linked to social functioning—was associated with worse social cognition, independent of general cognitive ability. Eccentricity and Machiavellianism were associated with better social cognition and general cognitive ability. Findings—and the hierarchical, dimensional approach employed—will be useful in informing future research on and interventions for social dysfunction. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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20. Covert variations of a musician's loudness during collective improvisation capture other musicians' attention and impact their interactions.
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Schwarz, Armand, Faraco, Arthur, Vincent, Coralie, Susini, Patrick, Ponsot, Emmanuel, and Canonne, Clément
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AUDITORY selective attention , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL perception , *LINGUISTIC context , *MUSICIANS - Abstract
While research on auditory attention in complex acoustical environment is a thriving field, experimental studies thus far have typically treated participants as passive listeners. The present study—which combined real-time covert loudness manipulations and online probe detection—investigates for the first time to our knowledge, the effects of acoustic salience on auditory attention during live interactions, using musical improvisation as an experimental paradigm. We found that musicians were more likely to pay attention to a given co-performer when this performer was made sounding louder or softer; that such salient effect was not owing to the local variations introduced by our manipulations but rather likely to be driven by the more long-term context; and that improvisers tended to be more strongly and more stably coupled when a musician was made more salient. Our results thus demonstrate that a meaningful change of the acoustical context not only captured attention but also impacted the ongoing musical interaction itself, highlighting the tight relationship between attentional selection and interaction in such social scenarios and opening novel perspectives to address whether similar processes are at play in human linguistic interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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21. Perception of animate motion in dogs.
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Abdai, Judit
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FORM perception ,SOCIAL perception ,DOGS ,SPECIES - Abstract
Various motion cues can lead to the perception of animacy, including (1) simple motion characteristics such as starting to move from rest, (2) motion patterns of interactions like chasing, or (3) the motion of point-lights representing the joints of a moving biological agent. Due to the relevance of dogs in comparative research and considering the large variability within the species, studying animacy perception in dogs can provide unique information about how selection for specific traits and individual-level (social) differences may shape social perception. Despite these advantages, only a few studies have investigated the phenomenon in dogs. In this mini-review, we discuss the current findings about how specific motion dynamics associated with animacy drive dogs' visual attention. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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22. Internet use and social trust: empirical analysis based on CGSS2021.
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Miao, Juan, Kuang, Junfeng, Yang, Linlin, Chen, Ming, and Tian, Xueqing
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SOCIAL interaction ,SOCIAL perception ,TRUST ,SOCIAL support ,INTERNET - Abstract
The development of the Internet has significantly changed the way people live and interact with each other. Interaction is the foundation for building trust and may therefore also be influenced by the Internet. This study aims to examine the impact of Internet use on different dimensions of social trust, focusing on the roles of perceived fairness and social support, using the latest data from the CGSS from China. The results show that Internet use has a significant negative predictive effect on the level of social trust, and the perception of social fairness plays a fully mediating role in this relationship. That is, Internet use can indirectly reduce people's level of social trust by reducing their perception of social fairness. Furthermore, the results indicate that social support can moderate people's perceptions of social fairness and thus mitigate the negative effects of Internet use on social trust. These results suggest that we should raise the profile of the impact of internet use, actively improve people's perceptions of social fairness to increase their level of social trust, and finally, focus on the positive role of social support, which can reduce the negative impact of internet use. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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23. Social cognition in bipolar I and II disorders: an updated systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Zhang, Bingren, Chen, Xuyu, and Qiu, Nianhua
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SOCIAL perception , *THEORY of mind , *BIPOLAR disorder , *EMOTIONS ,INTERNATIONAL Statistical Classification of Diseases & Related Health Problems - Abstract
Objective: In recent years, there has been a rapid increase in reports upon social-cognition impairments in bipolar disorder. This study aimed to compare the characteristics of social cognition domains in bipolar I (BD I) and II (BD II) based on the findings to date. Methods: A systematic literature search was conducted on Web of Science and PubMed from inception to 28 August 2024. Studies with all-age-group of ICD-10, DSM-IV, DSM-IV-TR, or DSM-5 defined BD (I or II) either in a remitted or symptomatic state were included. The risk of bias was measured using the Newcastle–Ottawa Scale, and the quality of the sources was evaluated using GRADE criteria. Results of the studies were measured by synthesizing Hedge's g effect sizes through a random effects meta-analytic approach. Results: A total of 20 studies were included, covering three core domains of social cognition (theory of mind (ToM), emotion processing and attributions). There was no significant difference in ToM between BD I and BD II and in emotion processing between non-psychotic patients with BD I and BD II, and history of psychosis negatively predicted performance on emotion processing. Furthermore, BD II performed worse than BD I in attributions, with a low to moderate summary effect size. Conclusions: BD I and BD II performed similarly on ToM and emotional processing, but BD II had more impaired attributions. Future studies are encouraged to control for the influence of clinical features, to use more neuroscientific techniques, and to explore on other domains of social cognition in bipolar subtypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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24. Metacognitive Training for Subjects with Bipolar Disorder: A Randomized Controlled Trial.
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de Siqueira Rotenberg, Luisa, Curvello, Renata, Nardini, Clara, da Silva Franco, Milene, Carozzino, Maria Eduarda, Biazus, Taís Boeira, Campanha, Thuani, Garrudo Guirado, Alia, O'Malley, Grace, Stamm, Thomas J., and Lafer, Beny
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SOCIAL cognitive theory , *THEORY of mind , *SOCIAL perception , *EMOTION recognition , *PSYCHOSOCIAL functioning - Abstract
Impairments in social cognition in bipolar disorder (BD) have been extensively described in the last decade but few treatment strategies have been studied to address this issue. This study presents findings from a randomized controlled trial (RCT) investigating the efficacy of metacognitive training for bipolar disorder (MCT-BD) compared to Treatment as Usual (TAU) among individuals with BD in remission. The aim was to determine whether MCT-BD could improve social cognition and overall functioning in this population.Introduction: Participants (Methods: N = 56) were recruited via social media and an internal database at the University of São Paulo Medical School. Inclusion criteria included a confirmed BD diagnosis, current state of remission, and the presence of social functioning impairments. Exclusion criteria included any impairments that could hinder neuropsychological testing. Patients were randomly assigned to either MCT-BD or TAU, with assessments conducted at baseline and follow-up. The MCT-BD program consisted of nine sessions. The overall attendance rate across all MCT-BD intervention sessions was 96.6%. The MCT-BD program demonstrated added value in improving social cognition, specifically in emotion recognition reaction time. However, no significant changes were found in theory of mind, psychosocial functioning, or quality of life.Results: This RCT provides preliminary evidence for the efficacy of MCT-BD in improving emotion recognition latency, emphasizing the importance of targeted interventions in social cognition outcomes for individuals with BD. The study’s strengths include high completion rates and comprehensive cognitive assessments. Future studies should explore long-term effects and personalized treatment approaches aiming to improve social-cognitive deficits in this population. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]Conclusion: - Published
- 2025
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25. Linking heartbeats with the cortical network dynamics involved in self-social touch distinction.
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Candia-Rivera, Diego, de Vico Fallani, Fabrizio, Boehme, Rebecca, and Salamone, Paula C.
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LARGE-scale brain networks , *SOCIAL interaction , *SOCIAL perception , *MEDICAL sciences , *NEUROSCIENCES , *PARASYMPATHETIC nervous system , *INTEROCEPTION - Abstract
Research on interoception has revealed the role of heartbeats in shaping our perceptual awareness and embodying a first-person perspective. These heartbeat dynamics exhibit distinct responses to various types of touch. We advanced that those dynamics are directly associated to the brain activity that allows self-other distinction. In our study encompassing self and social touch, we employed a method to quantify the distinct couplings of temporal patterns in cardiac sympathetic and parasympathetic activities with brain connectivity. Our findings revealed that social touch led to an increase in the coupling between frontoparietal networks and parasympathetic/vagal activity, particularly in alpha and gamma bands. Conversely, as social touch progressed, we observed a decrease in the coupling between brain networks and sympathetic dynamics across a broad frequency range. These results show how heartbeat dynamics are intertwined with brain organization and provide fresh evidence on the neurophysiological mechanisms of self-social touch distinction. The study found that social touch boosts covarying patterns of the heart's parasympathetic activity and the connection between the brain's frontoparietal regions, showing how attached are the brain and heart during perception and social interactions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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26. Effective climate action must address both social inequality and inequality aversion.
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Berger, Joël and Liebe, Ulf
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CLIMATE change mitigation ,EQUALITY ,SOCIAL injustice ,SOCIAL perception ,AVERSION - Abstract
While social inequality limits the less affluent's ability to support climate action, we develop a theoretical framework that analyzes how disadvantageous inequality aversion diminishes motivation for climate cooperation among the broader population. By clarifying how perceptions of disadvantage or social injustice can harm climate cooperation or produce backlash, we derive tailored countermeasures to enhance climate cooperation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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27. What are they all doing in that restaurant? Perspectives on the use of theory of mind.
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Gabbatore, Ilaria, Bosco, Francesca M., and Tirassa, Maurizio
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THEORY of mind ,SOCIAL cognitive theory ,SOCIAL perception ,COMPLEXITY (Philosophy) ,EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
If "theory of mind" is conceived as reasoning in a strict sense, then it can be said to be useful only at certain times; however, this leaves the rest of social cognition hardly comprehensible. If "theory of mind" is used instead to refer to a mentalist ontology and the consequent awareness that we ourselves and the others function on mental states, then we need new approaches that explain the flow of social experience. To illustrate these points, we outline the general conceptual framework that underlies most empirical studies of theory of mind and discuss their pros and cons; then, we discuss the Theory of Mind Assessment Scale, a tool developed to investigate the complexity of theory of mind, which adopts a different perspective and has been successfully tested on numerous populations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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28. Indigenous Food Sovereignty: Literature Review.
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Hansell, Robert M.
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FOOD sovereignty , *ANTI-imperialist movements , *SOCIAL perception , *INDIGENOUS peoples , *FREE trade - Abstract
Indigenous peoples have practiced food systems intertwined with the plants, animals, lands, and waters around them for thousands of years. These connections have frequently been severed by colonialism, producing devastating effects on Indigenous health, culture, and sovereignty. In the face of this devastation, the reflourishing of Indigenous food sovereignty constitutes a critical form of resistance. This paper provides a broad review of the academic literature on Indigenous food sovereignty, analyzing themes and case studies. This paper argues that 5 themes (health, law and the state, social perceptions of food, gender, and free trade) reflect helpful entry points for understanding this multidimensional topic. The case studies detail important aspects of food sovereignty, such as data ownership, anticolonial resistance, relationality, and seed saving. First, background on traditional food systems is given, followed by an exploration of food sovereignty, Indigenous food sovereignty, and food security in common literature. Five themes are used to ground Indigenous food sovereignty in key debates and challenges. Using the five case studies, this review aims to give the reader a sense of the inherently political nature of food systems in the experiences of Indigenous peoples by touching on a wide set of illustrative texts, examples, and cases. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
29. Does metacognitive training for psychosis (MCT) improve neurocognitive performance? A systematic review and meta-analysis.
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Jeffrey, Clayton, Penney, Danielle, Sauvé, Geneviève, Mendelson, Daniel, Thibaudeau, Élisabeth, Moritz, Steffen, Hotte-Meunier, Adèle, and Lepage, Martin
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SCHIZOPHRENIA , *SOCIAL perception , *COGNITIVE bias , *SOCIAL skills , *STATISTICAL hypothesis testing - Abstract
Metacognitive training for psychosis (MCT) offers benefits for addressing hallmark deficits/symptoms in schizophrenia spectrum disorders including reductions in cognitive biases and positive/negative symptoms as well as improvements in social cognition and functioning. However, differing results exist regarding the relationship between MCT and neurocognition. A comprehensive understanding of the nature of this relationship would significantly contribute to the existing literature and our understanding of the potential added value of MCT as a cognitive intervention for psychosis. Across eleven electronic databases, 1312 sources were identified, and 14 studies examining MCT and neurocognition in psychosis were included in this review. Measures of estimated effect sizes were calculated with Hedge's g , moderator analyses used Cochrane's Q statistic and significance tests to measure group differences according to control conditions. Twelve studies, 11 randomized controlled trials (RCTs) and 1 non-RCT, were included in the main meta-analyses, consisting of 673 participants (n MCT = 345, n control = 328). When comparing MCT against control interventions, non-significant differences in estimated effect sizes were observed across all neurocognitive domains when evaluating pre–post changes (g ≤ 0.1, p >.05). Two additional studies corroborated these results in a narrative review. These findings suggest that when compared against control conditions, MCT does not pose a statistically meaningful benefit to neurocognitive performance. General practice/learning effects are likely the main contributor that explains improvement in neurocognitive performance, and not a difference of intervention allocation when considering MCT against the included control comparators. These findings help establish the specificity of the effects of MCT. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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30. Empathic disequilibrium in schizophrenia: An individual participant data meta-analysis.
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Shalev, Ido, Shamay-Tsoory, Simone G., Montag, Christiane, Assaf, Michal, Smith, Matthew J., Eran, Alal, and Uzefovsky, Florina
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- *
INTERPERSONAL Reactivity Index , *REGRESSION analysis , *SOCIAL perception , *EMPATHY , *SURFACE analysis - Abstract
Schizophrenia involves substantial social difficulties, yet their nature remains unclear. Although empathy has been considered a promising social cognition construct, inconsistent findings have undermined its usefulness as a stable index for schizophrenia. This may be because previous studies overlooked the interdependency between the emotional and cognitive components of empathy. In this study, we investigated whether empathic disequilibrium, the intrapersonal imbalance between emotional and cognitive empathy, could be a meaningful schizophrenia marker. We conducted an individual-participant data meta-analysis, systematically searching the literature for studies involving participants with schizophrenia who completed the Interpersonal Reactivity Index, a validated empathy measure. Using emotional and cognitive empathy to capture empathic disequilibrium and the joint effect of cognitive and emotional empathy, we employed polynomial regression with response surface analysis to predict schizophrenia diagnosis and symptoms. Our analysis comprising ten studies (N = 1,080), revealed a non-linear association with the joint effect of cognitive and emotional empathy, as well as an association with empathic disequilibrium, suggesting emotional empathy overabundance, strongly and consistently predicted schizophrenia diagnosis. Additionally, empathic disequilibrium towards cognitive empathy overabundance was related to greater positive symptoms. The results suggest that empathic disequilibrium provides a stable behavioral marker related to schizophrenia, surpassing the utility of empathy alone. The findings deepen our understanding of schizophrenia phenomenology and can advance clinical and research practices. • Empathic disequilibrium, not empathy, predicted schizophrenia in a meta-analysis. • Schizophrenia diagnosis was related to relative overabundance of emotional empathy. • Consistent results and sensitivity analysis affirmed the robustness of the results. • Positive symptoms were related to relative overabundance of cognitive empathy. • Empathic disequilibrium provides a stable behavioral marker for schizophrenia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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31. Suspicion About Suspicion Probes: Ways Forward.
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Barrett, Daniel W., Neuberg, Steven L., and Luce, Carol
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PSYCHOLOGISTS , *PROFESSIONAL practice , *HUMAN research subjects , *DECISION making , *SOCIAL perception , *RESEARCH bias , *EXPERIMENTAL design , *RESEARCH methodology , *DECEPTION , *CONCEPTUAL structures , *RESEARCH ethics - Abstract
Suspicion probes are the traditional tool employed to assess the extent to which participants suspect intentional misdirection or deception within the research context. A primary reason psychologists use deception in research settings is to prevent participants from altering their behavior in light of knowing what is being studied, which could undermine internal validity as well as threaten the generalizability of findings to the real world (i.e., external validity). The present article elucidates a number of challenges with suspicion probes. A definition and framework for conceptualizing the construct of suspicion in research settings are proposed. Following a literature review, an analysis of existing evidence, and new data on the prevalence of using and reporting suspicion probes, we conclude that suspicion is a likely problem in research practice. We provide a decision guide to help researchers navigate the numerous choices involved in addressing potential suspicion and call for a combination of (a) renewed research leading to empirically supported tools and best practices and (b) systemic changes to editorial policies, funding practices, professional standards, and research training that would increase rigor and focus on this aspect of research methodology. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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32. Between-Level Incongruences in Human Positivity.
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Yu, Shi
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- *
PSYCHOLOGICAL resilience , *SATISFACTION , *HUMAN beings , *POSITIVE psychology , *PSYCHOLOGICAL adaptation , *SOCIAL perception , *BEHAVIORAL sciences , *PSYCHOLOGY , *EXPERIENCE , *QUALITY of life , *SOCIAL skills , *HAPPINESS , *THEORY , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *WELL-being , *ACHIEVEMENT - Abstract
Humans now understand the world as multilevel in nature. For example, societies emerge from individuals, and general experiences of life consist of specific aspects and momentary episodes. A critical feature of multilevel phenomena is between-level incongruences. Applied to human positivity, this means that positive higher-level units are not simply composed of positive lower-level units and that what is good for lower-level units may not be good for higher-level units (and vice versa). For example, killjoys may improve societal well-being, personal achievement may require giving up on certain goals, and a happy life may not arise from simply happy moments. In this article, I provide examples (organized by the positive outcome of well-being and performance and by the social, structural, and temporal forms of multilevel phenomena) to show that such between-level incongruences are ubiquitous. Next, I analyze a few mechanisms that may govern the diverse instantiations of between-level incongruences in positivity. Finally, I discuss implications of this perspective, such as why positivity claims should always qualify their level of analysis; how psychological science may benefit from a multilevel, dynamical, and computational perspective; and how to improve human positivity in light of between-level incongruences. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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33. Perceived social support, marital satisfaction, and resilience in women with abortion experience through structural equation modeling.
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Yadollahi, Parvin, Doostfatemeh, Marziyah, Khalajinia, Zohre, Karimi, Zahra, and Ghavi, Fatemeh
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FAMILY support , *COGNITIVE psychology , *MARITAL satisfaction , *PSYCHOLOGICAL factors , *SOCIAL perception , *ABORTION clinics - Abstract
Abortion can be a very stressful experience for women, and many social and psychological factors can influence this stress. The present study aims to investigate the impact of perceived social support on the marital satisfaction of women who have undergone an abortion. The study also explored whether resilience played a mediating role in this relationship. Data were analyzed from the cross-sectional study. The Perceived Social Support (including Social support, friend support, and other support subscales), ENRICH marital satisfaction, and Connor-Davidson Resilience questionnaire were completed by 150 women who had undergone an abortion and were referred to hospitals and clinics of Jahrom University of Medical Sciences from April 2021 to June 2021. The structural equation modeling (SEM) approach was used to obtain the direct and indirect effects of Perceived Social Support subscales and Resilience on marital satisfaction. The study found that the women who participated had high marital satisfaction and social support scores, while their resilience scores were moderate. The results indicated a positive correlation between social support dimensions and marital satisfaction and resilience. The study also revealed that family support (β = 0.41, p < 0.001), other supports (β = 0.46, p < 0.001), and resilience as a mediating variable (β = 0.15, p < 0.001) had a direct and significant positive impact on marital satisfaction. However, none of the three domains of perceived social support showed any indirect significant relationship with marital satisfaction. The study's findings demonstrate that the perception of social support from family members and other individuals can significantly impact the level of satisfaction in a marriage. Appropriate social support can increase resilience and help couples better cope with the stress associated with abortion. This study suggests that educating families, healthcare providers, and other individuals can help women experiencing this issue by providing them with counseling and support. This can ultimately help women maintain their mental and sexual health. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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34. The Ecological Social Psychology of Aviation Disasters.
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Baggs, Edward and Steffensen, Sune Vork
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ENVIRONMENTAL psychology , *SOCIAL psychology , *COMMERCIAL aeronautics , *SOCIAL perception , *FUNCTIONAL groups - Abstract
Reuben Baron's primary contribution to ecological psychology was in promoting the idea that we perceive other humans and animals in our environment in much the same way as we perceive inanimate objects, namely, by actively detecting information. Here, we explore how this insight can lead to a deeper understanding of real-world behavior. We look specifically at three case studies from the history of commercial aviation disasters. In our analysis we combine Baron's direct social perception strategy with the theoretical principles of the distributed cognition approach to functional group activity. We suggest that these approaches are deeply compatible, and that future work is needed to ground cognitive study of team activities in the analysis of the perceptual information available to the actors. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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35. Self /other recognition and distinction in adolescents with anorexia nervosa: A pilot study using a double mirror paradigm.
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Lavenne-Collot, Nathalie, Maubant, Emilie, Déroulez, Stéphanie, Bronsard, Guillaume, Wehrmann, Moritz, Botbol, Michel, and Berthoz, Alain
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- *
BODY image , *ANOREXIA nervosa , *MENTAL representation , *SOCIAL perception , *INTERPERSONAL relations , *FACE perception - Abstract
Background: Abnormalities in body perception in patients affected by anorexia nervosa have been widely studied, but without explicit reference to their relationship to others and the social processes involved. Yet, there are a several arguments supporting impairments in interpersonal relationships in these patients. Notably, some evidence suggests that self/other distinction (SOD), the ability to distinguish one's own body, actions and mental representations from those of others could be impaired. But research remains scarce in this area. Material and methods: A single-centre, prospective pilot study was conducted to investigate, for the first time, self-recognition and SOD in seven adolescents with anorexia nervosa compared with matched healthy controls (HCs) using the "Alter Ego"TM double mirror paradigm. This innovative device allows the progressive morphing of one's own face to that of another and vice versa between two subjects that interact on opposite sides of the device. Two judgement criteria were used: 1) M1: the threshold at which subjects start to recognize their own face during other-to-self morphing, and 2) M2: the threshold at which subjects start to recognize the other's face during self-to-other morphing. In a second part, SOD was reassessed during five different sensorimotor tasks aimed at increasing body self-consciousness in participants with anorexia nervosa. Results: The results showed that the participants with anorexia nervosa exhibited earlier self-recognition in the other-to-self sequence and delayed other-recognition in the self-to-other sequence. Furthermore, in contrast with that of HCs, the critical threshold for switching between self and other varied with the direction of morphing in anorexia nervosa participants. Finally, when participants with anorexia were seated in a chair with a backrest and footrest strengthening the median axis of their body, the self-recognition threshold (M1) increased significantly, approaching that of controls. Conclusions: Although additional research is needed to replicate the results of this pilot study, it revealed the first behavioural evidence of altered SOD in individuals affected by anorexia nervosa through an embodied, semiecological face-recognition paradigm. The relationships between anomalies in body perception and alterations in interpersonal relationships are discussed within an integrative framework from phenomenology to neuroscience, and new research and therapeutic perspectives are presented. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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36. The Rise of #Cartels: Exploring the Organizational Operations and Messaging of Public Perception on Twitter.
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Hbeilini, Ghady X. and Dmello, Jared R.
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PUBLIC opinion , *SOCIAL perception , *THEMATIC analysis , *DATA analysis , *SOCIAL media , *CARTELS - Abstract
Mexican cartel activity has become increasingly violent, causing civilians to question the government's ability to defend against this social and political threat. Within this context, the current study utilizes an exploratory framework to evaluate cartel portrayal on Twitter. We conducted a thematic analysis of data collected via the NVivo NCapture tool yielding 2,652 tweets spanning multiple countries, seeking to understand the key discourse associated with social perception of cartel activity, as well as the status and operations of Mexico's cartels. Results revealed several areas of focus and varying sentiments based on population demographics, such as location, and type of content. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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37. Thinking in schizophrenia and the social phenomenology of thought insertion.
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López-Silva, Pablo
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SENSE of agency , *SOCIAL perception , *SCHIZOPHRENIA , *PSYCHOSES , *DELUSIONS , *INTERSUBJECTIVITY - Abstract
Patients suffering from delusions of thought insertion (TI) report that external agents of different nature have placed thoughts into their minds. The symptom involves distressing feelings of intromission and exposition, loss of mental privacy, diminished ego boundaries, and a – often neglected – peculiar "physicality". A dominant approach within cognitive sciences characterizes TI as involving alterations in the experience of being the author of certain thoughts. For the advocates of this so-called Standard Approach to TI, the absence of a sense of agency for certain thoughts would lead to their externalization, this explaining the general structure of the clinical reports. In this paper, I problematize the phenomenological picture of everyday thoughts that the standard approach adopts when trying to make sense of TI. I claim that the standard approach neglects two more fundamental aspects of TI, namely the multimodal nature of thinking in psychosis and the deeply social dimension of the phenomenology of delusions in schizophrenia. After this, a broader descriptive phenomenological characterization of TI is provided. Finally, I establish some connections between the characterization of TI developed here and current research in social perception and clinical practice. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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38. Developing crosslinguistic awareness through plurilingual consciousness-raising tasks.
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Woll, Nina and Paquet, Pierre-Luc
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LANGUAGE awareness , *CONSCIOUSNESS raising , *FRENCH language , *SOCIAL perception , *SPANISH language - Abstract
If maximal exposure were the key to success in language learning, then adult learners at the university level would be doomed to fail. Not only are they presumably too old to learn additional languages effectively, but target language (TL) input appears to be insufficient, especially when other languages are allowed in class. Nevertheless, learners were shown to build on knowledge of previously acquired languages, to rely on language learning experience and to develop metalinguistic awareness. This study explores the perceived usefulness of a plurilingual consciousness-raising task that aims at helping learners make and strengthen connections between the TL and other previously acquired languages. Two university-level language courses were targeted: Spanish in Quebec and French in Mexico. Two customized tasks were implemented and recorded in each course throughout the semester. Each task included an input-based (discovery) phase, a reflective (metalinguistic) phase during which participants were asked to make assumptions on underlying patterns and correspondences across languages, and a validation phase where they presented their assumptions until reaching a consensus as a group. While tasks were generally perceived as useful, analyses of post-task questionnaires also revealed mixed feelings regarding its inductive stance. However, the verbal data collected demonstrated that the collaborative and metalinguistic reflective nature of the task permitted learners to find correspondences between languages and to engage in knowledge construction. Moreover, the various reflections collected indicate that learners benefitted from the task as groups engaged in metalinguistic reflections, activated their plurilingual repertoire and were able to create accurate assumptions regarding the targeted structure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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39. Perceiving social gaze produces the reversed congruency effect.
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Ishikawa, Kenta, Oyama, Takato, Tanaka, Yoshihiko, and Okubo, Matia
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THEORY of mind , *EYE contact , *SOCIAL robots , *SOCIAL perception , *SOCIAL interaction , *GAZE - Abstract
Numerous studies have shown that the gaze of others produces a special attentional process, such as the eye contact effect or joint attention. This study investigated the attentional process triggered by various types of gaze stimuli (i.e., human, cat, fish, koala, and robot gaze). A total of 300 university students participated in five experiments. They performed a spatial Stroop task in which five types of gaze stimuli were presented as targets. Participants were asked to judge the direction of the target (left or right) irrespective of its location (left or right). The results showed that the social gaze targets (i.e., human and cat gaze) produced a reversed congruency effect. In contrast to the social gaze targets, the non-social gaze (i.e., fish and robot) target did not produce the reversed congruency effect (Experiments 2, 2B, 3, and 4). These results suggest that attention to the gaze of socially communicable beings (i.e., humans and cats) is responsible for the reversed congruency effect. Our findings support the notion that the theory of mind or social interaction plays an important role in producing specific attentional processes in response to gaze stimuli. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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40. You don't understand me! But, I do! Awareness of cross-generational differences in collective remembering of national historic events.
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Hou, Claire, Umanath, Sharda, Corning, Amy, and Abel, Magdalena
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PSYCHOLOGICAL aspects of aging , *LIFE change events , *ATTITUDES toward aging , *GERMANS , *AMERICANS , *STEREOTYPES , *RESEARCH funding , *DATA analysis , *EMOTIONS , *WAR , *SOCIAL perception , *DESCRIPTIVE statistics , *SURVEYS , *MEMORY , *STATISTICS , *INTERGENERATIONAL relations , *ADULTS - Abstract
Collective memories refer to a group's shared representation of the past, which are slow to change over time. In this study, representative samples of American and German Younger Adults (YAs) and Older Adults (OAs) rated the emotional valence of 12 national historic events. Critically, both age groups were also asked to take on the perspective of the other: OAs imagined how YAs feel, whereas YAs imagined how OAs feel about the same events today. The results replicated previous findings that OAs and YAs hold differing opinions on numerous events. Both age groups successfully recognised these different collective perceptions between generations to some extent. Yet, OAs were more accurate in the perspective-taking task, with YAs consistently underestimating the intensity of OAs' emotional valence. Self-reported perspective-taking strategies suggest that OAs relied more on stereotypes and considered education, while knowledge from specific people was universally used to rate the other age group's perspective. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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41. Illusory Facial Expressions Caused by Lighting Direction.
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Ramanathan, Mahitha, Peterson, Lindsay M., and Palmer, Colin J.
- Abstract
Our daily interactions draw on a shared language of what facial expressions mean, but accurate perception of these signals may be subject to the same challenges that characterize visual perception in general. One such challenge is that faces vary in their appearance with the context, partly due to the interaction between environmental lighting and the characteristic geometry of the human face. Here, we examine how asymmetries in lighting across the horizontal and vertical axes of the face influence the perception of facial expressions in human observers. In Experiment 1, we find that faces with neutral expression appear to bear a negatively valenced expression and appear higher in emotional arousal when lit from below—an illusion of facial expression where none really exists. In Experiment 2, we find that faces performing common emotional expressions are more often miscategorized when lit from below compared to when lit from above, specifically for angry and neutral expressions. These data show that changes in facial appearance related to illumination direction can modify visual cues relevant to social communication—and suggest that facial expression recognition in humans is partially adapted to (naturalistic) environments in which light arrives predominately from overhead. Public Significance Statement: The phenomenon that faces can appear sinister or uncanny when lit from below is one that resonates widely, traditionally exploited by children telling a ghost story around the campfire and by film makers when depicting a villain. Here, we investigate systematically how lighting direction contributes to the (apparent) emotional character of the human face. We find that illusory differences in facial expression can be perceived when comparing faces lit from above and below, and that certain facial expressions are less accurately recognized when lit from below. These results speak to the visual processes that underlie our ability to recognize another person's facial expression and the theory that our perceptual system is optimized for environments characterized by a tendency toward overhead lighting. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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42. Early Adolescents' Ethnic–Racial Identity in Relation to Longitudinal Growth in Perspective Taking.
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Jorgensen, Nathan A., Lindquist, Kristen A., Prinstein, Mitchell J., and Telzer, Eva H.
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GROUP identity , *AFRICAN Americans , *HISPANIC Americans , *SOCIAL perception , *ATTITUDE (Psychology) , *MULTIRACIAL people , *MIDDLE school students , *BLACK people , *RURAL conditions , *INDIVIDUAL development - Abstract
Adolescents experience significant growth in social cognition, including perspective taking and identity formation. Due to the salience of race and ethnicity in the United States, adolescents' ethnic–racial identity (ERI) may have important implications for their sociocognitive development. The present study tested the association between ERI in early adolescence and subsequent longitudinal growth in perspective taking. Participants included 560 adolescents assessed annually over 4 years, beginning in sixth and seventh grade. Adolescents were from a small, rural community in the southeast United States and were from diverse ethnic–racial backgrounds (primarily Latine, Black/African American, and multiracial). Using linear growth curve modeling, we examined whether initial ERI predicted intercepts and slopes of longitudinal growth in perspective taking across adolescence. Results showed that the development of perspective taking differed based on initial ERI. Perspective taking increased significantly for youth with low and average levels of ERI but remained high and stable for youth at high levels of ERI. This study offers important evidence that Latine, Black, and multiracial youth who explore and find more clarity in their sense of ERI earlier in adolescence also show higher initial levels of perspective taking, which remains high across adolescence. Over time, most youth grow in perspective taking and eventually reach similar levels, but youth high in ERI reach these higher levels earlier than their peers, who had less sense of clarity about their ERI early in adolescence. This is one of the first known studies to directly test the association between ERI and perspective taking, utilizing a diverse, longitudinal sample of adolescents. Public Significance Statement: This study examines two important aspects of social cognition during adolescence: ethnic–racial identity and perspective taking. Results show that an earlier sense of ethnic–racial identity relates to higher levels of perspective taking over time. As young people navigate the complexities of a racialized social environment and their own place within, they may also be better able to understand the minds and perspectives of others, which may have important implications for their social development and well-being across adolescence. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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43. Factors Associated with Performance of Activities and Participation of Brazilian Children and Adolescents with Cerebral Palsy: A Cross-Sectional Study.
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Fontes, Déborah Ebert, Ayupe, Kênnea Martins Almeida, Moreira, Rafaela Silva, de Souza Morais, Rosane Luzia, de Carvalho Chagas, Paula Silva, Longo, Egmar, de Campos, Ana Carolina, de Toledo, Aline Martins, Leite, Hércules Ribeiro, and Camargos, Ana Cristina Resende
- Subjects
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MIDDLE-income countries , *RESEARCH funding , *LOGISTIC regression analysis , *CEREBRAL palsy , *SOCIAL perception , *FUNCTIONAL status , *MULTIVARIATE analysis , *MOVEMENT disorders , *AGE distribution , *CHILDREN with cerebral palsy , *SOCIAL skills , *BODY movement , *ACTIVITIES of daily living , *PHYSICAL mobility , *HUMAN locomotion , *LOW-income countries - Abstract
The aim of this study was to investigate factors related to performance in daily activities, mobility, social/cognitive skills, and responsibility of Brazilian children/adolescents with cerebral palsy (CP). Multivariate binary logistic regression analyses were performed. A total of 190 children/adolescents participated. Most participants performed below expected in mobility, which could be explained by age, locomotion ability, and anatomical distribution of motor impairment (R2 = 0.50). Performance in daily activities (R2 = 0.44) and responsibility (R2 = 0.23) were explained by age and locomotion ability. This study contributes to understanding the factors that explain the functioning of children/adolescents with CP in Brazil, a low/middle-income country. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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44. Effects of tourists' online self-disclosure depth on readers' visit intentions: mediating roles of perceived social distance and perceived self-expressiveness.
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Wang, Lilei and Luo, Zeyuan
- Subjects
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SOCIAL distance , *DEPTH perception , *USER-generated content , *SOCIAL perception , *PLACE marketing , *TOURIST attractions - Abstract
social media are important channels through which potential consumers can obtain information to inform travel decisions. This research examined the influence of tourists' social media self-disclosure depth on information receivers' visit intention. Hypotheses were tested using three experiments. Results revealed that tourists' self-disclosure depth on social media positively affected readers' visit intention directly. Tourists' self-disclosure depth specifically reduced the social distance perception between posters and readers and improved a destination's/hotel's self-expressiveness perception, thereby enhancing readers' visit intention. Spatial distance moderated these effects. These findings offered theoretical and managerial implications for destination managers and website designers to guide tourists' self-disclosure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
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45. Infants' Social Evaluation of Helpers and Hinderers: A Large‐Scale, Multi‐Lab, Coordinated Replication Study.
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Lucca, Kelsey, Yuen, Francis, Wang, Yiyi, Alessandroni, Nicolás, Allison, Olivia, Alvarez, Mario, Axelsson, Emma L., Baumer, Janina, Baumgartner, Heidi A., Bertels, Julie, Bhavsar, Mitali, Byers‐Heinlein, Krista, Capelier‐Mourguy, Arthur, Chijiiwa, Hitomi, Chin, Chantelle S.‐S., Christner, Natalie, Cirelli, Laura K., Corbit, John, Daum, Moritz M., and Doan, Tiffany
- Subjects
- *
SOCIAL skills , *SOCIAL perception , *SOCIAL history , *MORAL development , *SOCIAL development - Abstract
Evaluating whether someone's behavior is praiseworthy or blameworthy is a fundamental human trait. A seminal study by Hamlin and colleagues in 2007 suggested that the ability to form social evaluations based on third‐party interactions emerges within the first year of life: infants preferred a character who helped, over hindered, another who tried but failed to climb a hill. This sparked a new line of inquiry into the origins of social evaluations; however, replication attempts have yielded mixed results. We present a preregistered, multi‐laboratory, standardized study aimed at replicating infants' preference for Helpers over Hinderers. We intended to (1) provide a precise estimate of the effect size of infants' preference for Helpers over Hinderers, and (2) determine the degree to which preferences are based on social information. Using the ManyBabies framework for big team‐based science, we tested 1018 infants (567 included, 5.5–10.5 months) from 37 labs across five continents. Overall, 49.34% of infants preferred Helpers over Hinderers in the social condition, and 55.85% preferred characters who pushed up, versus down, an inanimate object in the nonsocial condition; neither proportion differed from chance or from each other. This study provides evidence against infants' prosocial preferences in the hill paradigm, suggesting the effect size is weaker, absent, and/or develops later than previously estimated. As the first of its kind, this study serves as a proof‐of‐concept for using active behavioral measures (e.g., manual choice) in large‐scale, multi‐lab projects studying infants. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
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46. Children's Selective Teaching and Informing: A Meta‐Analysis.
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Qiu, Fanxiao Wani, Park, Joanna, Vite, Amanda, Patall, Erika, and Moll, Henrike
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SOCIAL learning , *SOCIAL perception , *INFORMATION sharing , *COGNITION , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
Empirical studies on selective teaching and informing indicate that children may vary what they teach depending on whom they are teaching, taking into account how helpful the information is for a given audience. The current meta‐analysis quantifies the effect of selective informing and teaching in 2–7‐year‐olds by examining the relationship between the helpfulness of the information and the frequency of information transmission. Through a systematic search that yielded 1483 results, 28 studies (104 effect sizes, N = 2716) met the inclusion criteria. Using robust variance estimation, we found a medium average effect, Hedges' g = 0.578, 95% CI (0.331, 0.825), suggesting that children selectively share information based on its perceived helpfulness to the listener. Moderator analyses revealed that age and communicative context were significant factors. Children were more informative in their communication when asked to teach compared to other, nonpedagogical prompts. This finding supports and extends natural pedagogy theory—young children not only interpret pedagogical information differently than information acquired through other means, but they are more selective in their informing when teaching. Additionally, we observed a key developmental progression at age 4. Four‐ to 7‐year‐olds, but not 2–3‐year‐olds, selectively shared information that was most helpful for a given learner. This coincides with the development of false‐belief understanding, which undergoes significant development at around age 4. Taken together, the present synthesis suggests that young children actively engage in selective social learning from both sides, that of beneficiaries and benefactors of valuable information. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2025
- Full Text
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47. Interrelations Among Adolescents' Family Connections, Solitude Preferences, Theory of Mind and Perceptions of Academic and Work Competence.
- Author
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Jones, Megan, Bosacki, Sandra, and Talwar, Victoria
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YOUNG adults , *THEORY of mind , *SOCIAL perception , *CANADIANS , *FAMILY relations - Abstract
This study explored the links among family connections, solitude preferences, perceptions of work (academic and job) competence, and Theory of Mind (ToM) in 73 Canadian adolescents aged 11–18 (M age = 13.1). Previous studies show significant connections among these factors, although little is known about how such associations may relate to one another, especially the role of young people's perceptions. To address these gaps in the literature, this study focused on adolescents' experiences and perceptions of their family relationships, solitude preferences, and competence in the school context and workplace. Participants completed a series of self-report measures, advanced ToM tasks and written explanation for perceived family emotional connections. Results revealed that adolescents with more positive family connections reported higher levels of self-perceived academic and job competence, embraced solitude positively, yet felt less desire to be alone. Girls showed a higher affinity for solitude than boys, and the presence of more siblings reduced the desire for solitude. Those youth who were proficient in ToM skills reported positive family connections and high levels of academic competence. Findings hold implications for future research and education in adolescent's social cognition and social and academic outcomes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
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48. Are Autistic Children with Theory of Mind Delays Unexpectedly Competent at Moral Reasoning?
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Peterson, Candida C. and Slaughter, Virginia
- Subjects
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AUTISM , *SOCIAL perception , *PROBLEM solving , *ETHICS , *CHILD development , *ASPERGER'S syndrome , *JUDGMENT (Psychology) , *COMPARATIVE studies , *THOUGHT & thinking , *CHILDREN - Abstract
Moral reasoning and theory of mind (ToM) are two distinct but related aspects of social cognition. While past research has clearly documented serious delays in ToM development for children with autism spectrum disorders (ASD) both cross-sectionally (e.g. Happe, 1995) and longitudinally (Peterson & Wellman, 2020) much less is known about the timing of ASD children's development of moral reasoning. The present study addresses this knowledge gap with a special focus on three key research questions: (a) Is moral judgement delayed (in parallel with ToM) among children with ASD or is its timing comparable to that of typically-developing (TD) children their age? (b) Do ToM and moral reasoning significantly interconnect with one another among children with ASD? (c) If so, is the pattern of linkages the same as for TD children? [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. How Partisanship Can Moderate the Influence of Communicated Information on the Beliefs of Agents Aiming to Form True Beliefs.
- Author
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van Doorn, Maarten
- Subjects
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SOCIAL epistemology , *SOCIAL perception , *THEORY of knowledge , *VALUES (Ethics) , *LEGAL evidence - Abstract
Partisan epistemology – individuals granting greater credibility to co-partisan sources in evaluating information – is often taken to be evidence of directionally motivated reasoning in which concerns about group membership override concerns about accuracy. Against this dominant view, I outline a novel accuracy-based account of this mode of reasoning. According to this account, partisan epistemology stems from the inference that co-partisans are more likely to be right as they have superior epistemic access to the relevant facts and seek to realize the correct values. I argue that this theory fits better with relevant findings than motivated-reasoning theories of partisan epistemology. Finally, I suggest it has adequate explanatory power vis-à-vis patterns of misinformation belief. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. Third‐Party Affiliation in Domestic Dogs During and After a Human Conflict.
- Author
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Rial, Laura Analía, Cavalli, Camila, Dzik, Marina Victoria, and Bentosela, Mariana
- Subjects
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EMOTION recognition , *DOG owners , *SOCIAL perception , *EMOTIONAL state , *CONSOLATION , *DOGS - Abstract
Several behaviors occur in the aftermath of within‐group conflicts. These include spontaneous affiliation toward the victim from an uninvolved third party. When third‐party affiliations reduce the stress of the victim, this behavior has been defined as consolation. Given the absence of previous reports, the objective of the present study was to evaluate the presence of third‐party post‐conflict affiliation when dogs (Canis lupus familiaris) observe their owners arguing. We carried out two studies varying the intensity and the duration of the dispute. Affiliative behaviors toward each of the owners were registered, as well as stress‐related behaviors. Our findings support the existence of third‐party affiliation from dogs toward their owners during and after a conflict between them, evidenced as higher rates of victim‐directed affiliative behaviors in the experimental condition versus the control, in both studies. Moreover, dogs exhibited more stress‐related behaviors in the experimental condition compared to the control, but only in the second study, which suggests these stimuli were experienced as aversive, even though they were not aimed at the dogs. In addition, in the second study dogs displayed aggressor‐directed behaviors that could be interpreted as appeasement. Finally, there was no evidence that the level of the bond between the dog and each owner acts as a modulator of affiliative behavior. Further studies are required to expand our understanding of these abilities of dogs and its effects on the emotional state of the victim. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2025
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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