An Atlas of Interpersonal Situations
$63.99 USD
- Authors:
- Harold H. Kelley, University of California, Los Angeles
- John G. Holmes, University of Waterloo, Ontario
- Norbert L. Kerr, Michigan State University
- Harry T. Reis, University of Rochester, New York
- Caryl E. Rusbult, University of North Carolina, Chapel Hill
- Paul A. M. Van Lange, Vrije Universiteit, Amsterdam
- Date Published: December 2004
- availability: This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
- format: Adobe eBook Reader
- isbn: 9780511058318
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The Atlas of Interpersonal Situations provides a systematic theoretical account for understanding the impact of situations on patterns of social interaction. Structured around descriptions of twenty-one of the most common situations that people encounter in everyday life, the authors aim to provide readers with the tools needed to understand how those situations influence interpersonal behavior. These descriptions are intended to be freestanding, each one providing analysis, research examples, and everyday descriptions of the prototypical situation. The authors build upon the tools of interdependence theory, which stresses the manner in which people's outcomes are determined by the structure of their interaction with each other. This analysis makes clear exactly what is 'social' about 'social psychology'.
Read more- With its unique structure, this atlas guides the intellectual traveler through the maze of interpersonal situations that constitute everyday life
- Each entry can be read and understood on its own, and each is the result of the collective efforts of top scholars in the field
- This is the first book to create a taxonomy of interpersonal situations
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×Product details
- Date Published: December 2004
- format: Adobe eBook Reader
- isbn: 9780511058318
- contains: 11 b/w illus. 69 tables
- availability: This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.
Table of Contents
Foreword
Part I. Introduction and Theory:
1. Interpersonal situations: the context of social behavior
2. Outcome interdependence
3. Interaction conditions and person factors
4. Exploring the geography of the outcome patterns
Part II The Situations: Preface to the Entries for the Situations
Single Component Patterns:
1. Independence: we go our separate ways
2. Mutual partner control: I scratch your back, you scratch mine
3. Corresponding mutual joint control: getting in sync
4. Conflicting mutual joint control: match or mismatch
Two- and three-component patterns:
5. The prisoner's dilemma: me versus we
6. Threat: trading loyalty for justice
7. Chicken: death before dishonor
8. Hero: let's do it your way
9. Conjunctive problems: together we can do it
10. Disjunctive problems: either of us can do it
11. Asymmetric dependence: you're the boss
Time-extended patterns:
12. Iterated prisoner's dilemma: united we stand, divided we fall
13. Investment: building for the future
14. Delay of gratification: resisting temptation
Incomplete information situations
15. Negotiation: can we agree on a deal?
16. Encounters with strangers: lack of information about a partner
17. Joint decisions under uncertainty: bird in the hand
18. Twists of fate: coping with an uncertain future
N-person Situations
19. Third parties: effects of an outsider
20. N-person prisoner's dilemma: tragedy of the commons
Movement from one situation to another
21. Movement among situations: where do we go from here?
Part III. Epilogue.
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