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ATTITUDES
ATTITUDES

... • A type of learning in which people are more likely to imitate behaviors if they have seen others rewarded for performing them, and less likely to imitate behaviors if they have seen others punished for performing them ...
ATTITUDES
ATTITUDES

... • A type of learning in which people are more likely to imitate behaviors if they have seen others rewarded for performing them, and less likely to imitate behaviors if they have seen others punished for performing them ...
BS914 - Lecture 6
BS914 - Lecture 6

... (Kasel and Cobb 1966) • Health behaviour – ‘any behaviour undertaken by a person believing himself to be healthy for the purpose of preventing disease or detecting it at an asymptomatic stage.’ ...
Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Cognitive Dissonance Theory

... only got 25 cents to try this product, so it couldn’t have been the money that attracted me. I must really like this product after all.” The trick is to induce the behavior that goes against the attitude while leaving people feeling personally responsible for the dissonant act. That way they are mor ...
CA5254-Organizational Behaviour
CA5254-Organizational Behaviour

... impressions in order to give meaning to their environment. 17. What are the Factors Influencing Perception? Factors can reside: – in the perceiver – in the object or target being perceived – in the context of the situation in which the perception is made 18. What is meant by Attribution Theory . Whe ...
Written script
Written script

... group mean). So it’s a measure of how much the people within a group differ from each other (gesture around all the scores in the control group). The between-groups variance is a measure of how much the each group’s mean differs from the grand mean (point to two group means followed by grand mean). ...
Human relationships google doc summary
Human relationships google doc summary

... Strength: The study successfully showed that their might be a possible connection between romantic love and low levels of serotonin in the blood. Limitation: This study had been opposed by Fisher(2004) that it is not possible to document the exact role of serotonin in romantic love. Evolutionary ori ...
Behavioral - College Home
Behavioral - College Home

... Social Psychology Attempts to explain how the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others influences the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of individuals. Social psychologists are interested in • How variables within individuals contribute to their responses to social influences • Group variab ...
Word
Word

... deadlines for each submission are provided with each assignment. Missing deadlines incurs significant penalties (e.g., half of the possible score). Any late assignment still has to be completed and delivered, or it may prevent you from completing the course. The requirement of an electronic copy sub ...
BA Philosophy/BA Sociology PSYCHOLOGY OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR
BA Philosophy/BA Sociology PSYCHOLOGY OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR

... to predict behaviours. There were many methodological limitations to LaPiere’s study, however (Campbell, 1963). For example: the attitude and behaviour were measured at different times and locations; n the attitude measure itself was, at best, indirect (LaPiere did not ask the restaurant owners to c ...
Decision Making 2
Decision Making 2

... ◦ Some members might influence with other members ◦ unclear/confusing responsibility for the final outcome ...
Running head: MECHANISMS OF LINGUISTIC BIAS Mechanisms of
Running head: MECHANISMS OF LINGUISTIC BIAS Mechanisms of

... Stereotypes about people are widespread and play a crucial role in social perception and interaction. An important question is how stereotypic expectancies about social categories are transmitted and maintained interpersonally. Although stereotypes and prejudice may be shared explicitly (e.g., blata ...
TWO THEORIES OF MODERNITY CHARLES TAYLOR 1.Two
TWO THEORIES OF MODERNITY CHARLES TAYLOR 1.Two

... drawn by our partisan attachments to neglect it. This is partly because an immediately evaluative explanation (on the right side) is more satisfying - we tend to want to glorify modernity, or vilify it. And it is partly because we fear that a cultural theory might make value judgements impossible. T ...
Systems Theory
Systems Theory

... occur because of the interactions between the parts of an organism, a point of view that represented a dramatic change from the theories of his day. Existing theories had tended to be reductionist, understanding the whole by breaking it into its parts. Von Bertalanffy's introduction of systems theor ...
Preview Sample 3
Preview Sample 3

... To make introducing the syllabus a bit more interesting come up with a series of questions the student have to answer about the syllabus. In small groups ask students to complete the quiz. The content of your quiz will depend on the content of your syllabus but here are some ideas of questions to as ...
Chapter 1: Introduction to Sociology
Chapter 1: Introduction to Sociology

... 1825). They both thought that society could be studied using the same scientific methods utilized in natural sciences. Comte also believed in the potential of social scientists to work toward the betterment of society. He held that once scholars identified the laws that governed society, sociologist ...
11 B Systems Theory
11 B Systems Theory

... occur because of the interactions between the parts of an organism, a point of view that represented a dramatic change from the theories of his day. Existing theories had tended to be reductionist, understanding the whole by breaking it into its parts. Von Bertalanffy’s introduction of systems theor ...
key terms
key terms

... person versus situation debate (74) - The belief that to the degree that the person was important the situation was not and vice versa. person x situation interaction (83) - The idea that individual differences in behavior are reflected in the way each person responds to a particular situation and t ...
Family Development Theory
Family Development Theory

...  Teleology: family development has some end or goal, an assumption which was influenced by child development.  Determinism  Behavior can be predicted: ignorance and measurement error impede complete understanding.  Mistaken view: if certain conditions are met, families will successfully move to ...
Cross-cultural psychology
Cross-cultural psychology

... their individual needs. The United States is an example of an individualistic culture, while most East Asian cultures are collectivistic. These different cultural perspectives affect thinking in many ways. For example, one important finding in social psychology is the fundamental attribution error, ...
We are What We Drive: A SRM Analysis of Human
We are What We Drive: A SRM Analysis of Human

... McCracken 1988). Aaker’s seminal work (1997) on the association of human personality characteristics to brands has been extremely influential in spurring the dialogue about how companies and customers anthropomorphize their brands. In the ensuing years, marketers and consumer researchers have focuse ...
Introduction: - Hodder Education
Introduction: - Hodder Education

... at, as well as qualitative data, how the participants behaved and what they said. The recordings of the verbal comments of the participants show how they refused to take responsibility for the outcomes of their obedient behaviour. Also, although the research situation would be unlikely to occur in e ...
Learning by concept
Learning by concept

... personality traits. Physical attributes contribute to perceptions of attractiveness (i.e. weight, hair, eye color). For example, someone who is perceived as attractive, due in part to physical traits, may be more likely to be perceived as kind or intelligent. The role of attractiveness in producing ...
Social Structure notes
Social Structure notes

... • right - a behavior that individuals can expect from others (patient has the right to expect the doctor to reach an appropriate diagnosis) • obligation - a behavior that individuals are expected to perform toward others (doctor must diagnose patient's illness) • role performance - the actual behavi ...
Evolutionary explanations and socio
Evolutionary explanations and socio

... rejection of biological explanations? Closer reading of his texts suggests that what he has in mind is that people’s behaviour cannot be made sense of without an understanding of what the other people around are doing, both individually and collectively. For example, he writes ‘The group thinks, fee ...
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