
Sociology in Our Times
... with, or in some cases replace, live, person-toperson communications. For many college students, Facebook has become a fun way to get to know other people, to join online groups with Have Facebook and other networking websites influenced our social similar interests or activities, and to plan “real-l ...
... with, or in some cases replace, live, person-toperson communications. For many college students, Facebook has become a fun way to get to know other people, to join online groups with Have Facebook and other networking websites influenced our social similar interests or activities, and to plan “real-l ...
Internet and the plot of resentment - Apeiron
... formula itself that stalls, given the incapacity of the protagonist to meet the expectations on him. The sense of inadequacy that psychology recognises as one of the experiences most closely associated with resentment springs from this, as does its unmentionable nature. To declare oneself resentful ...
... formula itself that stalls, given the incapacity of the protagonist to meet the expectations on him. The sense of inadequacy that psychology recognises as one of the experiences most closely associated with resentment springs from this, as does its unmentionable nature. To declare oneself resentful ...
Is Belief in Conspiracy Theories Pathological
... found in a number of political behavioral processes, have not been systematically applied to explain belief in conspiracy theories. This study tests these mechanisms by presenting subjects with an original vignette embedded in a survey experiment with the goal of inducing conspiracy belief. The set ...
... found in a number of political behavioral processes, have not been systematically applied to explain belief in conspiracy theories. This study tests these mechanisms by presenting subjects with an original vignette embedded in a survey experiment with the goal of inducing conspiracy belief. The set ...
The Emotional‐Cognitive Processing Model
... TRA outlines the components that form a person’s behavioral intention – personal attitudes and subjective norms towards the relevant behavior. The personal attitudes component involves the specific action being examined, through analysis of available information. An attitude is formed through indivi ...
... TRA outlines the components that form a person’s behavioral intention – personal attitudes and subjective norms towards the relevant behavior. The personal attitudes component involves the specific action being examined, through analysis of available information. An attitude is formed through indivi ...
PDF hosted at the Radboud Repository of the Radboud University
... Duijvenbode et al. 2012a). We then adapted two widely used computer tasks (the visual dot probe task [VDP], MacLeod et al. 1986; approach avoidance task [AAT], Rinck and Becker 2007) to the needs of individuals with MBID by increasing the number of practice trials, minimising the number of critical ...
... Duijvenbode et al. 2012a). We then adapted two widely used computer tasks (the visual dot probe task [VDP], MacLeod et al. 1986; approach avoidance task [AAT], Rinck and Becker 2007) to the needs of individuals with MBID by increasing the number of practice trials, minimising the number of critical ...
What a Good Idea! Frames and Ideologies in Social Movement
... paper cannot do justice. Our agenda here is simply to revisit the debates that were abandoned by movement scholars in the 1970s, and point to the directions in which we think a rehabilitated theory of movement ideology should move. The plan of this paper is as follows. First we summarize the history ...
... paper cannot do justice. Our agenda here is simply to revisit the debates that were abandoned by movement scholars in the 1970s, and point to the directions in which we think a rehabilitated theory of movement ideology should move. The plan of this paper is as follows. First we summarize the history ...
Implicit Racial Bias in Public Defender Triage
... insufficient attention has been paid to the fact that, until much-needed changes in the provision of indigent defense services occur, PDs will engage in triage, the process of prioritizing cases for attention. This reality raises important questions about how to guide attorney decisionmaking in orde ...
... insufficient attention has been paid to the fact that, until much-needed changes in the provision of indigent defense services occur, PDs will engage in triage, the process of prioritizing cases for attention. This reality raises important questions about how to guide attorney decisionmaking in orde ...
Why Implicit Attitudes Are (Probably) not Beliefs
... 2008). If implicit attitudes are radically unlike beliefs, however, then arguments may fail to change them. Such a finding would not entail, of course, that rational argumentation had no role to play in the fight against implicit prejudice, but its role might be relatively circumscribed: perhaps it ...
... 2008). If implicit attitudes are radically unlike beliefs, however, then arguments may fail to change them. Such a finding would not entail, of course, that rational argumentation had no role to play in the fight against implicit prejudice, but its role might be relatively circumscribed: perhaps it ...
CONTACT AND COLLECTIVE ACTION 1 How does Intergroup
... improve one’s status when the existing social structure is viewed as flexible and permeable; i.e., when there is a belief that individuals can move to higher social strata or ‘pass’ to a higher-status group (e.g., through talent, by means of hard work, or relevant social connections) and thereby ach ...
... improve one’s status when the existing social structure is viewed as flexible and permeable; i.e., when there is a belief that individuals can move to higher social strata or ‘pass’ to a higher-status group (e.g., through talent, by means of hard work, or relevant social connections) and thereby ach ...
Fat in College: A Social Overview Kristen Crepezzi
... in a more complete sense of self and healthier self-esteem. Since fatness is not considered to be a permanent state of identity, individuals are not often willing to classify themselves with obese others due in part to the social stigma attached to other fat people. Fat Oppression In her article It’ ...
... in a more complete sense of self and healthier self-esteem. Since fatness is not considered to be a permanent state of identity, individuals are not often willing to classify themselves with obese others due in part to the social stigma attached to other fat people. Fat Oppression In her article It’ ...
perspectives
... basis of group membership is a kind of predictive mechanism we use in various social situations. Consider an example familiar to college students. On the first day of class, students meet Professor X. Professor X is known only as part of the group called professors, about which there are certain gen ...
... basis of group membership is a kind of predictive mechanism we use in various social situations. Consider an example familiar to college students. On the first day of class, students meet Professor X. Professor X is known only as part of the group called professors, about which there are certain gen ...
The Limits of Social Norms
... ways to reduce crime that are less expensive and more humane than traditional approaches. A change in law that does not need to be enforced, or is only minimally enforced, is not costly to society or to the individuals who are deterred from breaking the law by a new social taboo. Likewise, cleaning ...
... ways to reduce crime that are less expensive and more humane than traditional approaches. A change in law that does not need to be enforced, or is only minimally enforced, is not costly to society or to the individuals who are deterred from breaking the law by a new social taboo. Likewise, cleaning ...
Empathy and Attitudes: Can Feeling for a Member of a Stigmatized
... Third, there is the issue of victim responsibility. As emphasized by Ryan (1971) and others, an important component of the stereotype of most stigmatized grouPs is the perception of victim responsibility. Whether one thinks of the homeless, the poor, minorities, people with disabilities, or people w ...
... Third, there is the issue of victim responsibility. As emphasized by Ryan (1971) and others, an important component of the stereotype of most stigmatized grouPs is the perception of victim responsibility. Whether one thinks of the homeless, the poor, minorities, people with disabilities, or people w ...
course syllabus guide - CSI Social Science Department
... and lecture). The quizzes will help you keep up with the content and aid in educated participation in the classroom. Falling behind in reading and lectures guarantees poor performance in the course. Each quiz is worth 10 points. There are no makeup quizzes (attendance is thus advised). Class Project ...
... and lecture). The quizzes will help you keep up with the content and aid in educated participation in the classroom. Falling behind in reading and lectures guarantees poor performance in the course. Each quiz is worth 10 points. There are no makeup quizzes (attendance is thus advised). Class Project ...
Values, attitudes, and norms
... Defining Norms There is much research done on the influence that so called social norm have on our behavior, and it refers to the influence important others have on us, such as family, friends, and other people, whose opinion we value as important. The social or subjective norm thus captures the per ...
... Defining Norms There is much research done on the influence that so called social norm have on our behavior, and it refers to the influence important others have on us, such as family, friends, and other people, whose opinion we value as important. The social or subjective norm thus captures the per ...
THE RELA'rIONSHIP BETWEEN DEGREE OF
... with stereotypes in the literature but, again, little research has involved variables which m1ght actually influence rigidity. Familiarity has been hypothesized as an important factor in determining the degree to which traits are assigned to groups. If stereotypes are in fact character1zed by rigidi ...
... with stereotypes in the literature but, again, little research has involved variables which m1ght actually influence rigidity. Familiarity has been hypothesized as an important factor in determining the degree to which traits are assigned to groups. If stereotypes are in fact character1zed by rigidi ...
04 Pull and Pus h Factors
... • Push and pull factors have generally been characterized as relating to two separate decisions made at two separate points in time— one focusing on whether to go(push), what to see (pull) or what to do (relating to the specific destinations). • In particular, while the internal forces push people t ...
... • Push and pull factors have generally been characterized as relating to two separate decisions made at two separate points in time— one focusing on whether to go(push), what to see (pull) or what to do (relating to the specific destinations). • In particular, while the internal forces push people t ...
Chapter 4: Perception, Attribution, and the Management of
... • Describes how people explain the causes of behavior • Focuses on why people behave the way they do • Attributions can be made about the self or another person • Biases reduce the accuracy of attributions DDG 2183 ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR ...
... • Describes how people explain the causes of behavior • Focuses on why people behave the way they do • Attributions can be made about the self or another person • Biases reduce the accuracy of attributions DDG 2183 ORGANIZATIONAL BEHAVIOUR ...
Stuck in a moment and you cannot get out of it: The lingering effects
... Neuroimaging research indicates increased activation during experiences of ostracism in the anterior and posterior cingulate cortex, medial frontal cortex, and prefrontal cortex (Baird, Silver, & Veague, 2010; Campbell et al., 2006; Eisenberger, Lieberman, & ...
... Neuroimaging research indicates increased activation during experiences of ostracism in the anterior and posterior cingulate cortex, medial frontal cortex, and prefrontal cortex (Baird, Silver, & Veague, 2010; Campbell et al., 2006; Eisenberger, Lieberman, & ...
Resolving the IQ Paradox: Heterosis as a Cause of the Flynn Effect
... cohorts, rather than birth order per se. Also, even the methodologically superior within-family studies frequently test siblings at the same time, so that they are necessarily of different ages at time of testing. Each sibling’s IQ score must therefore be determined by comparison to an age-appropria ...
... cohorts, rather than birth order per se. Also, even the methodologically superior within-family studies frequently test siblings at the same time, so that they are necessarily of different ages at time of testing. Each sibling’s IQ score must therefore be determined by comparison to an age-appropria ...
The power of moral arguments
... On the whole, these results fit well with Haidt’s influential Social Intuitionist Model (Haidt, 2001). In this model, moral reasoning plays a limited role: it can influence intuitive moral judgments, but does so only rarely. However, the Social Intuitionist Model leaves open the possibility that ...
... On the whole, these results fit well with Haidt’s influential Social Intuitionist Model (Haidt, 2001). In this model, moral reasoning plays a limited role: it can influence intuitive moral judgments, but does so only rarely. However, the Social Intuitionist Model leaves open the possibility that ...
Holier than me? Threatening Social Comparison in the Moral Domain
... been identified by several authors (Tesser, 1991; Beach & Tesser, 2000; Major et al., 1991) as one of the necessary preconditions for upward comparison to represent threat, and morality seems to be central to most people’s self-concept. Park, Ybarra, and Stanik (2006) suggest that people’s self-enha ...
... been identified by several authors (Tesser, 1991; Beach & Tesser, 2000; Major et al., 1991) as one of the necessary preconditions for upward comparison to represent threat, and morality seems to be central to most people’s self-concept. Park, Ybarra, and Stanik (2006) suggest that people’s self-enha ...
Interpersonal contact and the stigma of mental illness: A review of
... seem to be the least harmless of the three, but researchers report that it results in feelings of anger and annoyance, rather than maternal or paternal feelings towards persons with SMI (Corrigan et al., 2001). In addition to the three factors discussed above, surveyed participants report other rela ...
... seem to be the least harmless of the three, but researchers report that it results in feelings of anger and annoyance, rather than maternal or paternal feelings towards persons with SMI (Corrigan et al., 2001). In addition to the three factors discussed above, surveyed participants report other rela ...