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- Social projection is a judgemental heuristic that allows people to make quick and reasonably accurate predictions about others.
www.tandfonline.com/doi/full/10.1080/10463280701284645From social projection to social behaviour: European Review ...
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Jul 22, 2010 · Social projection is a judgemental heuristic that allows people to make quick and reasonably accurate predictions about others. The first part of this paper presents a review of the status of projection as a highly (though not fully) automatic process, its separateness from superficially similar processes of self-stereotyping, and its ...
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The first part of this paper presents a review of the status of projection as a highly (though not fully) automatic process, its separateness from superficially similar processes of self-stereotyping, and its implications for intergroup perception.
Social projection is the tendency to expect similarities between oneself and others. A review of the literature and a meta-analhsis reveal that projection is stronger when people make judgments about ingroups than when they make judgments about outgroups.
- Jordan M. Robbins, Joachim I. Krueger
- 2005
In social psychology, social projection is the psychological process through which an individual expects behaviors or attitudes of others to be similar to their own. Social projection occurs between individuals as well as across ingroup and outgroup contexts in a variety of domains. [1]
Social projection is the tendency to expect similarities between oneself and others. A review of the literature and a meta-analysis reveal that projection is stronger when people make judgments about ingroups than when they make judgments about outgroups.
Although projection has different meanings in psychology (see Holmes, 1968, for a review), for the purposes of the current paper, social projection is defined as “ (…) assigning a state of one's own to someone else“ (Goldman, 2006, p. 40).
Oct 8, 2024 · Projection, the mental process by which people attribute to others what is in their own minds. The concept was introduced to psychology by Sigmund Freud. In contemporary psychological science the term continues to have the meaning of seeing the self in the other.