![General Psychology Notes - Social Psychology](http://s1.studyres.com/store/data/002260481_1-53ec6bc404ddc5bfb882f3a366bc36dd-300x300.png)
General Psychology Notes - Social Psychology
... 2. Emotional or affective component - is the judgment (like or dislike) 3. Behavioral component - way you act based on your beliefs and emotions 4. Seek consistency between what we believe, how we feel, and what we do. B. Forming Attitudes 1. Social Learning (modeling) - adults show children what to ...
... 2. Emotional or affective component - is the judgment (like or dislike) 3. Behavioral component - way you act based on your beliefs and emotions 4. Seek consistency between what we believe, how we feel, and what we do. B. Forming Attitudes 1. Social Learning (modeling) - adults show children what to ...
Writing In Third Person Helps Stressed People Understand Their
... about their friend, using “he” or “she.” The researchers found that writing about a friend eliminated any emotional bias that came with a cheating partner. Participants were able to rationalize the situation because their own feelings toward the situation were detached. “These results are the first ...
... about their friend, using “he” or “she.” The researchers found that writing about a friend eliminated any emotional bias that came with a cheating partner. Participants were able to rationalize the situation because their own feelings toward the situation were detached. “These results are the first ...
Questions to Consider
... • The tendency to overestimate the influence of internal factors when attributing others’ behavior while underestimating situational factors • People tend to explain the actions of others based on what kind of person they are rather than looking for outside causes such as social influences or situat ...
... • The tendency to overestimate the influence of internal factors when attributing others’ behavior while underestimating situational factors • People tend to explain the actions of others based on what kind of person they are rather than looking for outside causes such as social influences or situat ...
0 AP PSI Cheat sheet
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority ...
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority ...
SOCIOLOGY CHAPTER 4
... behavior, but also influenced the behavior of every one of the inmates he came in contact with while he was sitting on death row in a ...
... behavior, but also influenced the behavior of every one of the inmates he came in contact with while he was sitting on death row in a ...
Chapter 15 Lecture Outline Interpersonal Attraction (important
... Attributions - what are they? ...
... Attributions - what are they? ...
Focuses in Social Psychology
... pro-life. As you write the essay you become more sympathetic to the pro-choice views and by the time you turn in your assignment you become more prochoice. You decide to write something negative about someone who you consider a friend on a social networking site. After posting your comment and readi ...
... pro-life. As you write the essay you become more sympathetic to the pro-choice views and by the time you turn in your assignment you become more prochoice. You decide to write something negative about someone who you consider a friend on a social networking site. After posting your comment and readi ...
Ethics in Experimental Research
... When the benefits substantially outweigh the risks example: controlled double-blind studies on drug efficacy ...
... When the benefits substantially outweigh the risks example: controlled double-blind studies on drug efficacy ...
Reducing Racial Bias Among Health Care Providers
... backgrounds. These programs, however, typically focus on improving providers’ cross-cultural communication skills and, as such, are likely to have only limited effects on the unconscious cognitive processes that result in stereotype activation and application. In fact, there has been relatively litt ...
... backgrounds. These programs, however, typically focus on improving providers’ cross-cultural communication skills and, as such, are likely to have only limited effects on the unconscious cognitive processes that result in stereotype activation and application. In fact, there has been relatively litt ...
Evaluation of naturalistic observation
... then answer the big brother question and then use these slides to complete your evaluation notes ...
... then answer the big brother question and then use these slides to complete your evaluation notes ...
Overcoming the Illusion of Will and Self-Fabrication
... studies compare participants’ explicit attitude reports with implicit association test (IAT) findings. Based on computer-mediated response latency measurement protocols, the IAT measure is computed by comparing the relative response times associated with several categorization tasks (see Brunel et a ...
... studies compare participants’ explicit attitude reports with implicit association test (IAT) findings. Based on computer-mediated response latency measurement protocols, the IAT measure is computed by comparing the relative response times associated with several categorization tasks (see Brunel et a ...
Chapter 2 -- Psychology as a Science
... Psychology also shares more similarity with the fields of religion and philosophy than many sciences do, because psychological findings are more often associated with values, morality, and personal preference. ...
... Psychology also shares more similarity with the fields of religion and philosophy than many sciences do, because psychological findings are more often associated with values, morality, and personal preference. ...
AP_Psychology_Test_Review
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority Altruism: Self concern for others 1. Bystander intervention ...
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority Altruism: Self concern for others 1. Bystander intervention ...
AP Psy Crib Notes Review - Doral Academy Preparatory
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority Altruism: Self concern for others 1. Bystander intervention ...
... b. Door in the face technique-making a larger request first then making a smaller one which will seem more reasonable c. Low balling-getting agreement first, then adding specifics later 5. Obedience-compliance with someone who has authority Altruism: Self concern for others 1. Bystander intervention ...
Social Psychology
... • Undeserved (usually negative) attitude towards a group of people. Ethnocentrism is an example of a prejudice. Discrimination: • An action based on a prejudice. ...
... • Undeserved (usually negative) attitude towards a group of people. Ethnocentrism is an example of a prejudice. Discrimination: • An action based on a prejudice. ...
Social Perception
... this fosters aggression. Catharsis - Taking your aggression out in a more acceptable way, like on a punching bag. Zimbardo’s Prison Study - Found good people will become aggressive in the right ...
... this fosters aggression. Catharsis - Taking your aggression out in a more acceptable way, like on a punching bag. Zimbardo’s Prison Study - Found good people will become aggressive in the right ...
Social Perception
... “Well, no, I can’t tell Harriet!...First thing she’s gonna ask me is what I was doin’ checkin’ out a decoy!” ...
... “Well, no, I can’t tell Harriet!...First thing she’s gonna ask me is what I was doin’ checkin’ out a decoy!” ...
CHAPTER 14
... xii) Cognitive Dissonance: According to this theory, when people’s behavior changes, their attitudes will change. Cognitive dissonance describes a state of unpleasant tension that people experience when they realize that they hold contradictory attitudes or when they perceive that their behavior is ...
... xii) Cognitive Dissonance: According to this theory, when people’s behavior changes, their attitudes will change. Cognitive dissonance describes a state of unpleasant tension that people experience when they realize that they hold contradictory attitudes or when they perceive that their behavior is ...
personality
... • Mental process of classifying people into groups on the basis of their shared characteristics. • Much of it is automatic and spontaneous, and it often occurs outside conscious awareness • Categories are usually broad: gender, race, age, occupation. • Using social categories helps us mentally organ ...
... • Mental process of classifying people into groups on the basis of their shared characteristics. • Much of it is automatic and spontaneous, and it often occurs outside conscious awareness • Categories are usually broad: gender, race, age, occupation. • Using social categories helps us mentally organ ...
Lecture Ch14 AHS Fall 2010
... – The more members of a group discuss their ideas the more extreme the ideas ...
... – The more members of a group discuss their ideas the more extreme the ideas ...
Implicit Personality Theory
... • Cognitive—thoughts about given topic or situation • Affective—feelings or emotions about topic • Behavioral—your actions regarding the topic or situation ...
... • Cognitive—thoughts about given topic or situation • Affective—feelings or emotions about topic • Behavioral—your actions regarding the topic or situation ...
Chapter 5 - Development - Monona Grove School District
... Existential identity; a sense of integrity strong enough to withstand physical disintegration ...
... Existential identity; a sense of integrity strong enough to withstand physical disintegration ...
Psychology
... DO NOT put your names on it. Make sure you can explain why it is that approach. You have 7 minutes to complete this task. ...
... DO NOT put your names on it. Make sure you can explain why it is that approach. You have 7 minutes to complete this task. ...
Introspection illusion
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Iceberg_2_1997_08_07.jpg?width=300)
The introspection illusion is a cognitive bias in which people wrongly think they have direct insight into the origins of their mental states, while treating others' introspections as unreliable. In certain situations, this illusion leads people to make confident but false explanations of their own behavior (called ""causal theories"") or inaccurate predictions of their future mental states.The illusion has been examined in psychological experiments, and suggested as a basis for biases in how people compare themselves to others. These experiments have been interpreted as suggesting that, rather than offering direct access to the processes underlying mental states, introspection is a process of construction and inference, much as people indirectly infer others' mental states from their behavior.When people mistake unreliable introspection for genuine self-knowledge, the result can be an illusion of superiority over other people, for example when each person thinks they are less biased and less conformist than the rest of the group. Even when experimental subjects are provided with reports of other subjects' introspections, in as detailed a form as possible, they still rate those other introspections as unreliable while treating their own as reliable. Although the hypothesis of an introspection illusion informs some psychological research, the existing evidence is arguably inadequate to decide how reliable introspection is in normal circumstances. Correction for the bias may be possible through education about the bias and its unconscious nature.