conférence reportée : Reflection and impulse as determinants of social behavior

old_uid6955
titleconférence reportée : Reflection and impulse as determinants of social behavior
start_date2009/05/15
schedule14h30
onlineno
summaryDepending on external requirements, the adaptation of human behavior involves accuracy and speed. These criteria require different psychological processes that may operate in harmony or conflict. Recently, cognitive and social psychologists have described a number of dual-systems models specifying the cognitive mechanisms that are linked with the two processes. The reflective-impulsive model (RIM) has added motivational and emotional components to explain how behavior is generated under different conditions. Specifically, the model claims that behavior is a joint function of reflective and impulsive mechanisms and describes their interaction at different sequential stages. It has implications for diverse manifestations of human thinking, feeling and acting.
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