This course will involve a number of instructional methods, such as the following:
- lectures
- small group activities
- discussion groups
- guest lectures
- multimedia presentations
- Introduction to Social Cognition
- What is social cognition?
- Theoretical frameworks
- Basic Concepts in social cognition
- Automatic and controlled processes
- Attention and encoding
- Social cognition represented in memory processes
- Self and identity
- What is "the self"?
- Attribution processes
- Theories of attribution
- Heuristics and Decision Making
- Accuracy and efficiency in social inference
- Attitudes and Persuasion
- Origin and nature of attitudes
- Cognitive processing of attitude
- Stereotypes and Prejudice
- Cognition and bias
- Affect and Behaviour
- The influence of affect on social cognition
- The influence of cognition on affect
- Social cognition and culture
- Variations in social cognition from a multicultural perspective
At the conclusion of the course the successful student will be able to:
- Define social cognition, and give examples of different kinds of phenomena that social cognition researchers study.
- Identify and describe research methods used to study social cognition.
- Read research articles critically.
- Evaluate the importance of situations on human behaviour and mental processes.
- Describe how our knowledge about the world is represented in the form of concepts or schemas.
- Explain the consequences of biases and heuristics in thinking.
- Explain theories of causal attribution and attribution biases.
- Identify memory systems and explain memory construction.
- Describe how motivations and emotions affect cognition.
- Describe theoretical perspectives of attitudes and how attitudes relate to behaviours.
- Compare and contrast automatic and controlled information processing.
- Identify stereotypes as concepts and explain stereotype activation and application.
- Identify the various components and functions of the self.
- Describe how cultural identity affects social cognition.
- Apply principles of social cognition to real-world events.
- Demonstrate ability to use APA style in written communication.
The course evaluation will be in accordance with ÌÇÐÄvlog´«Ã½and Psychology Department Policy. Evaluations will be based on the course objectives. Specific evaluation criteria will be provided by the instructor at the beginning of the semester.
An example of a possible evaluation scheme would be:
Two midterm exams at 25% each - 50%
Final exam - 25%
APA style application paper - 20%
Attendance and participation - 5%
Total - 100%
Textbook(s) such as the following, the list to be updated periodically:
Fiske, S.T. & Taylor, S.E. (2016). Social cognition: From brains to culture (3rd ed.). London, England: Sage Publications Ltd.
Greifeneder, R., Bless, H., & Fiedler, K. (2018). Social cognition (2nd ed.). New York, NY: Routledge
Courses listed here must be completed either prior to or simultaneously with this course:
- No corequisite courses
Courses listed here are equivalent to this course and cannot be taken for further credit:
- No equivalency courses