This authoritative handbook reviews the state of the science of self-knowledge, a key emerging area in psychology. Leading investigators describe innovative theory and research that is shedding new light on how and how accurately people perceive their own traits, thoughts, feelings, behavior, and relationships. Coverage encompasses the behavioral, mental, biological, and social structures that underlie self-knowledge; approaches to studying self-beliefs in specific domains; and the motives and biases that influence accuracy. The volume explores the personal and societal benefits of self-knowledge and also considers possible ways to enhance it.
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5. Self-knowledge: from philosophy to neuroscience to psychology
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6. Blind spots to the self: limits in knowledge of mental contents and personal predispositions
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8. Self-knowledge: An individual-differences perspective
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12. Knowing our emotions: how do we know what we feel?
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15. Meta-accuracy: do we know how others see us?
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17. Affective forecasting: knowing how we will feel in the future
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19. Self conceptualization, self-knowledge, and regulatory scope: a construal level view
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20. Sitting at the nexus of epistemological traditions: narrative psychological perspectives on self-knowledge
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24. Strube from "out there" to "in here": implications of self-evaluation motives for self-knowledge
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