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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Lay Theories and Evaluation-Based Organization of Impressions: An Application of the Memory Search Paradigm

Yuk-Yue Tong, +1 more
- 01 Nov 2002 - 
- Vol. 28, Iss: 11, pp 1518-1527
TLDR
In this paper, the authors used the memory search task to examine entity and incremental theorists' cognitive strategies in memory search and found that entity theorists, who have a greater tendency to make spontaneous evaluation of people, would organize impressions in short-term memory according to whether the stimulus persons are positively or negatively evaluated.
Abstract
People may believe that personal attributes are fixed entities that cannot be changed (hold an entity theory). Alternatively, they may believe that qualities of a person are malleable (hold an incremental theory). In the present research, the authors used Sternberg’s (1966) memory search task to examine entity and incremental theorists’ cognitive strategies in memory search. It was hypothesized that entity theorists, who have a greater tendency to make spontaneous evaluation of people, would organize impressions in short-term memory according to whether the stimulus persons are positively or negatively evaluated. Next, they might compare the probe only to the stimulus persons with matched valence or discard the ones that did not match the probe in valence. By comparison, incremental theorists, who tend not to make immediate evaluative trait judgments, should be less likely to use these evaluation-based strategies. These hypotheses were confirmed in two memory search experiments, in which the names of posi...

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Journal ArticleDOI

Psychological essentialism, implicit theories, and intergroup relations

TL;DR: The authors argue that implicit person theories can be understood within the framework of psychological essentialism and that these essentialist beliefs are associated with stereotyping and prejudice, implying a significant role for these beliefs in the psychology of group perception.
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Lay Theories and Intergroup Relations

TL;DR: Lay theory research on intergroup relations has rapidly grown over the past two decades as discussed by the authors, and the importance of lay theories for group and intergroup processes is discussed in this special issue.
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Birds of a feather and birds flocking together: physical versus behavioral cues may lead to trait- versus goal-based group perception.

TL;DR: Results from 5 experiments show that same group movement invariably leads to common goal inferences, increased perceived cohesiveness, and increased perceived entitativity, and same skin color evokes inferences of group traits and increases perceived homogeneity and perceived entitivity.
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Lay Theories of Personality: Cornerstones of Meaning in Social Cognition

TL;DR: For instance, the authors argue that people exhibit processing distortions and compensatory mechanisms to minimize the impact of information that violates their meaning system, and that these meaning systems produce systematic differences in a range of fundamental social cognition processes, with important implications for the field's understanding of trait/situation attribution, moral judgment, and person memory.
Journal ArticleDOI

Essentializing race: Its implications on racial categorization.

TL;DR: The role of racial essentialism is investigated in influencing several important psychological aspects of racial categorization and its implications for understanding and managing interracial relations in the United States are discussed.
References
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Book

Self-theories: Their Role in Motivation, Personality, and Development

TL;DR: Theories of intelligence create high and low effort as mentioned in this paper... Theories and goals predict Self-Esteem Loss and Depressive Reactions, and why confidence and success are not enough.
Journal ArticleDOI

Self-monitoring of expressive behavior.

TL;DR: In this article, a social psychological construct of self-monitoring (selfobservation and self-control guided by situational cues to social appropriateness) of expressive behavior and selfpresentation was proposed.
Book

Social psychology: Handbook of basic principles.

TL;DR: Forster, Liberman, and Shafir, Decisions Constructed Locally: Some Fundamental Principles of the Psychology of Decision Making as mentioned in this paper, and Shaver, Mikulincer, Attachment theory and research: Core Concepts, Basic Principles, Conceptual Bridges.
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