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Socially shared cognition, affect and behavior: A review and integration
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Thompson, L. & Fine, G. (1999). Socially shared cognition, affect and behavior:
A review and integration. Personality and Social Psychology Review, 3
(4), 278-302.
Abstract
In this article, we review four classes of models of socially-shared cognition and
behavior: supra-individual models, information-processing models, communication models,
and social interaction models. Our review draws upon research and theory in social
psychology, sociology, and organization behavior. We conclude that these innovative
perspectives on socially-shared behavior represent a new approach to the study of groups
and are distinct from traditional models of the group mind and crowd behavior. The key
processes implicated in these models focus on the potency of immediate interaction,
reciprocal influence processes between individuals and groups, goal-directed behavior,
negotiated processing of information and ideas, and the maintenance and enhancement of
social identity. This approach to socially-shared understanding is not antagonistic toward
the analysis of individual-level processes but rather maintains that individual-level
processes are necessary, but not sufficient, to build a social psychology of shared
understanding.
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