A social cognition approach to health psychology: Philosophical and methodological issues
- 1 February 1996
- journal article
- review article
- Published by Taylor & Francis in Psychology & Health
- Vol. 11 (2) , 223-241
- https://doi.org/10.1080/08870449608400254
Abstract
Health psychologists working within a “social cognition” framework routinely regard verbal reports as indices of cognitive/mental representations and behavioural dispositions. Social cognition developed within social psychology but the philosophy of science, theoretical assumptions and methodological practices which constitute it are not universally accepted by social psychologists. This paper explores the implications of debates about the validity of a social cognitive perspective for research practice in health psychology. The realist foundations of social cognition are contrasted with the social constructionist perspective underpinning many discourse analysis studies. It is argued that a realist view of potentially accurate verbal reports and an individual cognitive focus are essential to health psychology research. However, it is emphasized that culture-bound self-presentational processes operating in data-collection contexts necessitate methodologies capable of monitoring and controlling the impact of those contexts on the content of collected verbal reports. Various methodological approaches are discussed and illustrative studies are used to demonstrate how cognitive categorizations of verbal reports can be used to predict health outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 92 references indexed in Scilit:
- The interpretation of change in verbal reports: Implications for health psychologyPsychology & Health, 1996
- Demand characteristics and research into drug usePsychology & Health, 1996
- How confidently can we infer health beliefs from questionnaire responses?Psychology & Health, 1996
- Making public the private: Possible effects of expressing somatic experiencePsychology & Health, 1996
- Modelling and modifying young heterosexuals' HIV-preventive behaviour; a review of theories, findings and educational implicationsPatient Education and Counseling, 1994
- Socio-economic health inequalities: Their origins and implicationsPsychology & Health, 1993
- Towards a psychology of caring*British Journal of Clinical Psychology, 1990
- Discourse: Definitions and contradictionsPhilosophical Psychology, 1990
- Effects of envisioning future activities on self-efficacy judgments and motivation: An availability heuristic interpretationCognitive Therapy and Research, 1989
- Attributional retraining: A review.Psychological Bulletin, 1985