The Psychology of Trust (Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology)

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The Psychology of Trust (Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology)

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 300 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781041102649

Full Description

The sophisticated human capacity for trust is our crowning evolutionary achievement that makes social life and long-lasting relationships and institutions possible. This cutting-edge volume provides a comprehensive overview of the psychology of trust, featuring leading international researchers who have done ground-breaking work on the origins, nature, characteristics and consequences of trust.

The chapters examine the evolutionary, historical, social, cultural and psychological origins of trust. The role of cognitive, motivational and affective processes influencing trust are discussed, and the current crisis of trust in Western liberal democracies receives special attention, representing a serious challenge to the survival of liberal democratic societies built on the enlightenment values of rationalism, individualism, humanism, and tolerance.

Exploring one of the most intriguing psychological issues that shapes human social life, this book will be of interest both to a lay audience, as well as students and researchers interested in all areas relevant to the relationship between human psychology and the social and cultural processes that define our civilization.

Contents

Contents

PART 1. ORIGINS, FUNCTIONS AND CONSEQUENCES OF TRUST

Chapter 1. The psychology of trust: Origins, functions and consequences.

Joseph P.Forgas (University of New South Wales).

Chapter 2. Trust, its origins, and the tethered mind.

Vinod Goel (York University, Canada).

Chapter 3. Trust versus rationality.

David Dunning (University of Michigan), Thomas Schlösser (South Westphalia University) and Detlef Fetchenhauer (University of Cologne).

Chapter 4. Do Conceptualizations and Measures of Trust Reflect a WEIRD Bias?

Ying Lin (Hong Kong University) and Michele Gelfand (Stanford University).

PART 2. COGNITIVE AND MOTIVATIONAL INFLUENCES ON TRUST

Chapter 5. Heuristic trust.

Joachim I. Krueger (Brown University), A. M. Evans (Allstate Corporation) and B. Aizenberg B. (Brown University).

Chapter 6. What can game-theoretical experiments tell us about trust?

Klaus Fiedler, (Heidelberg University).

Chapter 7. Trust and Contested Beliefs: The Role of Actively Open-Minded Thinking

Stanovich, Keith (University of Toronto) and Maggie E. Toplak (York University)

Chapter 8. Affective influences on trust-related judgments and decisions.

Forgas, Joseph Paul (University of New South Wales, Australia).

PART 3. TRUST IN PERSONAL RELATIONSHIPS

Chapter 9. The Development of Romantic Trust

Lorne Campbell & Omar Camanto (University of Western Ontario)

Chapter 10. Conceptualising trust in the context of close relationships.

Rempel, John K. (St Jerome University, Canada).

Chapter 11. An Attachment Perspective on trust and compliance: Secure and insecure forms of compliance towards partners and governmental institutions

Mario Mikulincer (Hebrew University), Shir Zur (Baruch Iver School of Psychology) and Philip R Shaver (University of California)

Chapter 12. Trust as a personal resource - A Mathew effect of believing in the well-meaning of others.

Detlef Fetchenhauer (University of Cologne), David Dunning (University of Michigan), Paschalia Georgantsi, Thomasz Graczyk & Thomas Schlösser (South Westphalia University of Applied Sciences)

PART 4. TRUST IN SOCIETY AND CULTURE

Chapter 13. Social Identity, Depersonalized Trust, and Social Cohesion

Marilynn B. Brewer (University of California)

Chapter 14. The Demise of Trust: Trustworthiness, the Internet, and self-deception

William D. Crano and Tehreem Riffat (Claremont Graduate University).

Chapter 15. The Disruption of Trust: The Digital Erosion of Civic Norms

Danit Finkelstein, Lee Jussim, Sonia Yanovsky, Dulberg Z. Fihrer, and Joel Finkelstein (Rutgers University, and Network Contagion Research Institute).

Chapter 16. On the interplay of (dis)trust, conspiracy beliefs, and populism: Fueling political divides

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