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Chapter 15: Social Psychology SW
... Zimmerman, who has a Peruvian mother and a German father, was accused of being racist. Some media coverage was criticized for inaming racial politics in their coverage. ...
... Zimmerman, who has a Peruvian mother and a German father, was accused of being racist. Some media coverage was criticized for inaming racial politics in their coverage. ...
The Effects of Persuasion on Implicit and Explicit
... teacher, Jane Elliot, announced that they were not all alike. Some had blue eyes and others had brown eyes, and they were not equal.2 Elliot explained that the blue-eyed boys and girls were nicer, smarter, neater, and generally better than the brown-eyed children, and to help distinguish them, blue- ...
... teacher, Jane Elliot, announced that they were not all alike. Some had blue eyes and others had brown eyes, and they were not equal.2 Elliot explained that the blue-eyed boys and girls were nicer, smarter, neater, and generally better than the brown-eyed children, and to help distinguish them, blue- ...
Understanding Psychology 5th Edition Morris and Maisto
... • Certain personality characteristics make some people more susceptible to attitude change: – People with low self-esteem are more easily influenced. – Highly intelligent people tend to resist persuasion because they can think of counterarguments more easily. ...
... • Certain personality characteristics make some people more susceptible to attitude change: – People with low self-esteem are more easily influenced. – Highly intelligent people tend to resist persuasion because they can think of counterarguments more easily. ...
Operant Conditioning
... Are you obeying the instruction? Would you obey this instruction more if you were punished for thinking about the beach? ...
... Are you obeying the instruction? Would you obey this instruction more if you were punished for thinking about the beach? ...
Self-efficacy - ProfessorMoseley
... significant threat to their health and are not prepared to enjoy and benefit from recreation or leisure. For these individuals, activity is a necessary prerequisite to health restoration. Activity is a means for them to begin to gain control over their situation and to overcome feelings of helplessn ...
... significant threat to their health and are not prepared to enjoy and benefit from recreation or leisure. For these individuals, activity is a necessary prerequisite to health restoration. Activity is a means for them to begin to gain control over their situation and to overcome feelings of helplessn ...
ch02
... fundamental values, self-interest, or identification with individuals or groups that a person values. • The more specific the attitude and the more specific the behavior, the stronger the link between the two. ...
... fundamental values, self-interest, or identification with individuals or groups that a person values. • The more specific the attitude and the more specific the behavior, the stronger the link between the two. ...
Document
... fundamental values, self-interest, or identification with individuals or groups that a person values. • The more specific the attitude and the more specific the behavior, the stronger the link between the two. ...
... fundamental values, self-interest, or identification with individuals or groups that a person values. • The more specific the attitude and the more specific the behavior, the stronger the link between the two. ...
Rigidity of the Economic Right? Menu-Independent
... research on the psychological origins of political attitudes. First, this model highlights that fully understanding the psychological basis of political attitudes requires researchers to separately measure sociocultural and economic attitudes (e.g., Crowson, 2009; Duckitt & Sibley, 2010), although w ...
... research on the psychological origins of political attitudes. First, this model highlights that fully understanding the psychological basis of political attitudes requires researchers to separately measure sociocultural and economic attitudes (e.g., Crowson, 2009; Duckitt & Sibley, 2010), although w ...
Social Cognition
... Change in behavior or attitudes brought about by a desire to follow the beliefs or standards of other people ...
... Change in behavior or attitudes brought about by a desire to follow the beliefs or standards of other people ...
Psychological Reactance Theory
... The greater the importance of threatened freedoms, the greater the reactance aroused The amount of reactance is direct function of number of freedoms threatened Freedoms can be threatened by implication--magnitude of reactance is greater when implied threats occur ...
... The greater the importance of threatened freedoms, the greater the reactance aroused The amount of reactance is direct function of number of freedoms threatened Freedoms can be threatened by implication--magnitude of reactance is greater when implied threats occur ...
Chapter Fifteen
... Emotional Intelligence • Emotional intelligence, or EQ – The extent to which people are self-aware, can manage their emotions, can motivate themselves, express empathy for others, and possess social skills. ...
... Emotional Intelligence • Emotional intelligence, or EQ – The extent to which people are self-aware, can manage their emotions, can motivate themselves, express empathy for others, and possess social skills. ...
Broadening the Lens of Stereotype and Bias
... Another important area of psychological research that has demonstrated meaningful implications for shaping societal and organizational change is the recent research examining how effortful stereotype inhibition depletes individual resources. According to Muraven, Tice, and Baumeister’s (1998) limite ...
... Another important area of psychological research that has demonstrated meaningful implications for shaping societal and organizational change is the recent research examining how effortful stereotype inhibition depletes individual resources. According to Muraven, Tice, and Baumeister’s (1998) limite ...
JACOBE, PAMBUAN, SAGARAL, VENTURA PREJUDICE “A
... ■ Even if initially untrue, a stereotype can eventually be seen as true merely by its existence 1. Prejudgments guide attention and memories “...once we judge an item as belonging to a category such as a particular race or sex, our memory for it later shifts toward the features we associate with t ...
... ■ Even if initially untrue, a stereotype can eventually be seen as true merely by its existence 1. Prejudgments guide attention and memories “...once we judge an item as belonging to a category such as a particular race or sex, our memory for it later shifts toward the features we associate with t ...
contributing disciplines to organisational behavior
... behavior of individuals are influenced by the actual, imagined or implied presents of others. What makes social psychology social is that it deals with how people are affected by other people who are actually physically present or who are imagined to be present or even whose presence is implied. In ...
... behavior of individuals are influenced by the actual, imagined or implied presents of others. What makes social psychology social is that it deals with how people are affected by other people who are actually physically present or who are imagined to be present or even whose presence is implied. In ...
FBA-BIP
... What the person does and the extent to which this represents a match or a mismatch between the person and the expectations placed on that person either overtly or subtly by his/her surroundings ...
... What the person does and the extent to which this represents a match or a mismatch between the person and the expectations placed on that person either overtly or subtly by his/her surroundings ...
Adlai E. Stevenson High School Course Description
... Students will explain the importance of research in explaining behavior and making connections Students will explain various stress patterns and the influence on an individuals well-being. Students will explore biological and social factors that motivate behavior and biological and cultural factors ...
... Students will explain the importance of research in explaining behavior and making connections Students will explain various stress patterns and the influence on an individuals well-being. Students will explore biological and social factors that motivate behavior and biological and cultural factors ...
Promoting positive attitudes
... poor attitudes related to disability. These attitudes are often based on a lack of experience, education and understanding. Attitudes are reflected in how a person acts, responds and behaves around someone with disability. Concentrating on what a person with disability cannot do perpetuates a negati ...
... poor attitudes related to disability. These attitudes are often based on a lack of experience, education and understanding. Attitudes are reflected in how a person acts, responds and behaves around someone with disability. Concentrating on what a person with disability cannot do perpetuates a negati ...
PSYCHOLOGY (9th Edition) David Myers
... delayed in time for a certain behavior. A paycheck that comes at the end of a week. We may be inclined to engage in small immediate reinforcers (watching TV) rather than large delayed reinforcers (getting an A in a course) which require consistent study. ...
... delayed in time for a certain behavior. A paycheck that comes at the end of a week. We may be inclined to engage in small immediate reinforcers (watching TV) rather than large delayed reinforcers (getting an A in a course) which require consistent study. ...
Believers` estimates of God`s beliefs are more
... the entire corpus of world religions. The vast majority of participants from these samples also report believing in God. We exclude nonbelievers from analyses, except where we have a sufficiently large sample for independent analysis (Study 4), primarily because our hypotheses are relevant only to b ...
... the entire corpus of world religions. The vast majority of participants from these samples also report believing in God. We exclude nonbelievers from analyses, except where we have a sufficiently large sample for independent analysis (Study 4), primarily because our hypotheses are relevant only to b ...
Consumer Attitudes and Behaviors Part 2of 7
... Once this pairing is learned, the conditioned stimulus will lead to a conditional response that is identical to the unconditioned ...
... Once this pairing is learned, the conditioned stimulus will lead to a conditional response that is identical to the unconditioned ...
PsycCRITIQUES - The Imelda Marcos of Green Consumerism
... footprint. This is an intriguing question because most people claim that they like to go green, but the actual choices they make tell a different story. Beattie therefore puts the people who say they care for climate change to the test. He uses an implicit association test that uses the speed in whi ...
... footprint. This is an intriguing question because most people claim that they like to go green, but the actual choices they make tell a different story. Beattie therefore puts the people who say they care for climate change to the test. He uses an implicit association test that uses the speed in whi ...
copyrighted material - Beck-Shop
... Schemas: The next step in the process? Making judgements when you don’t have all the data: cognitive heuristics Why do we fall prey to judgemental heuristics? Schema activation and behaviour Summary Going the Extra Mile: Regaining Cognitive Control Stereotype? What stereotype? How goals can stop the ...
... Schemas: The next step in the process? Making judgements when you don’t have all the data: cognitive heuristics Why do we fall prey to judgemental heuristics? Schema activation and behaviour Summary Going the Extra Mile: Regaining Cognitive Control Stereotype? What stereotype? How goals can stop the ...
Ability - Assignment Point
... Theories of Learning (cont’d) Social-Learning Theory People can learn through observation and direct experience. Key Concepts • Attentional processes • Retention processes ...
... Theories of Learning (cont’d) Social-Learning Theory People can learn through observation and direct experience. Key Concepts • Attentional processes • Retention processes ...
Part II Classical Conditioning
... learning. However, some research has found that animals do use reasoning. For instance, in Mackintosh’s (1994) study, rats pressed the lever in a Skinner box for a food reward. The experimenter then gave the rats an injection to create an aversion to the food. They found that the rats eventually sto ...
... learning. However, some research has found that animals do use reasoning. For instance, in Mackintosh’s (1994) study, rats pressed the lever in a Skinner box for a food reward. The experimenter then gave the rats an injection to create an aversion to the food. They found that the rats eventually sto ...
Attitude change
![](https://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/Special:FilePath/Asch_experiment.png?width=300)
Attitudes are associated beliefs and behaviors towards some object. They are not stable, and because of the communication and behavior of other people, are subject to change by social influences, as well as by the individual's motivation to maintain cognitive consistency when cognitive dissonance occurs--when two attitudes or attitude and behavior conflict. Attitudes and attitude objects are functions of affective and cognitive components. It has been suggested that the inter-structural composition of an associative network can be altered by the activation of a single node. Thus, by activating an affective or emotional node, attitude change may be possible, though affective and cognitive components tend to be intertwined.