A Theory of Objective Self Awareness |
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Page 2
... focused on events external to the individual's consciousness , personal history , or body , whereas “ objective self awareness " is exactly the opposite conscious state . Consciousness is focused exclusively upon the self and ...
... focused on events external to the individual's consciousness , personal history , or body , whereas “ objective self awareness " is exactly the opposite conscious state . Consciousness is focused exclusively upon the self and ...
Page 77
... focused entirely in the direction of the strong area of the field . This was an oversimplification necessary for purpose of exposition . In reality , the person's attention will oscillate back and forth between the strong and weak areas ...
... focused entirely in the direction of the strong area of the field . This was an oversimplification necessary for purpose of exposition . In reality , the person's attention will oscillate back and forth between the strong and weak areas ...
Page 145
... focused attention . Similarly , Carlsmith et al . demonstrated in two experiments that children justify their deciding not to play with a toy to the degree that their attention is focused directly on the critical toy . We may view ...
... focused attention . Similarly , Carlsmith et al . demonstrated in two experiments that children justify their deciding not to play with a toy to the degree that their attention is focused directly on the critical toy . We may view ...
Contents
Evidence for the Basic Propositions | 15 |
The Origin and Nature of Objective Self Awareness | 29 |
An Objective Self Awareness Approach | 57 |
Copyright | |
10 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
alternative analysis arousal Asch asked assume attempt attitude change attribute error attribute the error attribution of error attribution theory audience avoid aware person awareness theory behavior believe camera Carlsmith causal agent Chapter child conception condition conformity consciousness consistent contradiction created decision decrease deindividuation dependent measure difference of opinion differentiating mechanism differentiation dimension direction discrepancy reduction discussed dissonance reduction dissonance theory Duval effect egocentric environment evaluation example expected experiment experimenter Festinger focus of attention focused given increase indicate individual individual's interaction law of relative locus of error majority manipulation means MICHIGAN minority mirror negative affect not-self notion objective self awareness opinion change perception performance Piaget point of view positive possible predict present psychological question ratio relationship response SHELLEY DUVAL simply situation social facilitation social influence standard of correctness stimulus subgroup tape task tendency theoretical tion turntable uncertainty variable Wicklund Zajonc