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Metacognition
Cognitive and Social Dimensions
Edited by:
- Vincent Y Yzerbyt - Catholic Univeristy of Louvain, Belgium
- Guy Lories - Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium
- Benoit Dardenne - Catholic University of Louvain, Belgium
June 1998 | 272 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Metacognition - cognitive processes that apply to themselves - is becoming increasingly recognized as a fundamental aspect of human psychology. In this broad-ranging book, internationally renowned authors show how a full analysis of human reasoning and behaviour requires an understanding of both cognitive and metacognitive activities.
Important insights from across social and cognitive psychology are drawn together to offer an unmatched overview of this major debate, and a number of key questions are addressed, including: Are metacognitive activities similar to standard cognitive processes, or do they represent a separate category? How do people reflect on their cognitive processes? Does our metacognitive knowledge affect our behavioural choices?
Guy Lories, Benoit Dardenne and Vincent Y Yzerbyt
From Social Cognition to Metacognition
Asher Koriat
Illusions of Knowing
Adisack Nhouyvanisvong and Lynne M Reder
Rapid Feeling-of-Knowing
Guy Lories and Marie-Anne Schelstreate
The Feeling-of-Knowing as a Judgement
Thomas O Nelson, Arie Kruglanski and John T Jost
Knowing Thyself and Others
Herbert Bless and Fritz Strack
Social Influence on Memory
William B Swann Jr and Michael J Gill
Beliefs, Confidence and the Widows Ademoski
Vincent Y Yzerbyt, Benoit Dardenne and Jacques-Philipppe Leyens
Social Judgeability Concerns in Impression Formation
Mahzarin R Banaji and Nilanjana Dasgupta
The Consciousness of Social Beliefs
Timothy D Wilson, Daniel T Gilbert and Thalia Wheatley
Protecting Our Minds
Duane T Wegener, Richard E Petty and Meghan Dunn
The Metacognition of Bias Correction
Leonard L Martin and Diederik A Stapel
Correction and Metacognition