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ADVANCES IN
EXPERIMENTAL SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
VOLUME 22
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Experimenta1 Social Psychology
EDITED BY
Leonard Berkowitz DEPARTMENT OF PSYCHOWGY UNIVERSITY OF WISCONSIN-MADISON MADISON, WISCONSIN
VOLUME 22
ACADEMIC PRESS, INC. Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, Publishers
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CONTENTS
Contributors ......................................................
ix
On the Construction of the Anger Experience: Aversive Events and Negative Priming in the Formation of Feelings Leonard Berkowitz and Karen Heimer I . Introduction ................................................. I1. Approaches to Emotion and Anger ............................. 111 A Cognitive-Neoassociationistic Analysis of Anger . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . IV. The Present Research ......................................... V. General Discussion ........................................... References ...................................................
.
1 2 7 13 31 35
Social Psychophysiology: A New Look John T. Cacioppo. Richard E . Petty. and Louis G . Tassinary I . Introduction ................................................. I1. Background .................................................. 111. An Alternative Conceptualization ............................... IV. Illustrating the New Look: Part I ............................... V. Illustrating the New Look: Part I1 .............................. VI . Sociological and Philosophical Obstacles ........................ VII . The New Look: Part 111 ....................................... VIII . Conclusion .................................................. References ...................................................
39 40 43 43 65
73 77 81 83
Self-Discrepancy Theory: What Patterns of Self-Beliefs Cause People to Suffer? E . Tory Higgins
.
I Introduction ................................................. I1 . Self-Discrepancy Theory ....................................... V
93 94
vi
CONTENTS
. Evidence for Hypothesis 1 of Self-Discrepancy Theory ............ 99 IV. Evidence for Hypothesis 2 of Self-Discrepancy Theory . . . . . . . . . . . . 120 V. Summary and Concluding Remarks ............................. 128 References ................................................... 131
111
Minding Matters: The Consequences of Mindlessness-Mindfulness Ellen J . Langer I . Overview
....................................................
I1. Mindlessness and Mindfulness ..................................
111. Mindlessnes-Mindfulness and Health
...........................
IV. Mindlessness-Mindfulness and Performance ...................... V. Mindlessness-Mindfulness versus Related Concepts ............... VI. Misconceptions about the Advantages of Mindlessness and the Disadvantages of Mindfulness .......................... VII