FunderDraft2002 - Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology
... dangerousness. Such judgments are interesting, useful, and certainly important: they may determine further interaction. A person perceived as sociable will be approached, one perceived as reliable may be offered a job, and one perceived as dangerous may be avoided or even attacked. Because the judgm ...
... dangerousness. Such judgments are interesting, useful, and certainly important: they may determine further interaction. A person perceived as sociable will be approached, one perceived as reliable may be offered a job, and one perceived as dangerous may be avoided or even attacked. Because the judgm ...
Conformity and obedience
... ◦ Majority involves public compliance, they are more concerned with how they appear in front of others than the issue itself. ◦ Minorities are aiming for conversion rather than compliance. They hope that by focusing on the issue the majority will take notice. This in turn may start the process of co ...
... ◦ Majority involves public compliance, they are more concerned with how they appear in front of others than the issue itself. ◦ Minorities are aiming for conversion rather than compliance. They hope that by focusing on the issue the majority will take notice. This in turn may start the process of co ...
Social Condition as a Prohibited Ground in Discrimination in Human
... against the irrational judgments of third parties. The inclusion of social condition as a prohibited ground of discrimination does not give individuals any more rights than they have under the Act, which is itself subject to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, such inclusion ensure ...
... against the irrational judgments of third parties. The inclusion of social condition as a prohibited ground of discrimination does not give individuals any more rights than they have under the Act, which is itself subject to the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. However, such inclusion ensure ...
social media guide - DePauw University
... Facebook provides opportunities for organizations to create specific groups or fan pages within the Facebook network. Depending on the organization’s goals, both groups and fan pages can be useful. There are, however, a number of practical differences between the two that may lead users to choose on ...
... Facebook provides opportunities for organizations to create specific groups or fan pages within the Facebook network. Depending on the organization’s goals, both groups and fan pages can be useful. There are, however, a number of practical differences between the two that may lead users to choose on ...
Chapter 12
... A. presented on television have virtually no effect on children. B. promote altruism in children but not in adults. C. promote altruism in the observers. D. decrease helping because observers seem to believe that aid is less necessary. ...
... A. presented on television have virtually no effect on children. B. promote altruism in children but not in adults. C. promote altruism in the observers. D. decrease helping because observers seem to believe that aid is less necessary. ...
krueger-2009-aration.. - Description
... ftemales may not get to mate at all despite the availability of other males of acceptable fitness. Three empirical patterns suggest that cascade models are applicable to the Asch paradigm. First, the rise and leveling-off of empirical conformity rates resemble S-shaped growth curves (Tanford & Penro ...
... ftemales may not get to mate at all despite the availability of other males of acceptable fitness. Three empirical patterns suggest that cascade models are applicable to the Asch paradigm. First, the rise and leveling-off of empirical conformity rates resemble S-shaped growth curves (Tanford & Penro ...
Aronson, The Social Animal, 10e
... • One way that we make sense of the array of information that comes our way is through the use of judgmental heuristics. – These are mental shortcuts – a simple, often approximate, rule or strategy for solving a problem. – Heuristics require very little thought. – The three most common: • Representa ...
... • One way that we make sense of the array of information that comes our way is through the use of judgmental heuristics. – These are mental shortcuts – a simple, often approximate, rule or strategy for solving a problem. – Heuristics require very little thought. – The three most common: • Representa ...
Social-Cognitive Models and Skills
... goal and an attribution that one’s social success is due to effort may motivate the individual to select prosocial behavioral strategies. Then, as the person assesses the outcome of the social exchange, that individual may persist with the selected goal or revise it as the social interaction continu ...
... goal and an attribution that one’s social success is due to effort may motivate the individual to select prosocial behavioral strategies. Then, as the person assesses the outcome of the social exchange, that individual may persist with the selected goal or revise it as the social interaction continu ...
Attitude Research: Between Ockham`s Razor and the Fundamental
... consistency is high when individuals draw on similar inputs in forming an evaluative judgment and a behavioral decision but low otherwise. This assumption again provides a parsimonious account of the available data, including Fishbein and Ajzen’s (1975) admonitions regarding proper measurement, whic ...
... consistency is high when individuals draw on similar inputs in forming an evaluative judgment and a behavioral decision but low otherwise. This assumption again provides a parsimonious account of the available data, including Fishbein and Ajzen’s (1975) admonitions regarding proper measurement, whic ...
Migration Ethical challenges
... – loss (abandoning) of one’s own culture connected with failure to assimilate to local culture, – limiting one’s life to work, subordinating all other elements to gainful employment – insufficient support from the community of origin which would give a tool to verification and falsification of belie ...
... – loss (abandoning) of one’s own culture connected with failure to assimilate to local culture, – limiting one’s life to work, subordinating all other elements to gainful employment – insufficient support from the community of origin which would give a tool to verification and falsification of belie ...
Study Guide, Exam 4
... *Highlights suggest central questions, but you are responsible for making use of the entire study guide – and remember that it’s only a guide! Social Class ...
... *Highlights suggest central questions, but you are responsible for making use of the entire study guide – and remember that it’s only a guide! Social Class ...
Author`s personal copy
... reflecting the modalities of intergroup relations that can be framed in terms of competition over scarce resources or asymmetrical economic power. This Realistic Conflict Theory (Sherif, 1967) assumes that intergroup conflict, but also intergroup cooperation, stem from material interests that provide t ...
... reflecting the modalities of intergroup relations that can be framed in terms of competition over scarce resources or asymmetrical economic power. This Realistic Conflict Theory (Sherif, 1967) assumes that intergroup conflict, but also intergroup cooperation, stem from material interests that provide t ...
Standing Idly By: The Bystander Effect and Helping Behaviors Most
... that their work suggested that “the presence of bystanders may affect an individual in several ways; including both “social influence” and “diffusion of responsibility.” These two concepts will be discussed, as well as other causes that may give reason for others to not react when witnessing crime. ...
... that their work suggested that “the presence of bystanders may affect an individual in several ways; including both “social influence” and “diffusion of responsibility.” These two concepts will be discussed, as well as other causes that may give reason for others to not react when witnessing crime. ...
Social psychology
... their weight as an important part of their lives are a-schematic on that attribute.[15] It is rather clear that the self is a special object of our attention. Whether you are mentally focused on a memory, a conversation, a foul smell, the song that is stuck in your head, or this sentence, conscious ...
... their weight as an important part of their lives are a-schematic on that attribute.[15] It is rather clear that the self is a special object of our attention. Whether you are mentally focused on a memory, a conversation, a foul smell, the song that is stuck in your head, or this sentence, conscious ...
A look beyond brain size to life-history factors
... aimed at determining the conditions that augment the attitude/behavior correlation. For example, defining the attitude and behavior at a similar level of abstraction tends to improve prediction, as does having multiple measures of the attitude and behavior (Ajzen & Fishbein, 1977). Other factors hav ...
... aimed at determining the conditions that augment the attitude/behavior correlation. For example, defining the attitude and behavior at a similar level of abstraction tends to improve prediction, as does having multiple measures of the attitude and behavior (Ajzen & Fishbein, 1977). Other factors hav ...
Course Syllabus - PSY 2110H [Winter 2014]
... I do not keep track of class attendance. However, keep in mind that solely relying on class notes (i.e. PowerPoint slides) and required readings may not be enough to do well in the course. If you do miss a class for any reason, it is your responsibility to ask a classmate for a copy of their notes, ...
... I do not keep track of class attendance. However, keep in mind that solely relying on class notes (i.e. PowerPoint slides) and required readings may not be enough to do well in the course. If you do miss a class for any reason, it is your responsibility to ask a classmate for a copy of their notes, ...
defining social inequality and stratification
... and 11% of women worked as managers or senior officials. Women on average still earn less than men. One reason for this is that women are more likely than men to work in low-paid jobs. Women are also more likely than me to be employed part-time rather than full time. One explanation for the persiste ...
... and 11% of women worked as managers or senior officials. Women on average still earn less than men. One reason for this is that women are more likely than men to work in low-paid jobs. Women are also more likely than me to be employed part-time rather than full time. One explanation for the persiste ...
Paper
... addition, observing in-group members interacting with out-group members is also associated with increased positive intergroup interactions (Dovidio et al, 2011). Consequently, all these studies provide evidence for change in peoples’ attitudes. Also, they are doing so by combining descriptive and in ...
... addition, observing in-group members interacting with out-group members is also associated with increased positive intergroup interactions (Dovidio et al, 2011). Consequently, all these studies provide evidence for change in peoples’ attitudes. Also, they are doing so by combining descriptive and in ...
INTRODUCTORY ADDRESS* Serge Moscovici Ecole des Hautes
... users, it is possible to glimpse at what could be a social psychology of knowledge. But that is enough on this point. I am now coming to the second line of reflection which directly prolongs the first. It touches upon the obvious creativeness of representations, on the way in which their contents ar ...
... users, it is possible to glimpse at what could be a social psychology of knowledge. But that is enough on this point. I am now coming to the second line of reflection which directly prolongs the first. It touches upon the obvious creativeness of representations, on the way in which their contents ar ...
THE EVOLUTION OF INDIRECT RECIPROCITY Robert
... because the n-person prisoner’s dilemma captures only one of many kinds of cooperative social behavior in sizable groups. It might be that reciprocity could evolve under other circumstances. Alexander (1985, 1987) imagines that individual A may help individual B even though A receives no direct reci ...
... because the n-person prisoner’s dilemma captures only one of many kinds of cooperative social behavior in sizable groups. It might be that reciprocity could evolve under other circumstances. Alexander (1985, 1987) imagines that individual A may help individual B even though A receives no direct reci ...
This test includes chapters on Development, States of
... a. the social responsibility norm. b. the just-world phenomenon. c. the two-factor theory. d. deindividuation. e. ingroup bias. 80. When visiting the Bergin-Belsen concentration camp shortly after World War II, one German civilian was said to have remarked, "What terrible criminals these prisoners m ...
... a. the social responsibility norm. b. the just-world phenomenon. c. the two-factor theory. d. deindividuation. e. ingroup bias. 80. When visiting the Bergin-Belsen concentration camp shortly after World War II, one German civilian was said to have remarked, "What terrible criminals these prisoners m ...
Dynamic Social Impact and the Evolution of Social Representations
... might be stereotyped as both unintelligent and dirty, for instance. DSIT offers one explanation as to how two logically dissociated attributes come to be associated within the context of the cultural stereotype. Over time, two initially unrelated beliefs that are randomly distributed across social s ...
... might be stereotyped as both unintelligent and dirty, for instance. DSIT offers one explanation as to how two logically dissociated attributes come to be associated within the context of the cultural stereotype. Over time, two initially unrelated beliefs that are randomly distributed across social s ...
Online games as `third places.`
... determine what underlying variables are at play in each activity (Evelund, 2003) before drawing conclusions about the effects of online media as a whole. Building on the work of Lessig and Evelund, we begin with the assumption that some forms of Internet use may be more consequential for particular ...
... determine what underlying variables are at play in each activity (Evelund, 2003) before drawing conclusions about the effects of online media as a whole. Building on the work of Lessig and Evelund, we begin with the assumption that some forms of Internet use may be more consequential for particular ...
Social marketing
... negative consequences of a behavior and the benefits of a change. 2. Dramatic relief: people must experience the emotions and feelings associated with the problem behavior. 3. Self-reevaluation: people assess their self-image with and without the problem behavior. 4. Environmental reevaluation: peop ...
... negative consequences of a behavior and the benefits of a change. 2. Dramatic relief: people must experience the emotions and feelings associated with the problem behavior. 3. Self-reevaluation: people assess their self-image with and without the problem behavior. 4. Environmental reevaluation: peop ...