Abstract

Models postulating 2 distinct processing modes have been proposed in several topic areas within social and cognitive psychology. We advance a new conceptual model of the 2 processing modes. The structural basis of the new model is the idea, supported by psychological and neuropsychological evidence, that humans possess 2 memory systems. One system slowly learns general regularities, whereas the other can quickly form representations of unique or novel events. Associative retrieval or pattern completion in the slow-learning system elicited by a salient cue constitutes the effortless processing mode. The second processing mode is more conscious and effortful; it involves the intentional retrieval of explicit, symbolically represented rulesfrom either memory system and their use to guide processing. After presenting our model, we review existing dual-process models in several areas, emphasizing their similar assumptions of a quick, effortless processing mode that rests on well-learned prior associations and a second, more effortful processing mode that involves rule-based inferences and is employed only when people have both cognitive capacity and motivation. New insights and implications of the model for several topic areas are outlined.

Keywords

CognitionPsychologyCognitive psychologyAssociative propertyProcess (computing)Cognitive scienceSocial cognitionSalientDual (grammatical number)Information processingComputer scienceArtificial intelligence

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Publication Info

Year
2000
Type
article
Volume
4
Issue
2
Pages
108-131
Citations
1752
Access
Closed

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Cite This

Eliot R. Smith, Jamie DeCoster (2000). Dual-Process Models in Social and Cognitive Psychology: Conceptual Integration and Links to Underlying Memory Systems. Personality and Social Psychology Review , 4 (2) , 108-131. https://doi.org/10.1207/s15327957pspr0402_01

Identifiers

DOI
10.1207/s15327957pspr0402_01