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Social Influence
Social Influence

... • The concept that a group’s attitude is one of extremes and rarely moderate. As a group, both the Black Panthers and the Ku Klux Klan are more extreme than the average individual in the group. ...
Social Cognition and Crime
Social Cognition and Crime

... offenders tend to external control, that is they explain their behaviour as being controlled by influences beyond their personal control (Beck and Ollendick 1976; Kumchy and Sayer 1980).  other studies have failed to show any difference in locus of control between offender and non-offender samples ...
Introduction to Psychology
Introduction to Psychology

...  the development and expression of attitudes  people’s attributions about their own behavior and that of others  the reasons why people engage in both prosocial and antisocial behavior  how the presence and actions of others influences the way people behave ...
Sociology 530 - rci.rutgers.edu
Sociology 530 - rci.rutgers.edu

... 2. The Actor-Observer Effect. (“You Fell, I Was Pushed.”) This bias is essentially the reverse of correspondence bias. Here, we tend to attribute our OWN behavior to situational factors, though we attribute others’ behavior to dispositional effects. Why? a. We are very aware of the situational fact ...
Chap. 08
Chap. 08

...  Direct experience  Examining goods  Post-purchase evaluation ...
Myers & My notes - Scott County Schools
Myers & My notes - Scott County Schools

... Introduction • Social Psychology • The study of how we think about, influence, and relate to others ...
PowerPoint
PowerPoint

... What do you _________________? How do you __________? ...
Understanding Psychology 5th Edition Morris and Maisto
Understanding Psychology 5th Edition Morris and Maisto

... The scientific study of the ways in which the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of an individual are influenced by the real or imagined behavior of others. Main areas  Social cognition  Attitudes  Social influence  Social action ...
Chapter 18 - McConnell
Chapter 18 - McConnell

... fundamental attribution error can affect our analyses of behavior. We usually rely on situational attributions, stressing the influence of external events, to explain our own behavior (and often the behavior of those we know well and see in many different contexts). But in explaining the actions of ...
LEARNING OBJECTIVES
LEARNING OBJECTIVES

... 13.9 Explain how people infer the motives and intentions of others through the process of attribution, discuss the three criteria people use to determine whether the causes of a behaviour are internal or external, and describe two common attribution errors and how they obscure the real motives and i ...
Ch 14 - psimonciniohs.net
Ch 14 - psimonciniohs.net

... Individual values and identities can break down under situational pressure where one group has more power than other groups Prisons have traditionally been considered places of punishment and rehabilitation. Zimbardo concluded that rehabilitation may be difficult. Zimbardo: “Prisons are evil places ...
Social Psychology - Solon City Schools
Social Psychology - Solon City Schools

... Explain how advertisements and movies might encourage this tendency. Use your knowledge of the factors that facilitate interpersonal attraction to suggest how people could be influenced to feel more positively about those who are physically unattractive. ...
Chapter 16 Quiz
Chapter 16 Quiz

... elections are determined by the public’s impressions of the candidates rather than the candidates’ views on the issues. What are some possible reasons for this irrational voting behavior? If the public were more knowledgeable about factors that affect person perception and attitudes, how might that ...
Social comparison
Social comparison

... their personal characteristics (disposition) while ignoring or at least underestimating the influence of the external or social situation. • Why did this activity demonstrate the fundamental attribution error? ...
myers ap – unit 14
myers ap – unit 14

... can be identified by the text being underlined and a different color (usually purple). – Unit subsections hyperlinks: Immediately after the unit title slide, a page (slide #3) can be found listing all of the unit’s subsections. While in slide show mode, clicking on any of these hyperlinks will take ...
Some Milestones in the Field of Social Psychology
Some Milestones in the Field of Social Psychology

... examines how extreme prejudice can be shaped by personality conflicts in childhood. 1951: Solomon Asch demonstrates conformity to false majority judgments. 1954: Gordon Allport publishes The Nature of Prejudice, which provides the framework for much of the future research on prejudice. Social psycho ...
Phase 2 - COLLABORATIVE INQUIRY
Phase 2 - COLLABORATIVE INQUIRY

... almost a generation later. To some it is full of still-contemporary relevance and timeless wisdom. What is your view? Facing today's images of actual and possible human disasters, how do we feel? Do those feelings affect our behavior? Do you see Macy's diagnoses and prescriptions as still generally ...
Chapter 3
Chapter 3

... generalization applied to a person or situation. Based on the category in which we place someone or something and how that person or thing measures up against the personal constructs we apply, we predict what he, she, or it will do. For instance, if you label someone as a liberal, you might stereoty ...
Social Learning Theory
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 ...
ch_3 - Home - KSU Faculty Member websites
ch_3 - Home - KSU Faculty Member websites

... impressions of others to affect objective evaluation of their specific traits; perceiving high correlations between characteristic that may be unrelated. ...
Sociology 530 – Fall 2006
Sociology 530 – Fall 2006

... sanctioned. Normative expectations are the expectations held by others for the appropriate behavior that ought to be exhibited by the person holding a given role. i. Often the sanctions are subtle, such as the sanctions for violating traditional gender roles. These sanctions are typically in the for ...
CPY4B02 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 1 – Core Course of Bsc Counselling... – IV semester – CUCBCSS 2014 Admn onwards
CPY4B02 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 1 – Core Course of Bsc Counselling... – IV semester – CUCBCSS 2014 Admn onwards

... groups in an intergroup contact situation? a) ...
Social Behavior - Gordon State College
Social Behavior - Gordon State College

... that distinguish them from other objects.  In social categorization, physical features such as race, sex, age, and attractiveness are most common ways to classify people, especially during first encounters. ...
File - Ms. Lockhart
File - Ms. Lockhart

... FUNDAMENTAL ATTRIBUTION ERROR When judging the actions of OTHERS, what type of attributions do we make? Dispositional Attribution Positive Actions Negative Actions Give some examples: ...
Social Psych
Social Psych

... fundamental attribution error. We see Joe as quiet, shy, and introverted most of the time, but with friends he is very talkative, loud, and extroverted. ...
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