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PPT
PPT

... mutual interests, values and commitment • Equity • Intimacy ...
Focuses in Social Psychology
Focuses in Social Psychology

... • We will be looking at how the media and other things can have a powerful influence on our attitudes. • We will also discuss why it’s important to make our own informed opinions, based on good understanding and fact. • Today’s learning TARGETS: – Understand that our attitudes can be affected by ext ...
Textbook PowerPoint
Textbook PowerPoint

... ways in which the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of one individual are influenced by the real, imagined, or inferred behavior or characteristics of other people. ...
What is Psychology? - Weber State University
What is Psychology? - Weber State University

... tendency of members to avoid taking responsibility for actions or decisions because they assume that others will do so.  Deindividuation:  In groups or crowds, the loss of awareness of one’s own individuality. ...
Social Psychology Chapter 13
Social Psychology Chapter 13

... – Only one group member, the “naïve” participant, was really unaware of the purpose of the study – The other “participants” deliberately gave false answers – Asch found some naïve participants would go along with the group, even when the answer they gave was obviously wrong ...
Unit XIV Test Review
Unit XIV Test Review

... 5. Ingroup bias 6. Just world phenomenon ...
Personality in Social Psychology
Personality in Social Psychology

... Fear and Affiliate-choice Research • They examined the hypothesis that individuals facing a fearinducing situation would spend more time affiliating for purposes of social comparison than would individuals facing either embarrassing or ambiguous situations. ...
14SocialPsychology
14SocialPsychology

... Continued from previous slide ...
Part II – Free Response Questions – 28 points
Part II – Free Response Questions – 28 points

... Remember to write in complete sentences and to be cogent and terse. 1. The Smith-Garcias are planning for their first baby. Both parents-to-be have had a psychology course and are looking forward to applying the principles they learned from theories and research that address child development. A) Su ...
Social Psychology
Social Psychology

... they were just really shy, or that they just broke up with their significant other, or that maybe they were distracted by a minor car accident they had on the way to the party? ...
Social Psychology
Social Psychology

... they were just really shy, or that they just broke up with their significant other, or that maybe they were distracted by a minor car accident they had on the way to the party? ...
WHS AP Psychology
WHS AP Psychology

... • IV: Photo of woman either attractive or unattractive • DVs: 1) Men’s expectations about the woman 2) Observers’ ratings of the woman’s behavior • Results: When men expected that the woman was attractive, she was judged as friendly, warm, and more animated than when men believed they were talking w ...
Jeopardy
Jeopardy

... This persuasion technique works by giving you a Gift then expecting you to donate. ...
AP Psych Rapid Review
AP Psych Rapid Review

... another’s behavior, to underestimate the impact of the situation and to overestimate the impact of personality traits Self-serving bias We attribute our own success to traits we have (dispositional) and our failures to situational factors ...
Social Thinking
Social Thinking

... 56-1. Describe the three main focuses of social psychology, and explain how the fundamental attribution error impacts our judgments of others. Social psychology scientifically studies how (1) we think about, (2) influence, and (3) relate to one another. Attribution theory states that we tend to give ...
Chapter 12: Social Psychology
Chapter 12: Social Psychology

... Explain the advantages and disadvantages of using social categories and implicit personality theories, and note the effects of physical attractiveness on person perception. ...
Chapter 18 Social Psychology
Chapter 18 Social Psychology

... another person or group. Foot-in-the-door technique: compliance to a large request is gained by preceding it with a very small request. Door-in-the-face technique: compliance is gained by starting with a large, unreasonable request that is turned down, and then following it with a smaller, more reas ...
Social-Cognitive Theory
Social-Cognitive Theory

... • Albert Bandura also stressed that the easiest way to display moral development would be via the consideration of multiple factors, be they social, cognitive, or enviornmental. • The relationship between these three factors provides even more insight into the complex concept that is morality. • Ide ...
Chapter 12 Learning Objectives
Chapter 12 Learning Objectives

... Person Perception: Forming Impressions of Other People 2. Define person perception, describe the components of the interpersonal context in which person perception occurs, and explain the basic principles that guide person perception. 3. Explain the advantages and disadvantages of using social categ ...
Perception and theory in International Relations
Perception and theory in International Relations

... (consistency) by discounting ideas or information that contradict their existing views Cognitive dissonance is a feeling of anguish caused by holding two contradictory ideas simultaneously. These ideas (cognitions) may include attitudes and beliefs, the awareness of one's behavior, and facts. This i ...
File
File

... and Milgram’s obedience experiments. Groupthink occurs when people feel it is more important to maintain group cohesiveness than to consider the facts more realistically. The presence of others can influence how well an individual performs a specific task in a process, resulting in either social fac ...
Social Preferences and Bounded Rationality in the
Social Preferences and Bounded Rationality in the

... In this paper we use a group identity manipulation to examine the roles of social preferences and bounded rationality in an experimental centipede game. Contrary to what social preference theory would predict, we find that players continue longer when playing with outgroups. We estimate a "prospecti ...
Organizational Behavior
Organizational Behavior

... Distinctiveness  high?  external attr. Distinctiveness  low?  internal attr. Consensus  high?  external attr. Consensus  low?  internal attr. Consistency  high?  internal attr. Consistency  low?  external attr. ...
Social role
Social role

... mates that are perceived to be about their same level of attractiveness Ex: Two people considered the best looking ...
Perception
Perception

... and overestimate the influence of internal factors when making judgments about the behavior of others. In general, we tend to blame the person first, not the situation. ...
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False consensus effect

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