The social psychology of cognitive repression

Behavioral and Brain Sciences 29 (5):518-519 (2006)
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Abstract

Erdelyi identifies cognitive and emotional motives for repression, but largely neglects social motivations. Yet social pressure to not know, and implicit needs to isolate awareness in order to protect relationships, are common motives. Social motives may even trump emotional motives; the most painful events are sometimes the most difficult to repress. Cognitive repression may be impacted by social information sharing.

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Citations of this work

Information-Based Autonomy vs. Oligarchy.Ron Houston - 2014 - Journal of Information Ethics 23 (1):12-41.

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