Concepedia

Concept

agency (social cognitive psychology)

Parents

1K

Publications

149.3K

Citations

1.6K

Authors

687

Institutions

About

Agency (social cognitive psychology) is the capacity of individuals to influence their own functioning and the course of events by intentionally acting on their environment and themselves. Within the field of social cognitive psychology, this concept emphasizes the cognitive processes underlying human behavior, specifically focusing on the ability to form intentions, plan future actions (forethought), regulate one's motivation and behavior (self-reactiveness), and evaluate one's effectiveness (self-reflectiveness). It represents a core construct for understanding goal-directed behavior, self-regulation, and personal causation, distinguishing the social cognitive perspective on human behavior from deterministic models and situating it within the broader study of social cognition.

Top Authors

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

AB

Stanford University

PH

University College London

MY

Liverpool John Moores University

AE

Friedrich-Alexander-Universität Erlangen-Nürnberg

BW

Uniwersytet SWPS

Top Institutions

Rankings shown are based on concept H-Index.

Stanford University

Stanford, United States

University College London

London, United Kingdom

Utrecht University

Utrecht, The Netherlands

Columbia University

New York, United States