RESEARCH BASE
Search 3,717 documents across 34 fields — every claim tier-rated by evidence
349 results for "social cognition" — page 5 of 18
ZC_1_15 — Sociology of Emotions
Sociology of emotions examines how emotions are socially shaped, managed, and structured — challenging the assumption that feelings are purely biological or individual. Arlie Russell Hochschild (The Managed Heart, 1983)
ZC_1_09 — Psychology of Leadership
Leadership psychology investigates the traits, behaviors, and situations that enable individuals to influence, motivate, and direct others toward collective goals — one of the most extensively studied and practically imp
ZC_1_04 — Crowd Psychology & Mass Movements
Crowd psychology — the study of how individuals behave differently when part of a large group — has been a central concern of social science since Gustave Le Bon's The Crowd (1895), one of the most influential and contro
ZC_1_11 — Psychology of Time
The psychology of time encompasses how humans perceive duration, orient themselves across past-present-future, and how temporal cognition influences decision-making, memory, motivation, and well-being.
ZC_1_12 — Industrial-Organizational Psychology
Industrial-organizational (I/O) psychology applies psychological principles to workplace behavior — encompassing personnel selection, performance evaluation, motivation, leadership, organizational culture, team dynamics,
ZC_1_17 — Conspiracy Theory Epidemiology: Why People Believe and How Conspiracism Spreads
Conspiracy theories — explanatory frameworks that attribute significant events to the secret machinations of powerful, malevolent groups — are not a modern pathology but a recurring feature of human cognitive and social
ZC_1_02 — Cult Psychology — Manipulation, Totalism, and Recovery
Cult psychology examines how high-demand groups employ systematic influence techniques to recruit, retain, and control members. Key frameworks include Robert Jay Lifton's eight criteria of thought reform, Steven Hassan's
ZC_1_13 — Psychology of Prejudice and Discrimination
Prejudice — negative attitudes toward a group and its members — operates through cognitive (stereotypes), affective (prejudice), and behavioral (discrimination) components. Research reveals both overt and subtle forms of
ZC_4_07 — Childhood and the Anthropology of Growing Up
The anthropology of childhood — the cross-cultural study of how children are conceived of, raised, taught, disciplined, initiated, and transformed into culturally competent adults — challenges the assumption that childho
ZC_4_18 — Aboriginal Australian Kinship Systems
Aboriginal Australian kinship systems represent some of the most elaborate social classification frameworks ever documented by anthropology. Operating through moiety (2-part), section (4-part), and subsection (8-part) sy
ZC_4_01 — Gift Economy and Reciprocity
The gift economy — a system of exchange in which goods and services are transferred without explicit agreement for immediate return, yet create bonds of obligation, reciprocity, and social hierarchy — has been one of the
ZC_2_10 — Political Sociology and Power
Political sociology examines the social bases of political power — how authority is produced, maintained, legitimated, and contested. Max Weber (1864–1920) defined the state as the institution that successfully claims a
ZC_2_09 — Sociology of Gender and Sexuality
The sociology of gender and sexuality examines how societies construct, enforce, and contest gender categories and sexual norms. The sex-gender distinction (introduced to sociology by Ann Oakley, Sex, Gender and Society,
ZC_2_04 — Sociology of Education
The sociology of education examines how educational institutions produce, reproduce, and sometimes challenge social inequalities — investigating the relationship between schooling, social class, race, gender, and economi
ZC_2_07 — Sociology of Health and Illness
Medical sociology (or the sociology of health and illness) examines how social structures, institutions, and relationships shape health outcomes, health behaviors, and the organization of healthcare. Foundational concept
ZC_2_05 — Criminology and Deviance
Criminology studies the nature, causes, consequences, and control of criminal behavior, while deviance encompasses behavior that violates social norms, whether or not it is legally criminal. Classical theories: Émile Dur
ZC_2_02 — Collective Memory and Cultural Transmission of Myth
Collective memory — the shared pool of knowledge and information held by a group — is the mechanism by which myths, traditions, and historical narratives are transmitted across generations. This document surveys the scho
G_3_21 — Critical Realism: Roy Bhaskar and Stratified Ontology
Critical realism is a philosophical movement founded by Roy Bhaskar (1944–2014) that proposes a stratified ontology — reality consists of three nested domains (the Real, the Actual, and the Empirical) — and argues that s
G_2_15 — Cognitive Archaeology — Mind in the Archaeological Record
Cognitive archaeology investigates the cognitive abilities, mental processes, and symbolic capacities of past peoples through the material record they left behind — seeking to understand not just what ancient people did,
G_2_09 — Network Analysis in Archaeology — Trade, Communication, Influence
Network analysis — rooted in graph theory and social network analysis (SNA) — provides formal mathematical tools for modeling and analyzing the structure of relationships between archaeological entities: sites, regions,
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