
Chapter 18: Social Behavior
... 1. Social roles are the expected behavior patterns associated with particular social positions (student, daughter, worker, etc) 2. Fundamental Attribution Error is the tendency to attribute the behavior of others to internal causes (personality, likes, etc) 3. A Secure attachment base is when someon ...
... 1. Social roles are the expected behavior patterns associated with particular social positions (student, daughter, worker, etc) 2. Fundamental Attribution Error is the tendency to attribute the behavior of others to internal causes (personality, likes, etc) 3. A Secure attachment base is when someon ...
Social Psychology
... • Potential harm especially if person is hurt by the discovery of a potential behavior or the fact of being duped. • Anger of participants and potential contamination of other studies once ...
... • Potential harm especially if person is hurt by the discovery of a potential behavior or the fact of being duped. • Anger of participants and potential contamination of other studies once ...
C3_Notes_SV
... • Theory of how people explain others’ behavior – Dispositional attribution – Situational attribution ...
... • Theory of how people explain others’ behavior – Dispositional attribution – Situational attribution ...
Chapter 13 Class Notes
... Obedience: Behavior change which results from the direct command of a perceived figure of authority -remember from the beginning of the semester our discussion of Stanley Milgram's famous "shock generator" experiments conducted at Yale University in the 1960s -- you can read more about this classic ...
... Obedience: Behavior change which results from the direct command of a perceived figure of authority -remember from the beginning of the semester our discussion of Stanley Milgram's famous "shock generator" experiments conducted at Yale University in the 1960s -- you can read more about this classic ...
Chapter 3
... - All black men love sports. - Anyone with a Spanish last name is fluent in Spanish. ...
... - All black men love sports. - Anyone with a Spanish last name is fluent in Spanish. ...
Social Psychology
... think about other people, interact in relationships and groups, and are influenced by others Scientific study of how people’s thoughts, feelings, and behavior are impacted by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others The study of social situations, with special attention to how we view ...
... think about other people, interact in relationships and groups, and are influenced by others Scientific study of how people’s thoughts, feelings, and behavior are impacted by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others The study of social situations, with special attention to how we view ...
Social Psychology
... Intro: Social Psychology Social Psychology – The Scientific study of how we think about, influence and relate to others. Attribution Theory- The theory that we explain someone’s behavior by crediting either the situation or the persons disposition. ...
... Intro: Social Psychology Social Psychology – The Scientific study of how we think about, influence and relate to others. Attribution Theory- The theory that we explain someone’s behavior by crediting either the situation or the persons disposition. ...
cognitive dissonance
... Social Psychology The branch of psychology that studies how people think, feel, and behave in social situations Two Basic Areas of Social Psychology: 1. Social cognition - study of the mental processes people use to make sense of other people 2. Social influence - study of the effect of situational ...
... Social Psychology The branch of psychology that studies how people think, feel, and behave in social situations Two Basic Areas of Social Psychology: 1. Social cognition - study of the mental processes people use to make sense of other people 2. Social influence - study of the effect of situational ...
Slide 1
... Confirmation bias – searching for information that supports a conclusion and ignoring information that disconfirms it. Belief persistence – people tend to persist in beliefs they hold long after the basis for those beliefs is substantially discredited. Causal attribution theory – people tend to attr ...
... Confirmation bias – searching for information that supports a conclusion and ignoring information that disconfirms it. Belief persistence – people tend to persist in beliefs they hold long after the basis for those beliefs is substantially discredited. Causal attribution theory – people tend to attr ...
Chapter 20 Notes
... negative by observing others, or through observational learning. People form attitudes on the basis of their evaluation of information. This process is known as cognitive evaluation. Attitudes formed early tend to serve as cognitive anchors that keep people from adopting different attitudes. ...
... negative by observing others, or through observational learning. People form attitudes on the basis of their evaluation of information. This process is known as cognitive evaluation. Attitudes formed early tend to serve as cognitive anchors that keep people from adopting different attitudes. ...
SocialPsyc Shelley
... Schema is a mental organizing framework about a person or thing that we have formed by prior experience (part of the cognitive component of attitudes) When we form an attitude about something, a schema (organizing framework) about that issue is formed in our ...
... Schema is a mental organizing framework about a person or thing that we have formed by prior experience (part of the cognitive component of attitudes) When we form an attitude about something, a schema (organizing framework) about that issue is formed in our ...
CHAPTER OUTLINE I. Introduction: What Is Social Psychology
... 1. The actor–observer discrepancy is the tendency to attribute one’s own behavior to external, situational causes, while attributing the behavior of others to internal, personal causes, especially when the behavior leads to negative outcomes. 2. We are less susceptible to the actor–observer discrepa ...
... 1. The actor–observer discrepancy is the tendency to attribute one’s own behavior to external, situational causes, while attributing the behavior of others to internal, personal causes, especially when the behavior leads to negative outcomes. 2. We are less susceptible to the actor–observer discrepa ...
Intro to Social Psychology
... experience. When relationships are built, occasionally a simple friendship will progress and grow to become a more intimate relationship of romantic love. ...
... experience. When relationships are built, occasionally a simple friendship will progress and grow to become a more intimate relationship of romantic love. ...
Chapter 1 - CCRI Faculty Web
... Your reactions are determined by your perceptions of others. Your goals determine the amount and kind of information you collect. You evaluate people partly in terms of how you expect them to behave (social norms). Your self-perception influences how you perceive others. ...
... Your reactions are determined by your perceptions of others. Your goals determine the amount and kind of information you collect. You evaluate people partly in terms of how you expect them to behave (social norms). Your self-perception influences how you perceive others. ...
Social Influences
... • Use of humor so that the consumer will associate the product with a good feeling; conditioned emotional response • Repetition • Fear arousal (“This is your brain on drugs.”) – But should include instructions on how to cope with the threat ...
... • Use of humor so that the consumer will associate the product with a good feeling; conditioned emotional response • Repetition • Fear arousal (“This is your brain on drugs.”) – But should include instructions on how to cope with the threat ...
Philosophy 3200 1 Feeling “Holier Than Thou”
... moral dilemmas by selecting the saintly course of action but that others will behave more selfishly (Allison et al., 1989). Although people's general tendency to think they were less interested than others in the president's sex life is something of a contradiction, it is definitely not an anomaly. ...
... moral dilemmas by selecting the saintly course of action but that others will behave more selfishly (Allison et al., 1989). Although people's general tendency to think they were less interested than others in the president's sex life is something of a contradiction, it is definitely not an anomaly. ...
Chapter One
... Theory of how people explain others’ behavior Dispositional attribution Situational attribution ...
... Theory of how people explain others’ behavior Dispositional attribution Situational attribution ...
Fig17_2 - Thomas Jefferson High School for Science and
... impression, and the initial schema is recalled better and more vividly than any later correction to it. Actions based on this impression may elicit behavior that confirms it. ...
... impression, and the initial schema is recalled better and more vividly than any later correction to it. Actions based on this impression may elicit behavior that confirms it. ...
Social Psychology – Modules 53-55
... what “kind” of a person someone is rather than rather than the environment ***Tend to favor disposition over situation Ex. “Rude” waitress talking back Ex. Quiet student in class ...
... what “kind” of a person someone is rather than rather than the environment ***Tend to favor disposition over situation Ex. “Rude” waitress talking back Ex. Quiet student in class ...
Social Learning Theory
... between two points of view (that of the actor and the observer). 3. Self-Serving Bias – The tendency we have to attribute positive outcomes to our own dispositions and negative outcomes to ...
... between two points of view (that of the actor and the observer). 3. Self-Serving Bias – The tendency we have to attribute positive outcomes to our own dispositions and negative outcomes to ...
Milgram, S. Behavioral study of obedience (Yale)
... The learner repeatedly responded with cries of pain and then silence… the Teacher was instructed to continue shocks. The teacher thought they were administering real shocks. The teacher turned to experimenter for guidance on whether to continue. Experimenter- responded with orders to continue“Please ...
... The learner repeatedly responded with cries of pain and then silence… the Teacher was instructed to continue shocks. The teacher thought they were administering real shocks. The teacher turned to experimenter for guidance on whether to continue. Experimenter- responded with orders to continue“Please ...
Psych 2 Principles of Psychology Christopher Gade Office: 5315
... External attributions – explaining behaviors based on the situation and surrounding environment. ...
... External attributions – explaining behaviors based on the situation and surrounding environment. ...
Document
... world in multiple ways, understand that people who look different need not think, feel, or act differently; as a result, their voicing of negative attitudes toward minorities declines. ...
... world in multiple ways, understand that people who look different need not think, feel, or act differently; as a result, their voicing of negative attitudes toward minorities declines. ...