Ch. 18
... 3. Phillip Zimbardo conducted the Stanford Prison Experiment in the 70’s. His results could have predicted problems of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib in that: • A) people will follow direct orders of a superior when in the military. • B) when we play a role long enough, social norms can be as powerfu ...
... 3. Phillip Zimbardo conducted the Stanford Prison Experiment in the 70’s. His results could have predicted problems of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib in that: • A) people will follow direct orders of a superior when in the military. • B) when we play a role long enough, social norms can be as powerfu ...
IB Psychology Internal Assessment
... The IA for SL IB Psych requires students to undertake a partial replication of a simple experiment. The purpose of the IA is for students to experience the research process by practicing sound research methodology. Students must turn in a formal write up for the experiment with title page, abstract, ...
... The IA for SL IB Psych requires students to undertake a partial replication of a simple experiment. The purpose of the IA is for students to experience the research process by practicing sound research methodology. Students must turn in a formal write up for the experiment with title page, abstract, ...
Groups, Cliques and Social Behaviour - Hale
... A desire to achieve a sense of security within a group Failure to conform may result in social rejection ...
... A desire to achieve a sense of security within a group Failure to conform may result in social rejection ...
2 - faculty.georgebrown.ca
... ▪ Does the experiment validate the oft-quoted maxim that: “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” ▪ What does the experiment suggest for jails and prisons? Do they really habilitate? ▪ How would the experiment account for the phenomenon of mental hospital “institutionalism,” which m ...
... ▪ Does the experiment validate the oft-quoted maxim that: “Power corrupts and absolute power corrupts absolutely.” ▪ What does the experiment suggest for jails and prisons? Do they really habilitate? ▪ How would the experiment account for the phenomenon of mental hospital “institutionalism,” which m ...
Slide 1
... challenge you in new ways as a reader, a writer, and a thinker. This summer you will need to prepare yourself for these challenges. The purpose of the Advanced Placement Psychology is to introduce you to the systematic and scientific study of the behavior and mental process of human beings. You will ...
... challenge you in new ways as a reader, a writer, and a thinker. This summer you will need to prepare yourself for these challenges. The purpose of the Advanced Placement Psychology is to introduce you to the systematic and scientific study of the behavior and mental process of human beings. You will ...
texts - The BBC Prison Study
... has transformed Holocaust scholarship, their explanations are also found wanting. In arguing this, we are not questioning the fact that both studies are of great importance in showing that ordinary people can do extreme things. The issue, rather, is why they do them. In Milgram’s case there are thre ...
... has transformed Holocaust scholarship, their explanations are also found wanting. In arguing this, we are not questioning the fact that both studies are of great importance in showing that ordinary people can do extreme things. The issue, rather, is why they do them. In Milgram’s case there are thre ...
Socialization Test - theliberatorlounge
... 3 – lists each step in the looking glass self, explaining each step in detail, and providing at least one example 4 - lists each step in the looking glass self, explaining each step in detail, and provides 3 examples The following questions are worth 2 points ...
... 3 – lists each step in the looking glass self, explaining each step in detail, and providing at least one example 4 - lists each step in the looking glass self, explaining each step in detail, and provides 3 examples The following questions are worth 2 points ...
Memory - Union County College
... In the Korean War, Chinese communists solicited cooperation from US army prisoners by asking them to carry out small errands. By complying to small errands they were likely to comply to larger ones. The making of torturers ...
... In the Korean War, Chinese communists solicited cooperation from US army prisoners by asking them to carry out small errands. By complying to small errands they were likely to comply to larger ones. The making of torturers ...
social psychology social categorization Implicit personality theory
... (out-group homogeneity effect=tendency to see out-group members all the same) ...
... (out-group homogeneity effect=tendency to see out-group members all the same) ...
The Science of Psychology
... 1. Rights and well-being of participants must be weighed against the study’s value to science. 2. Participants must be allowed to make an informed decision about participation. 3. Deception must be justified. 4. Participants may withdraw from the study at any time. 5. Participants must be protected ...
... 1. Rights and well-being of participants must be weighed against the study’s value to science. 2. Participants must be allowed to make an informed decision about participation. 3. Deception must be justified. 4. Participants may withdraw from the study at any time. 5. Participants must be protected ...
500 Questions chapter 13 - Doral Academy Preparatory
... inconsistencies by making our beliefs more consistent. (E) When our beliefs and behaviors are too similar it causes an unpleasant psychological state of tension. 481. A person who agrees to a small request initially is more likely to comply with a larger demand later. This describes which phenomenon ...
... inconsistencies by making our beliefs more consistent. (E) When our beliefs and behaviors are too similar it causes an unpleasant psychological state of tension. 481. A person who agrees to a small request initially is more likely to comply with a larger demand later. This describes which phenomenon ...
pptx
... • Self-serving bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to personal factors and one’s failures to situational factors (seen more often in individualistic cultures) • Self-effacing bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to situational factors and one’s failures to personal factors (seen more ...
... • Self-serving bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to personal factors and one’s failures to situational factors (seen more often in individualistic cultures) • Self-effacing bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to situational factors and one’s failures to personal factors (seen more ...
Emotion
... • Self-serving bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to personal factors and one’s failures to situational factors (seen more often in individualistic cultures) • Self-effacing bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to situational factors and one’s failures to personal factors (seen more ...
... • Self-serving bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to personal factors and one’s failures to situational factors (seen more often in individualistic cultures) • Self-effacing bias: tendency to attribute one’s successes to situational factors and one’s failures to personal factors (seen more ...
Chapter 11 PowerPoint
... • Asch’s study crosses cultures, except Zimbabwe which frowns on conformity ©Mark Peterson/SABA ...
... • Asch’s study crosses cultures, except Zimbabwe which frowns on conformity ©Mark Peterson/SABA ...
Module 56
... from a person’s desire to gain approval or avoid rejection. Respecting normative behavior, because price may be severe if not followed. Informative Social Influence: The group may provide valuable information, only stubborn people will never listen to others. ...
... from a person’s desire to gain approval or avoid rejection. Respecting normative behavior, because price may be severe if not followed. Informative Social Influence: The group may provide valuable information, only stubborn people will never listen to others. ...
Social Psychology – Chapter 18
... - Zimbardo prison experiment – subjects volunteered to spend time in a simulated prison. Participants were randomly assigned to be prisoners or guards. Subjects quickly began to conform to roles (guards become cruel and degrading, prisoners rebelled or became passively resigned). Within just a few d ...
... - Zimbardo prison experiment – subjects volunteered to spend time in a simulated prison. Participants were randomly assigned to be prisoners or guards. Subjects quickly began to conform to roles (guards become cruel and degrading, prisoners rebelled or became passively resigned). Within just a few d ...
Dissimilarity Slides
... similar attitudes and neutral responses for correct and incorrect responses compared to neutral responses and dissimilar attitudes for correct and incorrect responses. The neutral-dissimilar group showed learning while the similar-neutral group did not. ...
... similar attitudes and neutral responses for correct and incorrect responses compared to neutral responses and dissimilar attitudes for correct and incorrect responses. The neutral-dissimilar group showed learning while the similar-neutral group did not. ...
module 2 outline
... To control for individual differences among research participants Confounding variables-in an experiment, a variable other than the independent variable That could produce a change in the dependent variable Blind procedure- the participants are not told the hypothesis until after the data is collect ...
... To control for individual differences among research participants Confounding variables-in an experiment, a variable other than the independent variable That could produce a change in the dependent variable Blind procedure- the participants are not told the hypothesis until after the data is collect ...
Thinking Critically with Psychological Science
... Experimentation Experiment an investigator manipulates one or more factors (independent variables) to observe their effect on some behavior or mental process (the dependent variable) by random assignment of participants the experiment controls other relevant factors ...
... Experimentation Experiment an investigator manipulates one or more factors (independent variables) to observe their effect on some behavior or mental process (the dependent variable) by random assignment of participants the experiment controls other relevant factors ...
Fundamental Attribution Error
... • Milgram – 1st research to quantify evil, electrocute a stranger – Background: Jewish kid, not far separated from Holocaust, wanted to know why there was blind obedience – Studies were done at Yale – “All evil is the cloak of semantic confusion” • Israel/Palestine BOTH have moral reasons for killin ...
... • Milgram – 1st research to quantify evil, electrocute a stranger – Background: Jewish kid, not far separated from Holocaust, wanted to know why there was blind obedience – Studies were done at Yale – “All evil is the cloak of semantic confusion” • Israel/Palestine BOTH have moral reasons for killin ...
Role of Situational and Dispositional Factors in Behavior.
... Subjects read pro- and anti-Fidel Castro essays. Subjects were asked to rate the pro-Castro attitudes of the writers. When the subjects believed that the writers freely chose the positions they took (for or against Castro), they naturally rated the people who spoke in favor of Castro as having a m ...
... Subjects read pro- and anti-Fidel Castro essays. Subjects were asked to rate the pro-Castro attitudes of the writers. When the subjects believed that the writers freely chose the positions they took (for or against Castro), they naturally rated the people who spoke in favor of Castro as having a m ...
Griggs Chapter 9: Social Psychology
... When they refused, the recruiters then asked them just to donate five minutes of time to put letters in envelopes (door-inthe-face) When given information about other charitable work, having agreed to this small task, people returned later as a function of the consistency aspect of the foot-in-the-d ...
... When they refused, the recruiters then asked them just to donate five minutes of time to put letters in envelopes (door-inthe-face) When given information about other charitable work, having agreed to this small task, people returned later as a function of the consistency aspect of the foot-in-the-d ...
Notes_1_bcsd Intro to Psych research design
... -participants allowed to leave the experimental situation at any time without penalty -participants receive a debriefing after the study that informs them of the exact nature of the research and reveals any deception that may have been used ...
... -participants allowed to leave the experimental situation at any time without penalty -participants receive a debriefing after the study that informs them of the exact nature of the research and reveals any deception that may have been used ...
Milgram experiment
The Milgram experiment on obedience to authority figures was a series of social psychology experiments conducted by Yale University psychologist Stanley Milgram. They measured the willingness of study participants to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts conflicting with their personal conscience. Milgram first described his research in 1963 in an article published in the Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology and later discussed his findings in greater depth in his 1974 book, Obedience to Authority: An Experimental View.The experiments began in July 1961, in the basement of Linsly-Chittenden Hall at Yale University, three months after the start of the trial of German Nazi war criminal Adolf Eichmann in Jerusalem. Milgram devised his psychological study to answer the popular question at that particular time: ""Could it be that Eichmann and his million accomplices in the Holocaust were just following orders? Could we call them all accomplices?"" The experiments have been repeated many times in the following years with consistent results within differing societies, although not with the same percentages around the globe.