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Full Description
This remarkable collection of essays gives students and other researchers a first-hand look at how collaborative scientific research is done. The 21 contributors are leading psychological and social scientists with extensive experience working as members of a research team. Each author offers a distinctive perspective on the collaborative research process—its pros and cons, challenges and benefits, practical implications and ethical dilemmas.
Each essay focuses on a set of guiding questions:
What motivated the collaboration?
What about the collaboration made the research work more effective (or less?)
Does the substantive domain in which the collaboration occurs shape the nature of the collaboration?
How have technological advances changed collaboration?
Are there particular issues that arise for students collaborating with faculty members, or faculty members collaborating with students?
These essays offer useful insights to Psychology students learning about research methods at undergraduate or postgraduate level.
Contents
Part I. Introduction: Behind the Scenes Part II. Collaboration Within Psychological Science.- 1. Elaine Hatfield and Ellen Berscheid, In Love Research, One is the Loneliest Number.- 2. Dominic Abrams and Michael Hogg. Alliances, Bridges and Adversity - It Has to be Fun.- 3. John F. Dovidio and Samuel L. Gaertner. Living What we Learn: Dual Identity and Collaboration.- 4. Susan T. Fiske and Shelley E. Taylor. Collaboration: Interdependence in Action.- 5. Jeff Greenberg, Tom Pyszczynski, and Sheldon Solomon. Psychology's Folie a Trois: Till Death Do Us Part.- 6. Miles Hewstone and Robin Martin. ''One of us'': Group Processes, Division of Labour, and Transactive Memory in Pursuit of the Enigma of Minority Influence.- 7. Charles Judd and Bernadette Park. Social cognition about a collaboration in social cognition.- 8. Hazel Rose Markus and Shinobu Kitayama, Dialogues across Difference; The Two Self Solution.- 9. Richard E. Nisbett and Lee Ross. A Fifty-Year Conversation.- 10.Phillip R. Shaver and Mario Mikulincer. An International Collaboration Based on Similarity and Complementarity.- Part III. Collaboration and Interdisciplinarity 11. John L. Sullivan and Eugene Borgida. It Takes a Village: Interdisciplinary Research Collaboration in Political Psychology.- 12. Steven W. Gangestad. Scientific Collaboration Illustrates Extraordinary Features of our Species - and the Risks Collaboration Entails.- 13. Steven J. Sherman. A Career of Collaborations: A Plan Designed to NOT Get You Tenure in Today's World.- 14. Gary Wells. Some Functions and Dysfunctions of Collaboration.- 15. Richard L. Zweigenhaft. Studying Diversity in the American Power Structure, Collaboratively.- Part IV. Collaboration With Institutional and Community Partners 16. Steven J. Breckler. The Social Psychology of National Science Policy.- 17. Nancy Cantor and Peter Englot. Psychological Science in Public: It Takes a Diverse Village to Make a Difference.- 8. Geoffrey L. Cohen and Julio Garcia. Partnering with Schools: No Researcher is an Island.- 19. James S. Jackson.The Program for Research on Black Americans: Team Science in the Study of Ethnic and Racial Influences.- 20. Barbara Loken and Deborah Roedder John. Collaboration in Applied Psychological Research.- 21. Mark Snyder and Allen M. Omoto. Finding the Sweet Spot: What Makes for Successful Collaboration?.- Part V. Conclusion: Best Practices for Collaborative Research in Psychological Science.