Chapter 7
... 55. When Werner and his colleagues (2002) placed signs on a campus with a two-sided message that not only stated the importance of recycling but also acknowledged the inconvenience of it, recycling A. increased to 80%. B. increased to 25%. C. decreased by 40%. D. decreased by 90%. ...
... 55. When Werner and his colleagues (2002) placed signs on a campus with a two-sided message that not only stated the importance of recycling but also acknowledged the inconvenience of it, recycling A. increased to 80%. B. increased to 25%. C. decreased by 40%. D. decreased by 90%. ...
A Psychology of Immigration
... This presentation of attitudinal positions is based on the assumption that immigrant groups and their individual members have the freedom to choose how they want to engage in intercultural relations. This, of course, is not always the case (Berry, 1974). When the receiving society enforces certain k ...
... This presentation of attitudinal positions is based on the assumption that immigrant groups and their individual members have the freedom to choose how they want to engage in intercultural relations. This, of course, is not always the case (Berry, 1974). When the receiving society enforces certain k ...
Journal of Contemporary Ethnography
... WHY APPLY THEORY TO THE PROBLEM OF ACCESS? One might ask what difference it makes whether we can specify how researcher-participant relationships take shape and influence data collection. Is it not enough to know that some researchers gain access to data through interpersonal relationships with part ...
... WHY APPLY THEORY TO THE PROBLEM OF ACCESS? One might ask what difference it makes whether we can specify how researcher-participant relationships take shape and influence data collection. Is it not enough to know that some researchers gain access to data through interpersonal relationships with part ...
discovering the invisible internet
... ritual knowledge? How do the communicative structures of the Internet change the transmission of ritual knowledge and ritual competence? Are Internet users in fact freed from all traditional barriers such as age, gender, education, and other similar personal qualifications, so that they now have equ ...
... ritual knowledge? How do the communicative structures of the Internet change the transmission of ritual knowledge and ritual competence? Are Internet users in fact freed from all traditional barriers such as age, gender, education, and other similar personal qualifications, so that they now have equ ...
Exemplification Theory and Cognitive Heuristics
... that the input is attended to and comprehended in certain ways (Entman, 1993). For example, if the media are the only source from which people acquire information about a particular sport, fans will only learn what fits into the frame employed by the media. On a more local scale, even a minor change ...
... that the input is attended to and comprehended in certain ways (Entman, 1993). For example, if the media are the only source from which people acquire information about a particular sport, fans will only learn what fits into the frame employed by the media. On a more local scale, even a minor change ...
attitudes
... Friendship groups and wider peer groups strongly influence an individuals attitude. An acceptance of the groups attitudes towards an attitude object is a way of gaining membership of a group and gaining a sense of identity. A team that has a shared set of attitudes will show a high degree of cohesio ...
... Friendship groups and wider peer groups strongly influence an individuals attitude. An acceptance of the groups attitudes towards an attitude object is a way of gaining membership of a group and gaining a sense of identity. A team that has a shared set of attitudes will show a high degree of cohesio ...
Chap 02 lecture notes
... • Four theories of prejudice o Scapegoating • occurs when an individual (group) projects and blames their own inadequacies or problems onto another group o Criticisms of Scapegoat Theory • Fails to explain why one group is used as a scapegoat and not another • Fails to explain why two individuals wh ...
... • Four theories of prejudice o Scapegoating • occurs when an individual (group) projects and blames their own inadequacies or problems onto another group o Criticisms of Scapegoat Theory • Fails to explain why one group is used as a scapegoat and not another • Fails to explain why two individuals wh ...
Burleson, 2003 - Gender differences in emotional support
... support play a similar role in the personal relationships of both men and women and those representing different ethnicities and nationalities? Is what counts as effective, sensitive, emotional support the same for everyone? And when seeking to provide emotional support, do members of distinct socia ...
... support play a similar role in the personal relationships of both men and women and those representing different ethnicities and nationalities? Is what counts as effective, sensitive, emotional support the same for everyone? And when seeking to provide emotional support, do members of distinct socia ...
B&B 10e ppt
... • What are your thoughts? – What are differences between Jones and Davis’ correspondent inference theory and Kelley’s causal attribution theory? – What are reasons why the fundamental attribution error, the actor-observer effect, and the selfserving bias occur? – What are explanations for the cultur ...
... • What are your thoughts? – What are differences between Jones and Davis’ correspondent inference theory and Kelley’s causal attribution theory? – What are reasons why the fundamental attribution error, the actor-observer effect, and the selfserving bias occur? – What are explanations for the cultur ...
Human Communication - University of Alabama at Birmingham
... speed dating event when participants are encouraged to decide immediately whether or not to continue the interaction in the future. Scholars have continued to support the possibility that relational closeness may be determined during initial interactions (Berg & Clark, 1986; Duck, 1995). Research on ...
... speed dating event when participants are encouraged to decide immediately whether or not to continue the interaction in the future. Scholars have continued to support the possibility that relational closeness may be determined during initial interactions (Berg & Clark, 1986; Duck, 1995). Research on ...
Redalyc.Approaches to the study of individual–landscape
... occurs inside the person and is carried out by codifying a message which, in our case, is the very thought. Intrapersonal communication occurs inside each communicator and takes different forms, such as self-talk, inner speech, imagined interaction, daydreaming, listening, and even emotional stockta ...
... occurs inside the person and is carried out by codifying a message which, in our case, is the very thought. Intrapersonal communication occurs inside each communicator and takes different forms, such as self-talk, inner speech, imagined interaction, daydreaming, listening, and even emotional stockta ...
Dishonesty Explained What - Duke People
... How can we explain this apparent gap between one’s dishonest behavior and one’s desire to maintain a positive moral self-image? Over the last decade, Monin and his colleagues (among other scholars) have explored this question and have argued that one’s own morality is dynamic and malleable. Monin su ...
... How can we explain this apparent gap between one’s dishonest behavior and one’s desire to maintain a positive moral self-image? Over the last decade, Monin and his colleagues (among other scholars) have explored this question and have argued that one’s own morality is dynamic and malleable. Monin su ...
The Definition of Social Pedagogy in the Context of Socio
... A generation level, separating grandparents from parents from children A social class level, associated with educational opportunities and with a person’s occupation or profession For those who are employed, organizational, departmental, and/or corporate levels according to the way employees have be ...
... A generation level, separating grandparents from parents from children A social class level, associated with educational opportunities and with a person’s occupation or profession For those who are employed, organizational, departmental, and/or corporate levels according to the way employees have be ...
Personality Impressions and Nonverbal Behavior in YouTube
... psychology (Knapp and Hall 2005) and social computing (Pentland 2008; Gatica-Perez 2009). In social media, a recent study on YouTube suggested that, in addition to the content, nonverbal behavior plays a role in conversational vlogs, in ways that might bear similarities with face to face interaction ...
... psychology (Knapp and Hall 2005) and social computing (Pentland 2008; Gatica-Perez 2009). In social media, a recent study on YouTube suggested that, in addition to the content, nonverbal behavior plays a role in conversational vlogs, in ways that might bear similarities with face to face interaction ...
research: in a methodological frame
... Theorizing is an integral part of any research. Selection of any aspect of life for a research and explanation of that particular aspect is based on the theoretical orientation. Infinite numbers of valuable data have seen and will gather in a research project; it is the researchers’ idea what they c ...
... Theorizing is an integral part of any research. Selection of any aspect of life for a research and explanation of that particular aspect is based on the theoretical orientation. Infinite numbers of valuable data have seen and will gather in a research project; it is the researchers’ idea what they c ...
Construction of Values in Online and Offline Dating Discourses
... that demonstrated other people, groups, or interests. Individuals often include personal tastes to draw links between similarities and differences to others (Liu, 2007). These rhetorical choices, and others, raise the stakes in regards to online daters’ desire to ‘‘present themselves as unique indiv ...
... that demonstrated other people, groups, or interests. Individuals often include personal tastes to draw links between similarities and differences to others (Liu, 2007). These rhetorical choices, and others, raise the stakes in regards to online daters’ desire to ‘‘present themselves as unique indiv ...
The Irony of Harmony: Intergroup Contact Can Produce False
... ences. Following the encounter, participants reported their attitudes toward the out-group and attention to group inequality. The advantaged-group members then allocated the credits, and members of the disadvantaged group indicated their expectations of out-group fairness and estimated the number of ...
... ences. Following the encounter, participants reported their attitudes toward the out-group and attention to group inequality. The advantaged-group members then allocated the credits, and members of the disadvantaged group indicated their expectations of out-group fairness and estimated the number of ...
The Interpretive Tradition in Social Science
... than human subjects, and important things like human emotion do not rely upon the judgment of things that physical scientists study (Martineau 1989:18-19). The most important methodological tool in studying human society, then, is what Martineau called “sympathy,” which will help the social research ...
... than human subjects, and important things like human emotion do not rely upon the judgment of things that physical scientists study (Martineau 1989:18-19). The most important methodological tool in studying human society, then, is what Martineau called “sympathy,” which will help the social research ...
Stereotyping, Prejudice and Discrimination
... •Cultural Discrimination—Within a culture, one group retains the power to define cultural values as well as the form those values should take •Maintaining dominance over other groups by rewarding those values that correspond to its views and punishing ...
... •Cultural Discrimination—Within a culture, one group retains the power to define cultural values as well as the form those values should take •Maintaining dominance over other groups by rewarding those values that correspond to its views and punishing ...
Redalyc.Approaches to the study of individual
... occurs inside the person and is carried out by codifying a message which, in our case, is the very thought. Intrapersonal communication occurs inside each communicator and takes different forms, such as self-talk, inner speech, imagined interaction, daydreaming, listening, and even emotional stockta ...
... occurs inside the person and is carried out by codifying a message which, in our case, is the very thought. Intrapersonal communication occurs inside each communicator and takes different forms, such as self-talk, inner speech, imagined interaction, daydreaming, listening, and even emotional stockta ...
Full text of this article as
... 1994). In the case study discussed in this article, my being a close relative did not appear to inhibit my mother from discussing certain aspects of the past. Rather, she appeared quite willing to talk openly and candidly about her experiences, ensuring that the interviews were robust. Qualitative r ...
... 1994). In the case study discussed in this article, my being a close relative did not appear to inhibit my mother from discussing certain aspects of the past. Rather, she appeared quite willing to talk openly and candidly about her experiences, ensuring that the interviews were robust. Qualitative r ...
Human relationships google doc summary
... 22.5 % live 2 doors apart 16.2 % live 3 doors apart 10% live at the opposite end of the hall ...
... 22.5 % live 2 doors apart 16.2 % live 3 doors apart 10% live at the opposite end of the hall ...
CSCW 2014 - David Coyle
... clearly motivated by competition, analysis of semistructured interviews with participants shows that may low performing participants were demotivated by competition. However, it also became clear that some participants, in particular those performing at a mid-level, were using the leaderboard in an ...
... clearly motivated by competition, analysis of semistructured interviews with participants shows that may low performing participants were demotivated by competition. However, it also became clear that some participants, in particular those performing at a mid-level, were using the leaderboard in an ...
Value priorities, empathy and guilt in Finland, Bulgaria
... Open questions and future directions Choice of real-life dilemma to report: To what extent does the dilemma type reflect the cultural SR of morality (temptation & norms vs. loyalty & value conflict)? (Bulgaria: more social pressure than in Finland) – To what extent are people ”consistent” in thei ...
... Open questions and future directions Choice of real-life dilemma to report: To what extent does the dilemma type reflect the cultural SR of morality (temptation & norms vs. loyalty & value conflict)? (Bulgaria: more social pressure than in Finland) – To what extent are people ”consistent” in thei ...
How to Make Cognitive Illusions Disappear
... single event (i.e., that a particular answer is correct) is different from the relative frequency of correct answers one generates in the long run? The answer is “no.” It is in fact not a violation according to several interpretations of probability. Let us look first at the now dominant school of pro ...
... single event (i.e., that a particular answer is correct) is different from the relative frequency of correct answers one generates in the long run? The answer is “no.” It is in fact not a violation according to several interpretations of probability. Let us look first at the now dominant school of pro ...