Group-Processes-Relationships-Attraction-Love
... (b) The importance of romantic love as a basis of marriage ● Research suggests that romantic love is more likely to be viewed as a necessary precondition for marriage in individualistic cultures than collectivistic cultures. ● Example: Levine et al. (1995) Recruited participants from 11 countries ...
... (b) The importance of romantic love as a basis of marriage ● Research suggests that romantic love is more likely to be viewed as a necessary precondition for marriage in individualistic cultures than collectivistic cultures. ● Example: Levine et al. (1995) Recruited participants from 11 countries ...
C6_Notes_SV
... – 3 to 5 people will elicit more conformity than just 1 or 2 – Groups greater in size than 5 yields diminishing returns ...
... – 3 to 5 people will elicit more conformity than just 1 or 2 – Groups greater in size than 5 yields diminishing returns ...
Booklet social - Beauchamp Psychology
... _____________ aimed at 12-17 year-olds which portrayed the message that most children in their age group did not smoke significantly reduced the number of non-smokers who started smoking (as they wanted to fit in with the ____________). This shows that the explanation of normative social influence h ...
... _____________ aimed at 12-17 year-olds which portrayed the message that most children in their age group did not smoke significantly reduced the number of non-smokers who started smoking (as they wanted to fit in with the ____________). This shows that the explanation of normative social influence h ...
krueger-2009-aration.. - Description
... predictions themselves. Investment markets that depend on this kind of secondguessing are notoriously volatile (Ottaviani, & Serensen, 2000). If instead, the philosophy of "fallible ontological realism" (Campbell, 1990, p. 49) is applicable to social psychology, scientific judgments are constrained ...
... predictions themselves. Investment markets that depend on this kind of secondguessing are notoriously volatile (Ottaviani, & Serensen, 2000). If instead, the philosophy of "fallible ontological realism" (Campbell, 1990, p. 49) is applicable to social psychology, scientific judgments are constrained ...
Tue June 25th - Mrs. Harvey`s Social Psychology Class
... • More likely to happen when: 1. The situation is ambiguous. We have choices but do not know which to select. 2. There is a crisis. We have no time to think and experiment. A decision is required now! 3. Others are experts. If we accept the authority of others, they must know better than us. ...
... • More likely to happen when: 1. The situation is ambiguous. We have choices but do not know which to select. 2. There is a crisis. We have no time to think and experiment. A decision is required now! 3. Others are experts. If we accept the authority of others, they must know better than us. ...
Welcome to Psyc 300A: Understanding Psychological Research I
... (may respond with cooperation, antagonism, social desirability) – Respond to demand characteristics ...
... (may respond with cooperation, antagonism, social desirability) – Respond to demand characteristics ...
Rethinking the Laboratory Experiment
... are produced and changed by some of the conditions to which a person is subject. But we can also think of attitudes dynamically, as features of displays put on by a person for some purpose at hand in the course of a discursive interaction. We believe that some of the apparent paradoxes that have eme ...
... are produced and changed by some of the conditions to which a person is subject. But we can also think of attitudes dynamically, as features of displays put on by a person for some purpose at hand in the course of a discursive interaction. We believe that some of the apparent paradoxes that have eme ...
psychology_primary_source_material
... conformed. In the control group, with no pressure to conform to confederates, less than 1% of participants gave the wrong answer. Conclusion: Why did the participants conform so readily? When they were interviewed after the experiment, most of them said that they did not really believe their conform ...
... conformed. In the control group, with no pressure to conform to confederates, less than 1% of participants gave the wrong answer. Conclusion: Why did the participants conform so readily? When they were interviewed after the experiment, most of them said that they did not really believe their conform ...
Ecological and Social Perspectives on Talking Together
... argued that one of the most basic facts of perception is occlusion (that particular surfaces and objects and come into and go out of view with movement). The fact that we can engage in acts of reversible occlusion specifies the layout of a place (what is usually called "space perception") and irrev ...
... argued that one of the most basic facts of perception is occlusion (that particular surfaces and objects and come into and go out of view with movement). The fact that we can engage in acts of reversible occlusion specifies the layout of a place (what is usually called "space perception") and irrev ...
Journalism 614: Communication and Public Opinion
... "teacher" and asked to administered shocks to "pupils” for incorrect responses Pupils were actually part of the experiment. – Act out the effects of progressively higher “shocks” – What proportion will continue to the highest level when prodded by the supervisor? • Highest voltage switches (450 vo ...
... "teacher" and asked to administered shocks to "pupils” for incorrect responses Pupils were actually part of the experiment. – Act out the effects of progressively higher “shocks” – What proportion will continue to the highest level when prodded by the supervisor? • Highest voltage switches (450 vo ...
The Consumer and Conformity
... Studying the link between conformity and consumer behaviour allows marketers to manipulate ads to maximize the potential for a ...
... Studying the link between conformity and consumer behaviour allows marketers to manipulate ads to maximize the potential for a ...
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 ...
... 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 ...
ISS Chapter 7
... however, when they would get some wrong the teacher would administer mild shock with mild concern The learner would continue to make mistakes and would continue to be shocked at increased levels The teacher would look to the experimenter and the experimenter would tell the participant to continue on ...
... however, when they would get some wrong the teacher would administer mild shock with mild concern The learner would continue to make mistakes and would continue to be shocked at increased levels The teacher would look to the experimenter and the experimenter would tell the participant to continue on ...
Chap 6 PPT
... We underestimate strength of situational cues Lynchings? Heroism can occur as well as evil Examples? ...
... We underestimate strength of situational cues Lynchings? Heroism can occur as well as evil Examples? ...
Social psychology
... by providing someone to blame. After 9/11 many people lashed out against innocent Arab-Americans. This is called scapegoating. ...
... by providing someone to blame. After 9/11 many people lashed out against innocent Arab-Americans. This is called scapegoating. ...
Document
... positive meaning were given first followed by words with less positive meaning, the participants tended to rate that person more positively; but when the order was reversed, participants tended to judge that person less positively (Asch, 1946). ...
... positive meaning were given first followed by words with less positive meaning, the participants tended to rate that person more positively; but when the order was reversed, participants tended to judge that person less positively (Asch, 1946). ...
Chapter 13
... What others say affects an observer’s perceptions –it appears to move in an arc if other people saw it move in an arc. ...
... What others say affects an observer’s perceptions –it appears to move in an arc if other people saw it move in an arc. ...
Attitude Formation and Change
... shares a piece of personal information with another. Close relationships with friends and lovers are often built through the process of self-disclosure ...
... shares a piece of personal information with another. Close relationships with friends and lovers are often built through the process of self-disclosure ...
Introduction to Social Influence
... expressed attitudes, often as a consequence of persuasion or coercion. • Compliance does not reflect internal change, it usually persists only while behaviour is under surveillance. ...
... expressed attitudes, often as a consequence of persuasion or coercion. • Compliance does not reflect internal change, it usually persists only while behaviour is under surveillance. ...
Social Influence
... states that when you’re assigned to a group, you automatically think of that group as an in-group for you (Harry Potter) Sherif’s Robbers Cave study 11–12 year old boys at camp boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate from one another each group took on characteristics of distinct soc ...
... states that when you’re assigned to a group, you automatically think of that group as an in-group for you (Harry Potter) Sherif’s Robbers Cave study 11–12 year old boys at camp boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate from one another each group took on characteristics of distinct soc ...
Conformity
... Solomon Asch (1952) perceptual judgment of line lengths. Which of 3 lines is closest in length to this line. ...
... Solomon Asch (1952) perceptual judgment of line lengths. Which of 3 lines is closest in length to this line. ...