Consequences Of The Internet For Self And Society: Is Social Life Being Transformed?
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分類: 图书,进口原版,Computers & Internet(计算机与网络),
品牌: Katelyn Y. A. McKennaJohn Bargh
基本信息出版社:Wiley-Blackwell; Volume 58, Number 1, 2002 (2002年3月15日)丛书名:Journal of Social Issues平装:242页正文语种:英语ISBN:1405100788条形码:9781405100786商品尺寸:23.2 x 15.6 x 1.1 cm商品重量:290 gASIN:1405100788商品描述内容简介The Internet is becoming a primary means of interpersonal communication, and with this comes implications for many aspects of social life. This book examines these from a variety of perspectives: psychological well-being, interpersonal relationships, social identity, group conflict, negotiation and bargaining, community involvement, and the development of democratic institutions. The authors present quantitative as well as qualitative methodological approaches, along with analyses reflecting the complexities of the 'Human-Internet interaction'.
Examines the implications of the internet as the primary means of personal communicationPulls together current research by well established researchers on the social consequences of the Internet, from a variety of levels of analysis, producing a holographic, 3-D look at the Internet's impact on psychological functioning of the individual as well as on the social fabricPerspectives of this examination include: psychological well-being, interpersonal relationships, social identity, group conflict, negotiation and bargaining,
community involvement, and the development of democratic institutions作者简介Katelyn Y. A. McKennaholds a PhD and is a Research Professor in the Department of Psychology, New York University. She received her B.A. with honors from Tulane University, and her PhD from Ohio University in 1998. Her research interests focus on relationship cognition and social identity processes, especially as these unfold over the Internet.
John A. Barghholds a PhD and is a Professor in the Department of Psychology, New York University. He received his Bachelors summa cum laude from University of Illinois in 1977, Ph.D. in Social Psychology from University of Michigan in 1981. Since 1981 he has been on the faculty of the New York University Psychology Department. He is the editor of four books, includingUnintended Thought(Guilford, 1989),Psychology of Action(Guilford, 1996),The Use and Abuse of Power(Psychology Press, 2001), andUnraveling the Complexities of Social Life: A Festschrift in Honor of Robert B. Zajonc(American Psychological Association, 2001). His research focuses mainly on the role of nonconscious influences on emotion, judgment, and social behavior. He is a recipient of the Early Career Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association and a John Simon Guggenheim Memorial Foundation fellowship.