
Social Representations and Individual Representations: What is the Difference? And Why are Individual Representations Similar?
Author(s) -
Saadi Lahlou
Publication year - 2021
Publication title -
vestnik rossijskogo universiteta družby narodov. seriâ psihologiâ i pedagogika
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2313-1705
pISSN - 2313-1683
DOI - 10.22363/2313-1683-2021-18-2-315-331
Subject(s) - intension , representation (politics) , ambiguity , object (grammar) , set (abstract data type) , construct (python library) , social representation , extension (predicate logic) , relation (database) , population , mathematics , computer science , psychology , epistemology , social psychology , artificial intelligence , sociology , philosophy , demography , database , politics , political science , law , programming language
This paper clarifies a long-standing ambiguity in the notion of social representations; it provides a clear operational definition of the relation between social representation and individual representation. This definition, grounded in the theory of sets, supports most current empirical investigation methods of social representations. In short, a social representation of an object in a population is the mathematical set of individual representations the individuals of that population have for this object. The components of the representation are the components used to describe this set, in intension in the mathematical sense of the term (in contrast with a definition in extension). Statistical techniques, as well as content analysis techniques, can construct such components by comparison of individual representations to extract commonalities, and that is what classic investigations on social representations indeed do. We then answer the question: how come that, in a given culture, individuals hold individual representations that are so similar to one another?