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Human agency in social cognitive theory.
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Citations
53
References
1989
Year
Behavioral Decision MakingSocial PsychologyAutonomySocial SciencesPsychologySocial AgencyTriadic Reciprocal CausationPersonal AgencyReciprocal DeterminismVoluntary ControlSocial IdentityCognitive ScienceAgency (Social Cognitive Psychology)Self-awarenessSocial Identity TheorySocial CognitionHierarchical StructureCollective IntentionalitySocial BehaviorAttribution TheorySocial Cognitive TheoryArts
The present article examines the nature and function of human agency within the conceptual model of triadic reciprocal causation. In analyzing the operation of human agency in this interactional causal structure, social cognitive theory accords a central role to cognitive, vicarious, self-reflective, and self-regulatory processes. The issues addressed concern the psychological mechanisms through which personal agency is exercised, the hierarchical structure of self-regulatory systems, eschewal of the dichotomous construal of self as agent and self as object, and the properties of a nondualistic but nonreductional conception of human agency. The relation of agent causality to the fundamental issues of freedom and determinism is also analyzed.
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