IN THIS SECTION: 1.) BRIEF 2.) COMPREHENSIVE BRIEF TABLE OF CONTENTS: Chapter 1: The Field of Social Psychology Chapter 2: Social Perception Chapter 3: Social Cognition Chapter 4: Attitudes Chapter 5: Social Identity Chapter 6: Prejudice and Discrimination Chapter 7: Interpersonal Attraction Chapter 8: Close Relationships Chapter 9: Social Influence Chapter 10: Prosocial Behavior Chapter 11: Aggression Chapter 12: Group Behavior Chapter 13: Business Psychology Chapter 14: Forensic Psychology Chapter 15: Health Psychology COMPREHENSIVE TABLE OF CONTENTS: Chapter 1: The Field of Social Psychology Article 1 How to be a wise consumer of psychological research, by The American Psychological Association Article 2 Human use of human subjects: The problem of deception in social psychological research, by Herbert C. Kelman Article 3 Social influences on paranormal belief: Popular versus scientific support, by Heather Ridolfo, Amy Baxter, and Jeffrey W. Lucas Chapter 2: Social Perception Article 4 The once-over: Can you trust first impressions? by Carlin Flora Article 5 The warm-cold variable in first impressions of persons, by Harold H. KelleyArticle 6 Indirect detection of deception: Looking for change, by Christian L. Hart, Derek G. Fillmore, and James D. Griffith Chapter 3: Social Cognition Article 7 Some systematic biases in everyday judgment, by Thomas Gilovich Article 8 Cognitive, social, and physiological determinants of emotional states, by Stanley Schachter and Jerome E. Singer Article 9 Lasting false beliefs and their behavioral consequences, by Elke Geraerts, Daniel M. Bernstein, Harald Merckelbach, Christel Linders, Linsey Raymackers, and Elizabeth F. LoftusChapter Four: Attitudes Article 10 Changing behavior by degrees, by Michael Price Article 11 Cognitive consequences of forced compliance, by Leon Festinger and James M. Carlsmith Article 12 The origins of cognitive dissonance: Evidence from children and monkeys, by Louisa C. Egan, Laurie R. Santos, and Paul Bloom Chapter 5: Social Identity Article 13 The many me's of the self-monitor, by Mark Snyder Article 14 The measurement of psychological androgyny, by Sandra L. Bem Article 15 Reducing narcissistic aggression by buttressing self-esteem: An experimental field study, by Sander Thomaes, Brad J. Bushman, Bram Orobio de Castro, Geoffrey L. Cohen, and Jaap J.A. Denissen Chapter 6: Prejudice and Discrimination Article 16 Unmasking racial micro aggressions, by Tori DeAngelis Article 17 Attitudes vs. actions, by Richard T. LaPiere Article 18 Interracial roommate relationships: An experimental field test of the contact hypothesis, by Natalie J. Shook and Russell H. Fazio Chapter 7: Interpersonal Attraction Article 19 Why I hate beauty, by Michael Levine with Hara Estroff Marano Article 20 What is beautiful is good, by Karen Dion,m Ellen Berscheid, and Elaine Walster Article 21 The ability to judge the romantic interest of others, by Skyler S. Place, Peter M. Todd, Lars Penke, and Jens B. Asendorpf Chapter 8: Close Relationships Article 22 Great expectations, by Polly Shulman Article 23 Playing hard to get: Understanding an elusive phenomenon, by Elaine Hatfield, G. William Walster, Jane Piliavin, and Lynn SchmidtArticle 24 Does a long-term relationship kill romantic love?, by Bianca P. Acevedo and Arthur Aron Chapter 9: Social Influence Article 25 Revisiting the Stanford Prison Experiment: A lesson in the power of the situation, by Phillip G. Zimbardo Article 26 Behavioral study of obedience, by Stanley Milgram Article 27 The constructive, destructive, and reconstructive power of social norms, by P. Wesley Schultz, Jessica M. Nolan, Robert B. Cialdini, Noah J. Goldstein, and Vladus Griskevicius Chapter 10: Prosocial Behavior Article 28 Nice by nature? by Sadie F. Dingfelder Article 29 From Jerusalem to Jericho: A study of situational and dispositional variables in helping behavior, by John M. Darley and C. Daniel Batson Article 30 Comfortably numb: Desensitizing effects of violent media on helping others, by Brad J. Bushman and Craig A. Anderson Chapter 11: Aggression Article 31 Understanding terrorism, by Tori DeAngelis Article 32 Transmission of aggression through imitation of aggressive models, by Albert Bandura, Dororthea Ross, and Sheila A. Ross Article 33 School violence and the culture of honor, by Ryan P. Brown, Lindsey L. Osterman, and Collin D. Barnes Chapter 12: Group Behavior Article 34 Group decision fiascoes continue: Space Shuttle Challenger and a revised groupthink framework, by Gregory Moorhead, Richard Ference, and Chris P. Neck Article 35 The effect of threat upon interpersonal bargaining, by Morton Deutsch and Robert M. Krause Article 36 Can high group cohesion be harmful? A case study of a junior ice-hockey team, by Esa Rovio, Jari Eskola, Stephen A. Kozub, Joan L. Duda, and Taru Lintuner Chapter 13: Business Psychology Article 37 When followers become toxic, by Lynn R. Offerman Article 38 One more time: How do you motivate employees? by Fredrick Herzberg Article 39 Impact of emotional intelligence and other factors on perception of ethical behavior of peers, by Jacob Joseph, Kevin Berry, and Satish P. Deshpande Chapter 14: Forensic Psychology Article 40 The psychology and power of false confessions, by Ian Herbert Article 41 Beautiful but dangerous: Effects of offender attractiveness and nature of the crime on juridic judgment, by Harold Sigall and Nancy Ostrove Article 42 Attractive but guilty: Deliberation and the physical attractiveness bias, by Mark W. Patry Chapter 15: Health Psychology Article 43 Understanding the have-knots, by Eric Wargo Article 44 The social readjustment rating scale, by Thomas H. Holmes and Richard H. Rahe Article 45 Psychosocial predictors of resilience after the September 11, 2001 terrorist attacks, by Lisa D. Butler, Cheryl Koopman, Jay Azarow, Christine M. Blasey, Juliette C. Magadalene, Sue DiMiceli, David A. Seagraves, T. Anderew Hastings, Xin-HuaChen, Robert W. Garlan, Helena C. Kraemer, and David Spiegel