A Glance Back at a Quarter Century of Social Psychology
... for the Psychological Study of Social Issues) of the APA, as well as the pervasive influence of Kurt Lewin, his students, and such other important early social psychologists as Gordon Allport would suggest that women and minorities could expect a warmer reception in social psychology than in other d ...
... for the Psychological Study of Social Issues) of the APA, as well as the pervasive influence of Kurt Lewin, his students, and such other important early social psychologists as Gordon Allport would suggest that women and minorities could expect a warmer reception in social psychology than in other d ...
An Afrocentric Perspective on Social Welfare Philosophy and Policy
... concepts would foster more humane societal relationships and equitable distributions of opportunities and resources. Afrocentric Social Welfare Philosophy The Afrocentric basis of social welfare has as its basic mission the guarantee of equal opportunities for all people in a given society to maximi ...
... concepts would foster more humane societal relationships and equitable distributions of opportunities and resources. Afrocentric Social Welfare Philosophy The Afrocentric basis of social welfare has as its basic mission the guarantee of equal opportunities for all people in a given society to maximi ...
Implicit Racial Bias in Public Defender Triage
... effects of IBs on black clients because psychological research disproportionately addresses anti-black prejudice. However, IBs are likely to impact judgments of other clients who are similarly stereotyped as dangerous and criminal. i. overview of implicit racial biases Implicit social cognition is a ...
... effects of IBs on black clients because psychological research disproportionately addresses anti-black prejudice. However, IBs are likely to impact judgments of other clients who are similarly stereotyped as dangerous and criminal. i. overview of implicit racial biases Implicit social cognition is a ...
Organizational Behavior 11e.
... 1. Agreeableness refers to a person’s ability to get along with others. It causes some people to be gentle, cooperative, forgiving, understanding, and good-natured in their dealings with others. But it may result in others being irritable, short-tempered, uncooperative, and generally antagonistic to ...
... 1. Agreeableness refers to a person’s ability to get along with others. It causes some people to be gentle, cooperative, forgiving, understanding, and good-natured in their dealings with others. But it may result in others being irritable, short-tempered, uncooperative, and generally antagonistic to ...
How Self-Evaluations Relate to Being Liked by
... that positive feelings about the self have social benefits (Taylor & Brown, 1988). Another possibility is that individuals’ feelings about themselves may be affected by how others feel about them. This has been a central argument of a number of psychological theories of the self, such as the looking ...
... that positive feelings about the self have social benefits (Taylor & Brown, 1988). Another possibility is that individuals’ feelings about themselves may be affected by how others feel about them. This has been a central argument of a number of psychological theories of the self, such as the looking ...
Respiratory Sinus Arrhythmia (RSA) in Adults with Possible Autism
... patterned behaviors and/or attentiveness to specific interests. Recent psychophysiological research has looked at how high and low respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) activity may be related to a lack of social communicative skills relating to social cognition, which are hallmark features of individu ...
... patterned behaviors and/or attentiveness to specific interests. Recent psychophysiological research has looked at how high and low respiratory sinus arrhythmia (RSA) activity may be related to a lack of social communicative skills relating to social cognition, which are hallmark features of individu ...
Influences on Music Preference Formation
... would fall lower on a scale of preference. Alternatively, excerpts at or slightly above an individualʼs optimum level of complexity will likely produce higher ratings of preference when repeated. In other words, participants liked pieces more when they had experience with them, but only if they were ...
... would fall lower on a scale of preference. Alternatively, excerpts at or slightly above an individualʼs optimum level of complexity will likely produce higher ratings of preference when repeated. In other words, participants liked pieces more when they had experience with them, but only if they were ...
WilliamsCaseGovanFINAL2002 - Sydney Symposium of Social
... holding an implicit attitude of resentment and derogation for the same minority group. Depending upon which attitude was activated, the consequent expression would either look like egalitarianism or prejudice. Implicit measures, they argue, activate implicit attitudes; explicit measures activate exp ...
... holding an implicit attitude of resentment and derogation for the same minority group. Depending upon which attitude was activated, the consequent expression would either look like egalitarianism or prejudice. Implicit measures, they argue, activate implicit attitudes; explicit measures activate exp ...
How ostracism, populism, social capital
... Research has shown a connection between ostracism and an increase in hate towards the ostracising group (Twenge, Baumeister, Tice and Stucke, 2001). A combination of ostracism and high rejection sensitivity has also been shown to make individuals more negative towards the ostracising individuals (Ay ...
... Research has shown a connection between ostracism and an increase in hate towards the ostracising group (Twenge, Baumeister, Tice and Stucke, 2001). A combination of ostracism and high rejection sensitivity has also been shown to make individuals more negative towards the ostracising individuals (Ay ...
The Problem of Behaviour Change: From Social Norms to an
... individuals seeking to achieve individual goals and preferences results in the emergence of social norms. What is being argued here is that group behaviour (co-operation, acting in line with the norm) is an outcome of individual psychological processes. It is simply functional, efficient and in one’ ...
... individuals seeking to achieve individual goals and preferences results in the emergence of social norms. What is being argued here is that group behaviour (co-operation, acting in line with the norm) is an outcome of individual psychological processes. It is simply functional, efficient and in one’ ...
MECHANISMS OF MORAL DISENGAGEMENT IN TERRORISM
... nations render themselves hostage to a small band of terrorists inspires and invites further terrorist acts. Hostage taking is stripped of functional value if it is treated as a criminal act that gains terrorists neither any coercive concessionary power nor much media attention. Democratic societies ...
... nations render themselves hostage to a small band of terrorists inspires and invites further terrorist acts. Hostage taking is stripped of functional value if it is treated as a criminal act that gains terrorists neither any coercive concessionary power nor much media attention. Democratic societies ...
The Body in Social Policy: Mapping a Territory
... person and the hands-on nature of its care, it aspires to heal the fragmenting experience of the hospital and of health care. It is for this reason that nurses seeking to work in a more holistic way, often stress the importance of the basic bed and body work, sometimes attempting to integrate techni ...
... person and the hands-on nature of its care, it aspires to heal the fragmenting experience of the hospital and of health care. It is for this reason that nurses seeking to work in a more holistic way, often stress the importance of the basic bed and body work, sometimes attempting to integrate techni ...
Attitudes in the Social Context: The Impact of Social Network
... members accounted for variance in the person’s voting behavior, even after controlling for his or her political party identification and a host of demographic characteristics. Similarly, attitudes held by members of a person’s social network have been shown to predict changes in his or her attitudes ...
... members accounted for variance in the person’s voting behavior, even after controlling for his or her political party identification and a host of demographic characteristics. Similarly, attitudes held by members of a person’s social network have been shown to predict changes in his or her attitudes ...
UNIT 4 UNDERSTANDING HUMAN BEHAVIOUR
... management. It is doubtful whether the manager can perform his tasks satisfactorily without developing a fair degree of understanding of the people around him. Any attempt to learn why people behave as they do in organisations requires some understanding of individual differences. Managers spend con ...
... management. It is doubtful whether the manager can perform his tasks satisfactorily without developing a fair degree of understanding of the people around him. Any attempt to learn why people behave as they do in organisations requires some understanding of individual differences. Managers spend con ...
Applications Of Social Norms Theory To Other Health And Social
... revealing the actual, healthier norm will have a beneficial effect on most individuals, who will either reduce their participation in potentially problematic behavior or be encouraged to engage in protective, healthy behaviors. ...
... revealing the actual, healthier norm will have a beneficial effect on most individuals, who will either reduce their participation in potentially problematic behavior or be encouraged to engage in protective, healthy behaviors. ...
Social Cognition
... One interpretation: No real FCE here. Rather, all students (regardless of views) perceive WU students as more pro-Fundamental Christian than they really are ...
... One interpretation: No real FCE here. Rather, all students (regardless of views) perceive WU students as more pro-Fundamental Christian than they really are ...
the injury iceberg: an ecological approach to planning sustainable
... A group of people who exchange information, contacts, and experience for professional or social purposes (Moore, 1997, p899). A social network consists of a finite set or sets of actors and the relation or relations defined on them. The presence of relational information is a critical and defining f ...
... A group of people who exchange information, contacts, and experience for professional or social purposes (Moore, 1997, p899). A social network consists of a finite set or sets of actors and the relation or relations defined on them. The presence of relational information is a critical and defining f ...
5618-van Lange-Ch-39.indd
... is on social interaction, a comprehensive concept that captures the basics of human social life, which helps explain why interdependence theory has been used to understand so many themes for so long. After all, interaction is at the heart of where people live their social lives. Many feelings and em ...
... is on social interaction, a comprehensive concept that captures the basics of human social life, which helps explain why interdependence theory has been used to understand so many themes for so long. After all, interaction is at the heart of where people live their social lives. Many feelings and em ...
Automaticity in social-cognitive processes
... and prejudice in adults (see [2]); instead we devote attention to the new emerging research on attitudes and prejudice in very young children (see the section on development). The second major trend in automaticity research has been the growing recognition that not all higher-level automatic process ...
... and prejudice in adults (see [2]); instead we devote attention to the new emerging research on attitudes and prejudice in very young children (see the section on development). The second major trend in automaticity research has been the growing recognition that not all higher-level automatic process ...
Urban-Rural Differences in Motivation to Control Prejudice Toward People With HIV/AIDS:
... attributes or characteristics that are devalued by others experience prejudice, discrimination, stereotyping, and exclusion.2 Because stigma arises from an affected person’s experiences with unaffected community members, the extent to which an affected person perceives stigma could be influenced by ...
... attributes or characteristics that are devalued by others experience prejudice, discrimination, stereotyping, and exclusion.2 Because stigma arises from an affected person’s experiences with unaffected community members, the extent to which an affected person perceives stigma could be influenced by ...
Does social desirability bias favor humans?
... The dual-process model of impression management predicts that people will exhibit social desirability bias by exaggerating their preference for human beings over machines when they apply conscious impression management strategies in explicitly comparing human speech and machine-synthesized speech. T ...
... The dual-process model of impression management predicts that people will exhibit social desirability bias by exaggerating their preference for human beings over machines when they apply conscious impression management strategies in explicitly comparing human speech and machine-synthesized speech. T ...
Lecture 12
... stigmatized persons, restricting the flow of information about themselves to others whom they can trust. Whether successful in managing stigma or not, Goffman’s work points out that labeled deviants are faced with problems not faced by the straight world. The second theoretical tradition emerging fr ...
... stigmatized persons, restricting the flow of information about themselves to others whom they can trust. Whether successful in managing stigma or not, Goffman’s work points out that labeled deviants are faced with problems not faced by the straight world. The second theoretical tradition emerging fr ...
Universities, Small Firms and Human Capital
... attitudes were able to impact upon decision-making processes through frequent unplanned, contingent and informal interactions (Ram (1994) refers to this as ‘the negotiation of order’). For example; DB: Compared to the other places you’ve worked, how would you describe the culture and the atmosphere ...
... attitudes were able to impact upon decision-making processes through frequent unplanned, contingent and informal interactions (Ram (1994) refers to this as ‘the negotiation of order’). For example; DB: Compared to the other places you’ve worked, how would you describe the culture and the atmosphere ...
... Edwards, Green, Diwan, & Penn, 2001, p. 219). From this combination of opinions and stereotypes, people will then draw their own conclusions about an individual’s character and rate of social acceptance (Horsfall, Cleary, & Hunt, 2010). The unfortunate result for those being stigmatized includes a d ...
Social 30-2 - Diploma Writing Assignment Outlines
... they are benefits) whereas the drawbacks include _______________________________ (and why they are drawbacks). Furthermore, an individual or organization who might have created, or support, this source would be _______________ (State individual/organization) because they believe that _______________ ...
... they are benefits) whereas the drawbacks include _______________________________ (and why they are drawbacks). Furthermore, an individual or organization who might have created, or support, this source would be _______________ (State individual/organization) because they believe that _______________ ...