Wikipedia:Wiki Ed/University of Toronto/PSY326 Social Cognition (Fall 2025): Difference between revisions

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{{student table row|PsychStudent12|[[Dispositional attribution]]|}}

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{{student table row|UnicornHusky|[[Impression formation]], [[Construal]], [[Lie detection]]|}}

{{student table row|UnicornHusky|[[Impression formation]], [[Construal]], [[Lie detection]]|}}

{{student table row|Yhuan23|[[Attitude change]], [[Attribution bias]], [[Social comparison theory]]|}}

{{student table row|Yhuan23|[[Attitude change]], [[ ]], [[ ]]|}}

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Revision as of 16:32, 10 November 2025

Course name
PSY326 Social Cognition
Institution
University of Toronto
Instructor
Dr.Patricia.Y.Sanchez
Wikipedia Expert
Ian (Wiki Ed)
Subject
Psychology
Course dates
2025-09-08 00:00:00 UTC – 2025-12-02 23:59:59 UTC
Approximate number of student editors
50

An examination of theory and research on how we make sense of ourselves and our social world. Topics covered include the self, decision-making, attitudes, attribution processes and impression formation, and social categorization. Students will be working on editing existing articles related to the content covered in this course.

Student Assigned Reviewing
SippinJoe
Vi252
PsychStudent12 Dispositional attribution
UnicornHusky Impression formation, Construal, Lie detection
Yhuan23 Attitude change, Social comparison theory, Affect (psychology)
PsychoticWombat
Beierlu
Sunghyundvd Self-perception theory, Implicit-association test, Fundamental attribution error
RedLoudTurtle
SporadicHedgehog
KyuuALA
Aria2910 Counterfactual thinking, Actor–observer asymmetry
CognitionMission
RedHappyTurtle Self-concept, Cognitive misers, Availability heuristic
Socially Cognizant Social comparison theory, Self-esteem functions, Masking (behavior)
Bluehighlighter1
Khasneikos
Pearlypeaches False consensus effect, Spotlight effect, Impression management
326p326 Serial-position effect, Peak–end rule, Implicit personality theory
Christopheroon Impression formation
2virpri7

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