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- Hot_cognition abstract "Hot and cold cognition form a dichotomy within executive functioning. Executive functioning has long been considered as a domain general cognitive function, but there has been support for separation into \"hot\" affective aspects and \"cold\" cognitive aspects. It is recognized that executive functioning spans across a number of cognitive tasks including working memory, cognitive flexibility and reasoning in active goal pursuit. The distinction between hot and cool cognition implies that executive function may operate differently in different contexts. Hot and cold cognition have been applied to research in cognitive psychology, developmental psychology, clinical psychology, social psychology, neuropsychology, and other areas of study in psychology.Hot cognition is a hypothesis on motivated reasoning in which a person's thinking is influenced by their emotional state. Put simply, hot cognition is cognition coloured by emotion. It is proposed to be associated with cognitive and physiological arousal, in which a person is more responsive to environmental factors. As it is automatic, rapid and led by emotion, hot cognition may consequently cause biased and low-quality decision making. Hot cognition may arise, with varying degrees of strength, in politics, religion, and other sociopolitical contexts because of moral issues, which are inevitably tied to emotion. Hot cognition was initially proposed in 1963 by Robert P. Abelson. This idea became popular in the 1960s and the 1970s. An example of a biased decision caused by hot cognition would be a juror disregarding evidence because of an attraction to the defendant.".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageID "10069680".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageLength "13197".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageOutDegree "15".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageRevisionID "662297712".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Autobiographical_memory.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Category:Cognition.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Clinical_psychology.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_flexibility.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Cognitive_psychology.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Cold_cognition.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Developmental_psychology.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Executive_functions.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Iowa_gambling_task.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Motivated_reasoning.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Neuropsychology.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Prefrontal_cortex.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Reason.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Social_psychology.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLink Working_memory.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLinkText "'hot cognition'".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLinkText "Hot cognition".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageWikiLinkText "hot cognition".
- Hot_cognition wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Merge_from.
- Hot_cognition wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Hot_cognition subject Category:Cognition.
- Hot_cognition comment "Hot and cold cognition form a dichotomy within executive functioning. Executive functioning has long been considered as a domain general cognitive function, but there has been support for separation into \"hot\" affective aspects and \"cold\" cognitive aspects. It is recognized that executive functioning spans across a number of cognitive tasks including working memory, cognitive flexibility and reasoning in active goal pursuit.".
- Hot_cognition label "Hot cognition".
- Hot_cognition sameAs Q5910677.
- Hot_cognition sameAs m.02q0sx9.
- Hot_cognition sameAs Q5910677.
- Hot_cognition wasDerivedFrom Hot_cognition?oldid=662297712.
- Hot_cognition isPrimaryTopicOf Hot_cognition.