Fwd: Recordatória | André Mata @ Seminário de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Psicologia Social (SEPG) | Novembro 15, 2024 | 14:30 – 16:00

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Rui Costa Lopes

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Nov 11, 2024, 7:09:14 AM11/11/24
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Rui Costa Lopes

Senior Research Fellow @ICS - University of Lisbon
Guest Lecturer @FP - University of Lisbon


Início da mensagem reencaminhada:

De: Ana Filipa Albuquerque Madeira <filipa....@ics.ulisboa.pt>
Assunto: Recordatória | André Mata @ Seminário de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Psicologia Social (SEPG) | Novembro 15, 2024 | 14:30 – 16:00
Data: 11 de novembro de 2024 às 12:05:45 WET
Para: Ana Filipa Albuquerque Madeira <filipa....@ics.ulisboa.pt>

(Scroll down for English version)

Estimados colegas,

Recordamos que esta sexta-feira teremos o primeiro Seminário de Estudos Pós-Graduados em Psicologia Social deste ano letivo.

Data: 15 de novembro de 2024
Hora: 14h30 - 16:00
Formato: Híbrido 

Local: Sala 1, ICS-ULisboa
Orador: André Mata
Professor Assistente, Faculdade de Psicologia da Universidade de Lisboa

Título: Why we tend to see other people as biased: Pluralistic ignorance in reasoning, morality, and prejudice
AbstractResearch on pluralistic ignorance and comparative biases shows that people often believe others are more biased than they are. In this talk, a socio-metacognitive model is presented that tries to make sense of this. First, some evidence shall be presented to support this model, coming from studies on reasoning, judgment and decision-making. The model also explains pluralistic ignorance about prejudice: Although most people claim they are not prejudiced, they believe others are. This is due to the internal conflict between implicit, often prejudiced, reactions and explicit, controlled attitudes. When people suppress their prejudiced responses, they infer that others may not do the same, projecting their own implicit biases onto others. Studies confirm that when people experience greater conflict between implicit and explicit attitudes, they believe others hold more negative views than they do, revealing how implicit biases shape perceptions of others’ attitudes.

 

Bio: André Mata is an Assistant Professor at the University of Lisbon, where he specializes in social cognition, judgment and decision making, metacognition, and morality. He earned his PhD in Social and Organizational Psychology from ISCTE-IUL and Indiana University and has held postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Heidelberg and Indiana University. André Mata leads funded research projects on topics such as pluralistic ignorance and prejudice, and has received awards including the European Social Cognition Network Best Paper Award and the Scientific Award from the University of Lisbon.


Este seminário  pode ser particularmente interessante para grupos de investigação, colegas e alunos, por isso, contamos com a sua colaboração na divulgação junto daqueles que possam estar interessados.

Agradecemos antecipadamente e esperamos contar consigo!

****************************************************************************************************************

Dear Colleagues,

This is a kind reminder about the first Post-graduate Seminar in Social Psychology for this academic year. We look forward to your participation.

Seminar Details:

Date: November 15, 2024
Time: 14:30 – 16:00
Format: Hybrid Seminar

Location:
In-Person: Sala 1, at ICS-ULisboa.

 
Speaker: André Mata, Ph.D Assistant Professor, Faculdade de Psicologia, Universidade de Lisboa

 

 

Abstract: Research on pluralistic ignorance and comparative biases shows that people often believe others are more biased than they are. In this talk, a socio-metacognitive model is presented that tries to make sense of this. First, some evidence shall be presented to support this model, coming from studies on reasoning, judgment and decision-making. The model also explains pluralistic ignorance about prejudice: Although most people claim they are not prejudiced, they believe others are. This is due to the internal conflict between implicit, often prejudiced, reactions and explicit, controlled attitudes. When people suppress their prejudiced responses, they infer that others may not do the same, projecting their own implicit biases onto others. Studies confirm that when people experience greater conflict between implicit and explicit attitudes, they believe others hold more negative views than they do, revealing how implicit biases shape perceptions of others’ attitudes.

 

Bio: André Mata is an Assistant Professor at the University of Lisbon, where he specializes in social cognition, judgment and decision making, metacognition, and morality. He earned his PhD in Social and Organizational Psychology from ISCTE-IUL and Indiana University and has held postdoctoral fellowships at the University of Heidelberg and Indiana University. André Mata leads funded research projects on topics such as pluralistic ignorance and prejudice, and has received awards including the European Social Cognition Network Best Paper Award and the Scientific Award from the University of Lisbon.


This seminar may particularly interest research groups, colleagues, and students. We would greatly appreciate your help in sharing this e-mail with those who might be interested.

 

 
Yours sincerely,

Ana Filipa Madeira
-------------------------------------------------
Researcher at the Institute of Social Sciences, University of Lisbon
Invited Lecturer at Faculty of Psychology - University of Lisbon




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