Written by students who passed Immediately available after payment Read online or as PDF Wrong document? Swap it for free 4.6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Summary

Summary Lecture Notes Social Cognition | Tilburg University | 2025/26

Rating
-
Sold
1
Pages
41
Uploaded on
06-06-2026
Written in
2025/2026

Lecture notes from Social Cognition (422052-B-6) at Tilburg University covering foundational concepts and classic studies in how people construct social reality. Topics include cognitive dissonance (Festinger & Carlsmith), conformity (Asch), memory systems (encoding, storage, retrieval), and false memory formation (Loftus & Pickrell), with key research findings and criticisms. Well-organized by lecture with main concepts, graphs, and study summaries—ideal for exam preparation and understanding core theories in social cognition.

Show more Read less
Institution
Course

Content preview

Lecture 1: history

Main graphs




Main concepts

- Social cognition: how people construct and understand social reality
- Phenomenology: focus on how people subjectively experience the world
- Cognitive psychology: studies mental processes such as memory, attention and
perception
- Behaviourism: only observable behaviour should be studied; thoughts are
ignored
o Criticism: cannot explain many complex behaviors
- Cognitive dissonance: discomfort caused by conflicting beliefs and behavior
- Conformity: changing behavior or judgements because of other people

Main studies

- Cognitive dissonance: festinger and carlsmith
o Premise: participants did a boring task and were paid 1 or 20 dollars to
tell someone it was fun
o Results: 1 dollar group rated the task more enjoyable than the 20 dollar
o Why: 1 dollar insufficient justification. So they changed attitude.
o Criticism: only included people willing to lie; modern evidence is less
consistent
- Conformity: asch
o Premise: participants judged line lengths while confederates intentionally
gave wrong answers
o Results: many participants conformed to the incorrect majority
o Why: normative influence (fit in) and informational influence (others know
better)
- Asch replication: franzen and mader
o Modern replication of ash

, o Result: conformity still occurred; financial incentives only slightly
reduced it



Lecture 2: memory

Main graphs

,Main concepts

- Encoding: creating memories from experiences
- Storage: maintainging information in memory
- Retrieval: recalling information from memory
- Short term: temporary storage
- Long term: lasting storage
- Explicit (declarative memory): conscious memory: Remembering your birthday
party.
- Implicit memory: unconscious memory influences : Typing your password
without thinking about each key.
- Episodic memory: memory for specific events : Remembering your first day at
university.
- Semantic memory: general knowledge and concepts: Knowing that Amsterdam
is the capital of the Netherlands.
- Procedural memory: skills and routines: riding a bike
- Autobiographical memory: memory of your own life story: remembering where
you grew up
- Source monitoring: determining where a memory came from
o Problem: imagined events can be confused for real ones
- Phantom flashbulbs: very confident memories can still be inaccurate
- Semantic networks: memory is organized in connected networks of concepts
- Distinctiveness: unexpected information gets deeper encoding and is
remembred better
- Primacy effect: items presented first are remembered better
- Recency effect: items presented last are remembered better
- False memory reconstruction: people can remember events that never
happened
- Framing: the wording of information changes memory

, - Goal relevance: goal influence what information is remembred
- Debunking: correcting misinformation after exposure
o Works, but cannot fully undo informartion
- Prebunking / inoculation: preparing people beforehand to resist misinformation

Main studies

- Forgetting curve: ebbingshaus
o Premise: studied memory by learning nonsense syllables and testing
recall over time
o Results: most forgetting happens shortly after learning, then levels of
o Takeaway: memory naturally decays over time without rehearsal
o Criticism: used meaningless syllables, may not reflect real life memory
- Source monitoring: johnson
o Premise: investigated how people determine where a memory came from
o Results: people sometimes confuse imagined events with real events
o Takeaway: memory is not only about remembering information, but also
remembering its source
o Criticism: errors are more common in lab settings than in everyday life
- Phantom flashbulbs: neisser and harsch
o Premise: students reported where they were when they heard about the
challenger disaster and were asked again years later
o Results: participants were highly confident but often inaccurate
o Takeaway: confidence is not accuracy
- Person memory: hastie and kumar
o Premise: participants learned information about a person that was either
▪ Congruent with expectation
▪ Neutral
▪ Incongruent with expectations
o Results:
▪ Incongruent information remembred best
▪ Primacy and recency effects occured
o Takeaway: unexpected information get deeper processing and is
remembred better
- Lost in the mall: loftus and pickrell
o Premise: participants received several childhood memories, one of which
was false
o Results: about 25% developed a memory for the false event
o Takeaway : entirely false memories can be created
o Criticism: Being lost in a mall is a relatively mild event; results may not
generalize to traumatic memories.
- False memory replication

Written for

Institution
Study
Course

Document information

Uploaded on
June 6, 2026
Number of pages
41
Written in
2025/2026
Type
SUMMARY

Subjects

$7.04
Get access to the full document:

Wrong document? Swap it for free Within 14 days of purchase and before downloading, you can choose a different document. You can simply spend the amount again.
Written by students who passed
Immediately available after payment
Read online or as PDF

Get to know the seller
Seller avatar
PieterPsychologie

Get to know the seller

Seller avatar
PieterPsychologie Tilburg University
Follow You need to be logged in order to follow users or courses
Sold
4
Member since
1 year
Number of followers
0
Documents
8
Last sold
6 hours ago

0.0

0 reviews

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Recently viewed by you

Why students choose Stuvia

Created by fellow students, verified by reviews

Quality you can trust: written by students who passed their tests and reviewed by others who've used these notes.

Didn't get what you expected? Choose another document

No worries! You can instantly pick a different document that better fits what you're looking for.

Pay as you like, start learning right away

No subscription, no commitments. Pay the way you're used to via credit card and download your PDF document instantly.

Student with book image

“Bought, downloaded, and aced it. It really can be that simple.”

Alisha Student

Working on your references?

Create accurate citations in APA, MLA and Harvard with our free citation generator.

Working on your references?

Frequently asked questions