Dual-Processing Accounts of Reasoning, Judgment, and Social Cognition 论文

2007Annual Review of Psychology引用 5003
Decision-Making and Behavioral EconomicsExperimental Behavioral Economics StudiesCognitive Science and Mapping

详细信息

发表期刊/会议
Annual Review of Psychology
发表日期
2007-12-21
发表年份
2007

关键词

Decision-Making and Behavioral EconomicsExperimental Behavioral Economics StudiesCognitive Science and Mapping

摘要

This article reviews a diverse set of proposals for dual processing in higher cognition within largely disconnected literatures in cognitive and social psychology. All these theories have in common the distinction between cognitive processes that are fast, automatic, and unconscious and those that are slow, deliberative, and conscious. A number of authors have recently suggested that there may be two architecturally (and evolutionarily) distinct cognitive systems underlying these dual-process accounts. However, it emerges that (a) there are multiple kinds of implicit processes described by different theorists and (b) not all of the proposed attributes of the two kinds of processing can be sensibly mapped on to two systems as currently conceived. It is suggested that while some dual-process theories are concerned with parallel competing processes involving explicit and implicit knowledge systems, others are concerned with the influence of preconscious processes that contextualize and shape deliberative reasoning and decision-making.

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