
Abnormal Psychology
... He then divided the pen into 4 sections, the 2 largest males each claimed one section along with a small harem of females, the rest of the colony lived in terribly overcrowded conditions • Breakdown in mating and nest building, eating of the young, random an inappropriate aggression, others passive ...
... He then divided the pen into 4 sections, the 2 largest males each claimed one section along with a small harem of females, the rest of the colony lived in terribly overcrowded conditions • Breakdown in mating and nest building, eating of the young, random an inappropriate aggression, others passive ...
MyersExpPsych7e_IM_Module 43 garber edits
... Zimbardo (1972) assigned the roles of guards and prisoners to random students and found that guards and prisoners developed roleappropriate attitudes. Link BBC 3:45 Link 29:01 Originally published in the New Yorker ...
... Zimbardo (1972) assigned the roles of guards and prisoners to random students and found that guards and prisoners developed roleappropriate attitudes. Link BBC 3:45 Link 29:01 Originally published in the New Yorker ...
chapter 2 review with answers
... of the factors involved in an actual experiment 9. Single blind experiment - When the participants are unaware of what is being tested 10. Ethics - Must let the participants know what they are signing up for - Must debrief participants - Must have participants provide written consent to share result ...
... of the factors involved in an actual experiment 9. Single blind experiment - When the participants are unaware of what is being tested 10. Ethics - Must let the participants know what they are signing up for - Must debrief participants - Must have participants provide written consent to share result ...
Chapter 1: What is Psychology and what are its roots?
... -have discovered things such as how damage to certain parts of the brain can destroy ...
... -have discovered things such as how damage to certain parts of the brain can destroy ...
Conformity and Obedience
... assume she is mean. You see her at the mall one day and she’s laughing with friends – you are shocked. ...
... assume she is mean. You see her at the mall one day and she’s laughing with friends – you are shocked. ...
Famous Experiments
... THEREFORE the environment creates the addict, not the drug What if you get Rat Park rats “addicted” to morphine first? So what? ...
... THEREFORE the environment creates the addict, not the drug What if you get Rat Park rats “addicted” to morphine first? So what? ...
Social Psychology – Chapter 18
... doing it. Once they’ve rationalized minor infraction, a slightly bigger request seems reasonable - Patty Hearst - People’s Temple Role-playing -- subjects who play a role often begin to “become” the role. - Zimbardo prison experiment – subjects volunteered to spend time in a simulated prison. Partic ...
... doing it. Once they’ve rationalized minor infraction, a slightly bigger request seems reasonable - Patty Hearst - People’s Temple Role-playing -- subjects who play a role often begin to “become” the role. - Zimbardo prison experiment – subjects volunteered to spend time in a simulated prison. Partic ...
psychology_primary_source_material
... willing to risk all for the sake of enhancement of humanity. In contrary to the ‘last man’ whose sole desire is his own comfort and is incapable of creating anything beyond oneself in any form. This should suggest that an overman is someone who can establish his own values as the world in which othe ...
... willing to risk all for the sake of enhancement of humanity. In contrary to the ‘last man’ whose sole desire is his own comfort and is incapable of creating anything beyond oneself in any form. This should suggest that an overman is someone who can establish his own values as the world in which othe ...
Rethinking the Laboratory Experiment
... We shall refer to our proposals by the adjective "encyclemic," keeping the words derived from "drama" for their usual range of uses. We shall refer to the analytical use of Burke's (1945) pentad and its derivatives as the method of dramatism and to the synthetic (laboratory) use of the pentad and de ...
... We shall refer to our proposals by the adjective "encyclemic," keeping the words derived from "drama" for their usual range of uses. We shall refer to the analytical use of Burke's (1945) pentad and its derivatives as the method of dramatism and to the synthetic (laboratory) use of the pentad and de ...
Famous Experiments
... Conclusion: people mimic/imitate behaviors they see others doing ESPECIALLY Data: IF the person they are imitating (model) seems to have status, power, is rewarded for behavior So what? Media, older peers, parents set standards for behavior “Do as I say, not as I do” does NOT work!! ...
... Conclusion: people mimic/imitate behaviors they see others doing ESPECIALLY Data: IF the person they are imitating (model) seems to have status, power, is rewarded for behavior So what? Media, older peers, parents set standards for behavior “Do as I say, not as I do” does NOT work!! ...
The Blind Wathmaker
... • Each irishman wants to go when it is not crowded; prefers not to go if more than 60 are there. Each would gladly go to El Farol, if only he knew those other noisy bastards would stay home • One hundred agents set up, and each was allowed to evolve a different strategy. Result: attendance was nearl ...
... • Each irishman wants to go when it is not crowded; prefers not to go if more than 60 are there. Each would gladly go to El Farol, if only he knew those other noisy bastards would stay home • One hundred agents set up, and each was allowed to evolve a different strategy. Result: attendance was nearl ...
Psychology: the scientific study of behavior and mental processes
... institutional review boards: where groups of professionals look over studies and judge whether it is safe enough to carry out or not o rights and well-being of participants must be weighed against the study’s value to science – people come first and then research o participants must be allowed to ma ...
... institutional review boards: where groups of professionals look over studies and judge whether it is safe enough to carry out or not o rights and well-being of participants must be weighed against the study’s value to science – people come first and then research o participants must be allowed to ma ...
File
... How often are doctors or medical students in the position of having to obey "orders" or implicit expectations in hospitals or clinics, when they are uneasy about the ethics of doing so? ...
... How often are doctors or medical students in the position of having to obey "orders" or implicit expectations in hospitals or clinics, when they are uneasy about the ethics of doing so? ...
Conformity • Adjusting one`s behavior or attitudes to fit with those of
... • Adjusting one’s behavior or attitudes to fit with those of peers or other group. • Yielding to real or imagined social pressure. • The pressure to conform can be very strong, though may be subtle • e.g., conforming to the fashion of the day ...
... • Adjusting one’s behavior or attitudes to fit with those of peers or other group. • Yielding to real or imagined social pressure. • The pressure to conform can be very strong, though may be subtle • e.g., conforming to the fashion of the day ...
1 Social Psychology A review of J.M Burger`s 2006 Replication of
... whether the rate of obedience by participants’ to the experimenter’s direction to administer electrical shocks to the confederate would be as high as it was in the 1960’s, when Milgram conducted his experiment. Given the constraints imposed by the ethical concerns that Milgram’s experiment aroused, ...
... whether the rate of obedience by participants’ to the experimenter’s direction to administer electrical shocks to the confederate would be as high as it was in the 1960’s, when Milgram conducted his experiment. Given the constraints imposed by the ethical concerns that Milgram’s experiment aroused, ...
Evaluate research on conformity to group norms
... The Bystander’s Apathy experiment in 1968 by John Darlene and Bibb Latane was conducted because of the researchers’ are wondering why would no one help another person while they are in need when they are in a group of bystanders. To test this they first set up a radio show, which first contained 2, ...
... The Bystander’s Apathy experiment in 1968 by John Darlene and Bibb Latane was conducted because of the researchers’ are wondering why would no one help another person while they are in need when they are in a group of bystanders. To test this they first set up a radio show, which first contained 2, ...
Social Psychology
... “Free speech being a privilege rather than a right, it is proper for a society to suspend free speech when it feels threatened” – 19% agreed with statement in private – 58% agreed under pressure of group influence ...
... “Free speech being a privilege rather than a right, it is proper for a society to suspend free speech when it feels threatened” – 19% agreed with statement in private – 58% agreed under pressure of group influence ...
Open Document - Clinton Community College
... How many do you think went all the way to final voltage? ...
... How many do you think went all the way to final voltage? ...
Social Psych Powerpoint
... “Free speech being a privilege rather than a right, it is proper for a society to suspend free speech when it feels threatened” – 19% agreed with statement in private – 58% agreed under pressure of group influence ...
... “Free speech being a privilege rather than a right, it is proper for a society to suspend free speech when it feels threatened” – 19% agreed with statement in private – 58% agreed under pressure of group influence ...
Skeletal Notes Social Psych
... Social facilitation: Social impairment: the presence of others impair performance if task is difficult Conformity: Asch experiment: o class setting: questions o Confederates all gave obvious incorrect answer / individual would follow suit 30% of time (70% at least once during trials) Likel ...
... Social facilitation: Social impairment: the presence of others impair performance if task is difficult Conformity: Asch experiment: o class setting: questions o Confederates all gave obvious incorrect answer / individual would follow suit 30% of time (70% at least once during trials) Likel ...
Social Influence
... 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. Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon: The tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. ...
... 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. Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon: The tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. ...
Social Psych Questions
... Social Psychology There will be two written response items on the test. One will come from the first group of questions (1-6) and the second will come from the second group of questions (A-G). 1. Who was the lead researcher in the “Stanford Prison Study”? Based on the results, is behavior more likel ...
... Social Psychology There will be two written response items on the test. One will come from the first group of questions (1-6) and the second will come from the second group of questions (A-G). 1. Who was the lead researcher in the “Stanford Prison Study”? Based on the results, is behavior more likel ...
Work Groups and Teams
... “our actions are determined less by the kind of people we are than by the kind of situation we are in” • We don’t lose sense of morality but we start to focus on how well we are living up to the expectations of the authority figure ...
... “our actions are determined less by the kind of people we are than by the kind of situation we are in” • We don’t lose sense of morality but we start to focus on how well we are living up to the expectations of the authority figure ...
Chapter 18
... explain others behavior by __________________________________ and underestimating the impact of situational influences. Dispositional Example: those who took part in the Abu Ghraib abuse were sadists or prone to _______________. Situational Example: external influences and the __________________ ...
... explain others behavior by __________________________________ and underestimating the impact of situational influences. Dispositional Example: those who took part in the Abu Ghraib abuse were sadists or prone to _______________. Situational Example: external influences and the __________________ ...
Chapter 16: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY
... (conduct) by Phillip Zimbardo. In this study, 20 well-adjusted young college men __________ (pay) $15.00 a day for participating in a simulation of prison life. Approximately half of the participants __________ (select) to be prisoners and the remainder __________ (designate) as guards. The results ...
... (conduct) by Phillip Zimbardo. In this study, 20 well-adjusted young college men __________ (pay) $15.00 a day for participating in a simulation of prison life. Approximately half of the participants __________ (select) to be prisoners and the remainder __________ (designate) as guards. The results ...