Resolving Internal Conflicts – (Mechanisms and Contextual Influences)
Author(s) / Creator(s)
Kleiman, Tali
Abstract / Description
In this talk I will revisit two seminal psychological theories through the lens of the mechanistic properties of, and contextual influence on internal conflict resolution. I will first discuss Kurt Lewin’s Motivational Conflicts theory which distinguishes between approach-approach (AP-AP) and avoidance-avoidance (AV-AV) conflicts. I will present classic behavioral, mouse-tracking, and EEG evidence pertaining to three core questions: First, Why AP-AP and AV-AV conflicts differ (testing a force-fields mechanism)? Second, when do they differ (looking at contextual boundary conditions)? And third, whether they indeed differ (are they construed as different tasks)? I will then look into Bem’s Self Perception theory, which broadly posits that individuals learn about their preferences through observing their own behavior. Using a novel application of the mouse-tracking paradigm, I will show how tracking their own conflict resolution (choice) process affects individuals’ conflict markers and meta-cognitive inferences. I will conclude with implications for other fields of psychological research, and advocate for the importance of revisiting classic psychological theories using theoretical and empirical knowledge that we have accumulated through the years.
On August 7, 2024 Prof. Dr. Tali Kleiman from the Department of Psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem spoke at the ZPID Colloquium.
Am 7. August 2024 sprach Prof. Dr. Tali Kleiman vom Department of Psychology der Hebrew University of Jerusalem im ZPID-Kolloquium.
Persistent Identifier
Date of first publication
2024-09-06
Is part of
ZPID-Kolloquium 2024, Trier, Germany
Publisher
ZPID (Leibniz Institute for Psychology)
Citation
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Kleiman_Trier Aug 2024.pptxUnknown - 15.6MBMD5: afd9e893a4995eb6cb31b64ec7771288
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Kleiman_Trier Aug 2024.pdfAdobe PDF - 5.14MBMD5: 6414269f0bc669f850a28867c28065e1
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Demo video for slide no. 43_Kleiman Study1- Observable-1.webmUnknown - 242.97KBMD5: d6dbeb3193b845097cfc83d2f800c3abDescription: Demo video for slide no. 43
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There are no other versions of this object.
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Author(s) / Creator(s)Kleiman, Tali
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PsychArchives acquisition timestamp2024-09-06T07:44:36Z
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Made available on2024-09-06T07:44:36Z
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Date of first publication2024-09-06
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Abstract / DescriptionIn this talk I will revisit two seminal psychological theories through the lens of the mechanistic properties of, and contextual influence on internal conflict resolution. I will first discuss Kurt Lewin’s Motivational Conflicts theory which distinguishes between approach-approach (AP-AP) and avoidance-avoidance (AV-AV) conflicts. I will present classic behavioral, mouse-tracking, and EEG evidence pertaining to three core questions: First, Why AP-AP and AV-AV conflicts differ (testing a force-fields mechanism)? Second, when do they differ (looking at contextual boundary conditions)? And third, whether they indeed differ (are they construed as different tasks)? I will then look into Bem’s Self Perception theory, which broadly posits that individuals learn about their preferences through observing their own behavior. Using a novel application of the mouse-tracking paradigm, I will show how tracking their own conflict resolution (choice) process affects individuals’ conflict markers and meta-cognitive inferences. I will conclude with implications for other fields of psychological research, and advocate for the importance of revisiting classic psychological theories using theoretical and empirical knowledge that we have accumulated through the years.en
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Abstract / DescriptionOn August 7, 2024 Prof. Dr. Tali Kleiman from the Department of Psychology at the Hebrew University of Jerusalem spoke at the ZPID Colloquium.en
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Abstract / DescriptionAm 7. August 2024 sprach Prof. Dr. Tali Kleiman vom Department of Psychology der Hebrew University of Jerusalem im ZPID-Kolloquium.de_DE
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Publication statusunknown
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Review statusunknown
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Persistent Identifierhttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/10850
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Persistent Identifierhttps://doi.org/10.23668/psycharchives.15421
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Language of contenteng
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PublisherZPID (Leibniz Institute for Psychology)
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Is part ofZPID-Kolloquium 2024, Trier, Germany
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Is related tohttps://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12034/11586
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Dewey Decimal Classification number(s)150
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TitleResolving Internal Conflicts – (Mechanisms and Contextual Influences)en
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DRO typeconferenceObject
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Visible tag(s)ZPID Conferences and Workshops