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    • Image courtesy of onlinelibrary.wiley.com

      onlinelibrary.wiley.com

      • Neurocognitive functions are skills that are linked to specific parts or pathways in the brain. Examples include social cognition, language, learning, memory, executive function, and perceptual-motor skills. Medical conditions that affect the brain can lead to deficits in neurocognitive function.
      www.verywellhealth.com/neurocognitive-function-5271704
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  2. As a result, affect is an intrinsic property in all psychological phenomena that result from so-calledcognitive” processes (such as consciousness, language, and memory). Affect and cognition, then, are not ontologically separate, but they are, perhaps, phenomenologically distinct.

    • Seth Duncan, Lisa Feldman Barrett
    • 10.1080/02699930701437931
    • 2007
    • 2007/09
  3. Social psychology is based on the ABCs of affect, behavior, and cognition. In order to effectively maintain and enhance our own lives through successful interaction with others, we rely on these three basic and interrelated human capacities: Affect (feelings) Behavior (interactions) Cognition (thought)

    • Charles Stangor
    • 2014
  4. Define and differentiate affect, behavior, and cognition as considered by social psychologists. Summarize the principles of social cognition. Social psychology is based on the ABCs of affect, behavior, and cognition (Figure 1.2 “The ABCs of Affect, Behavior, and Cognition”).

  5. Affect regulates cognitive processing as well as judgment. Studies indicate that happy mood promotes and sad mood inhibits many standard cognitive phenomena, including semantic priming, flanker effects, false memories, schema-based memory phenomena, category-level thinking, heuristic reasoning, and stereotyping [ 26 ].

    • Gerald L Clore, Alexander J Schiller, Adi Shaked
    • 10.1016/j.cobeha.2017.11.010
    • 2018
    • 2018/02
    • Social Cognition: Thinking and Learning About Others
    • Social Affect: Feelings About Ourselves and Others
    • Social Behavior: Interacting with Others

    The human brain contains about 86 billion neurons, each of which can make contact with tens of thousands of other neurons. The distinguishing brain feature in mammals, including humans, is the more recently evolved cerebral cortex—the part of the brain that is involved in thinking. Humans are highly intelligent, and they use cognition in every part...

    Affect refers to the feelings we experience as part of our everyday lives. As our day progresses, we may find ourselves feeling happy or sad, jealous or grateful, proud or embarrassed. Although affect can be harmful if it is unregulated or unchecked, our affective experiences normally help us to function efficiently and in a way that increases our ...

    Because we interact with and influence each other every day, we have developed the ability to make these interactions proceed efficiently and effectively. We cooperate with other people to gain outcomes that we could not obtain on our own, and we exchange goods, services, and other benefits with other people. These behaviors are essential for survi...

  6. Jun 25, 2022 · Social psychology is based on the ABCs of affect, behavior, and cognition (Figure 1.2). In order to effectively maintain and enhance our own lives through successful interaction with others, we rely on these three basic and interrelated human capacities: Affect (feelings) Behavior (interactions) Cognition (thought)

  7. Social Cognition. 2.3 Social Cognition and Affect. Learning Objectives. Describe important ways in which our affective states can influence our social cognition, both directly and indirectly, for example, through the operation of the affect heuristic.

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