1st Edition

Affect and Cognition 17th Annual Carnegie Mellon Symposium on Cognition

Edited By Margaret S. Clark, Susan T. Fiske Copyright 1982
    368 Pages
    by Psychology Press

    First published in 1982. In late May, 1981, the 17th annual Carnegie Symposium on Cognition brought 16 cognitive and social psychologists to Camegie-Mellon University. Their topic was affect and cognition. For only the second time, the Carnegie Symposium had been organized by social psychologists. John Carroll and John Payne chaired the first social cognitive symposium in 1975. Their conference came precisely at the time when social cognition was beginning to take root within social psychology. Since then, the area has blossomed. These are the papers from the conference.

    PART 1: COGNITIVE UNDERPINNINGS OF AFFECT 1. The Structure of Value: Accounting for Taste 2. Attraction and Emotion in Interpersonal Relations 3. Schema-triggered Affect: Applications to Social Perception 4. Affective Consequences of Complexity Regarding the Self and Others PART 2: COGNITION AND AFFECT: APPLICATIONS AND BEHAVIOR 6. The Integration of Emotion and Cognition: A View From the Perceptual-Motor Theory of Emotion 8. The Emotional Consequences of Causal Attributions 9. Independence and Interaction of Affect and Cognition 10. Comments on Emotion and Cognition: Can There be a Working Relationship? PART 3: AFFECTIVE UNDERPINNINGS OF COGNITION 11. Some Factors Influencing Decision-Making Strategy and Risk Taking 12. A Role for Arousal in the Link between Feeling States, Judgments, and Behavior 13. Emotional Influences in Memory and Thinking: Data and Theory 14. Comments

    Biography

    Edited by Margaret Sydnor Clark, Susan T. Fiske both Carnegie-Melon University, USA.