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Attitude Research: Between Ockham`s Razor and the Fundamental
Attitude Research: Between Ockham`s Razor and the Fundamental

... an important role to previously formed evaluative judgments, although such a role is not needed to make construal models work. For the purpose of making their argument, Schwarz and Bohner (2001) began with the extreme assumption that people can never recall previously formed judgments and always hav ...
module 1 The Story of Psychology Module Preview Psychology
module 1 The Story of Psychology Module Preview Psychology

... study of observable behavior. As the science of behavior and mental processes, psychology has its origins in many disciplines and countries. Psychology’s most enduring issue concerns the relative contributions of biology and experience. Today, psychologists recognize that nurture works on what natur ...
Step Up To: Psychology
Step Up To: Psychology

... behavior, if you want to collect for a charity, the person most likely to give would be: • A) Joe, who was just told by his boss that he is receiving a promotion • B) Mary, who has $100 in her pocket • C) David, who just lost a tennis match • D) Sarah, who has never given before ...
289317Bolt_MM7e_IRM53.1-10
289317Bolt_MM7e_IRM53.1-10

... Distribute two copies of Handout 53–1 to each student. Have students complete the scale twice, once for a former teacher (or some prominent public figure, say, Rush Limbaugh) and once for themselves. After they have completed both forms, have them count the number of times they circled “depends on t ...
Andrew Luttrell: Home
Andrew Luttrell: Home

... Luttrell, A., & Petty, R. E. (2015). The role of perceived efficacy in willingness to intervene in single (vs. multi-) country conflicts. Talk presented at the Midwestern Psychological Association, Chicago, IL. Luttrell, A., Briñol, P., & Petty, R. E. (2014). The effects of perceived bases of certai ...
Social Psychology Social Psychology
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AP Psychology
AP Psychology

... Social Psychology in the Real World Now that you have read about the important concepts in Social Psychology, it's time for you to apply what you've learned to your own real-life experiences. By observing your friends and family members over the next few days, you will have the opportunity to reflec ...
Joe Milillo Slides2
Joe Milillo Slides2

... Evolutionary Psychology research confirms that differences in attitudes toward sex and mate-choosing exist. A meta-analysis on gender differences studies between 1993 and 2007 found that most of these were small with the exceptions being pornography use and causal sex. Nations and ethnic groups that ...
Psychology 2013 Updated 8/04/2013 Mr. Scott Johnson 2013
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... a. All students are expected to participate in class discussions. b. There will be no sleeping in class. Sleep at night! c. Follow the rules of common courtesy. Do the right thing. E. Assignments: a. Homework is due at the beginning of class so do not plan on finishing it during class. Students that ...
Social psychology
Social psychology

... by providing someone to blame. After 9/11 many people lashed out against innocent Arab-Americans. This is called scapegoating. ...
Social Behavioral Bonus: Lying for Science
Social Behavioral Bonus: Lying for Science

... remained largely oblivious to the high-minded gamesmanship of psychologists, sociologists and clinical researchers. Time and again, the promise of knowledge that might benefit the public at large provided experimenters with the moral justification for all kinds of ‘procedural deception’. Half of al ...
More details - EDI Conference
More details - EDI Conference

... intentional biases (e.g., gender, race, ethnic, age, disability, sexual orientation, etc.) are developed within the workplace. Of particular interest is the degree to which an individual’s connections in the organization influence the development of such biases, as well as potential positive and neg ...
OL Chapter 14
OL Chapter 14

... actions or other thoughts. To relieve this tension, we may change our beliefs and attitudes to fit our choices – If we have chosen to support a party or president, we will change our understandings to fit the ...
Introducing Social Psychology
Introducing Social Psychology

... » This may not be important, it may be more important to have experimental realism (degree to which an experiment absorbs and involves its participants) – Deception: when participants are misinformed or misled about the study’s purpose or methods – Demand Characteristics: cues in an experiment that ...
Chapter 12 Power Point: Social Psychology
Chapter 12 Power Point: Social Psychology

... competitive games and other conflicts. Before long, a full-scale riot was in progress and the researchers had to work hard at mediation to defuse the situation. Example: A common situation is where jobs are scarce and an established group blames immigrants for ‘taking the food out of our children's’ ...
Chapter 1: Introducing Psychology
Chapter 1: Introducing Psychology

... emphasizes the importance of thoughts and other mental processes; focuses on how people take in, mentally represent, and store information; how they perceive and process info; and how cognitive processes are related to observable behavior ...
ansc 510: communication, values, attitudes and behavior
ansc 510: communication, values, attitudes and behavior

... always overlap with that of the text, attendance is crucial. Everyone is allowed one unexplained absence per term. However, if you are absent more than once you must make an appointment to see me or risk losing credit for the course. 2. Reading assignments — The lectures presume you have done the as ...
Social Psychology
Social Psychology

... Welcome to Psych 512. Social psychology is the scientific study of individual behavior as a function of (social) context. Social psychologists are interested the meaning people make of their experiences and the impact of contexts on thinking, feeling, and action as measured by self-report, overt beh ...
Lecture 20 Social Psychology
Lecture 20 Social Psychology

... Genovese was brutally murdered and raped in New York City. She was attacked at about 3 a.m. in a courtyard surrounded by apartment buildings. It took approximately 30 minutes to kill Genovese. Thirty-eight neighbors watched the gory scene from their windows and heard Genovese's screams. No one helpe ...
Chapter 8
Chapter 8

... The problem with the contact hypothesis is that a) it is difficult to establish contact between different groups b) certain optimal conditions of contact should be met c) participants often do not generalise positive attitudes to other situations d) both b and c above ...
443254MyersMod_LG_53
443254MyersMod_LG_53

... MODULE 53 PREVIEW Social psychology is the scientific study of how people think about, influence, and relate to one another. In thinking about others’ behavior and its possible causes, we tend to underestimate the influence of the situation, thus committing the fundamental attribution error. Our att ...
WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY
WHAT IS PSYCHOLOGY

... Of all the social sciences, psychology relies more heavily on laboratory experiments and observations. At the same time, it is the most personal of all the social sciences, focusing more than the others on the individual and his or her well-being. Psychology also makes more use of biological informa ...
The Fan-Athlete Relationship - Association for Applied Sport
The Fan-Athlete Relationship - Association for Applied Sport

... the psychology of sport spectators since the mid 1980s, with a particular interest in fan identification (i.e., a fan’s psychological connection to a team), spectator violence, and the actions of parents as spectators at youth sporting events. A Professor of Psychology at Murray State, Wann works wi ...
MyersExpPsych7e_IM_Module 43 garber edits
MyersExpPsych7e_IM_Module 43 garber edits

... To relieve ourselves of this tension we bring our attitudes closer to our actions (Festinger, 1957). ...
IB PSYCHOLOGY
IB PSYCHOLOGY

... Discuss the key factors in persuasion. Describe Asch’s work on conformity. Describe Milgram’s obedience research. Discuss the dynamics of group behavior in terms of productivity, decisionmaking, and the bystander effect. Relate principles attitude formation to prejudice. ...
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Shelley E. Taylor

Shelley Elizabeth Taylor (born 1946) is a distinguished professor of psychology at the University of California, Los Angeles. She received her Ph.D. from Yale University, and was formerly on the faculty at Harvard University. A prolific author of books and scholarly journal articles, Taylor has long been a leading figure in two subfields related to her primary discipline of social psychology: social cognition and health psychology. Her books include The Tending Instinct and Social Cognition, the latter by Susan Fiske and Shelley Taylor.Taylor's professional honors include the Distinguished Scientific Contribution Award from the American Psychological Association (APA; 1996), the William James Fellow Award from the Association for Psychological Science (APS; 2001), and the APA's Lifetime Achievement Award, which she received in August 2010. Taylor was inducted into the United States National Academy of Sciences in 2009.
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