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Social Cognition
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Social Cognition
From brains to culture

Fifth Edition


November 2025 | 400 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
The social world is complicated and our minds are limited, so we take shortcuts. You have to make quick decisions – this person is dangerous, this one is not. The shortcuts we take mostly work well enough, because, after all, we survive. But some are deeply unjust, including racial or social class categories or other unfair stereotypes.

This book will help you understand how these shortcuts work, why they exist, and how they are changing. 

This edition has been thoroughly revised to remove outdated content and add new information on AI and machine learning, as well as brand new chapter on accuracy. 

This is not a self-help book, but it will aid you as you navigate your social world. This is not a do-good book, but it will help you make a difference in the world. This is not fiction, but it tells some good stories. Social cognition captures a remarkable range of phenomena useful to individuals and to the human condition

Susan T. Fiske is Emerita Eugene Higgins Professor of Psychology and Professor of Public Affairs, Princeton University. She is the only person to have won all three APS awards. 
 
Chapter 1: Introduction
 
Part I: Basic concepts in social cognition
 
Chapter 2: Dual modes in social cognition
 
Chapter 3: Attention and encoding
 
Chapter 4: Representation in memory
 
Part II: Understanding individual selves and others
 
Chapter 5: Self in social cognition
 
Chapter 6: Attribution of dispositions
 
Chapter 7: Heuristic judgments of probability
 
Part III: Making sense of society: Issues and groups
 
Chapter 8: Attitudes: Cognitive structure and process
 
Chapter 9: Stereotyping: Cognition and bias
 
Chapter 10: Prejudice: Interplay of cognitive and affective biases
 
Part IV: Beyond cognition: Affect, behaviour
 
Chapter 11: Affect and social cognition
 
Chapter 12: Behavior and cognition
 
Chapter 13: Accuracy and rationality

Susan T. Fiske

Susan T. Fiske is Eugene Higgins Professor, Psychology and Public Affairs, Princeton University (Ph.D., Harvard University; honorary doctorates, Université Catholique de Louvain-la-Neuve, Belgium; Universiteit Leiden, Netherlands; Universität Basel, Switzerland; Universidad de Granada, Spain). She attended Harvard/Radcliffe College, majoring in Social Relations, where she met her graduate advisor and lifelong collaborator, Shelley Taylor. After her doctorate in social psychology, she worked at Carnegie-Mellon and the University of Massachusetts, Amherst, before moving to Princeton in 2000. She investigates social cognition, especially... More About Author

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