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Scientific study of how people’s thoughts, feelings, and actions are affected by others Attitudes ◦ Evaluations of a particular person, behavior, belief, or concept ◦ Factors by which attitudes can be changed Message source Attitude communicator Characteristics of the message Characteristics of the target Routes to persuasion ◦ Central route processing ◦ Peripheral route processing Link between attitudes and behavior Cognitive dissonance ◦ When a person holds two contradictory attitudes or thoughts Social cognition ◦ Way people understand and make sense of others and themselves ◦ Schemas Sets of cognitions about people and social experiences Impression formation ◦ Central traits ◦ “Thin slices of behavior” Attribution theory ◦ Seeks to explain how we decide, on the basis of samples of an individual’s behavior, what the specific causes of that person’s behavior are Situational causes ◦ A cause of behavior that is brought about by something in the environment Dispositional causes ◦ A cause of behavior that is prompted by the person’s disposition (his or her internal traits or personality characteristics) Fundamental attribution error ◦ Tendency to over-attribute others’ behavior to dispositional causes, and the corresponding failure to recognize the importance of situational causes Halo effect ◦ Phenomenon in which an initial understanding that a person has positive traits is used to infer other uniformly positive characteristics Assumed-similarity bias ◦ Tendency to think of people as being similar to oneself, even when meeting them for the first time Self-serving bias ◦ Tendency to attribute personal success to personal factors (skill, ability, or effort) and to attribute failure to factors outside oneself Collectivist orientation ◦ Worldview that promotes the notion of interdependence See themselves a parts of a larger, interconnected social network and as responsible to others Individualist orientation ◦ Emphasizes personal identity and the uniqueness of the individual Focus more on what sets them apart from others and what makes them special Social influence ◦ Process by which the actions of an individual or group affect the behavior of others Conformity ◦ Change in behavior or attitudes brought about by a desire to follow the beliefs or standards of other people ◦ Solomon Asch study, 1951 Characteristics of the group Situation in which the individual is responding Kind of task Unanimity of the group ◦ Social supporter Person who shares an unpopular point of view along with another group member, thereby reducing nonconformity Type of thinking in which group members share such a strong motivation to achieve consensus that they lose the ability to critically evaluate alternative points of view Foot-in-the-door technique ◦ Small request followed by a larger request Door-in-the-face technique ◦ Large request followed by a smaller request That’s-not-all technique ◦ Offered a deal at an inflated price Not-so-free sample ◦ Norm of reciprocity Change in behavior in response to the commands of others Stanley Milgram’s obedience experiment Stereotypes ◦ Generalized beliefs and expectations about social groups and their members Prejudice ◦ The negative (or positive) evaluations of groups and their members Discrimination ◦ Negative behavior toward members of a particular group ◦ Self-fulfilling prophecy Claude Steele ◦ Many African Americans suffer from stereotype threat, in which members of the group fear that their behavior will confirm stereotypes about themselves ◦ Many may come to accept society’s stereotypes and believe that they are prone to fail Social learning approaches ◦ People’s feelings about members of various groups are shaped by the behavior of parents, other adults, and peers Social identity theory ◦ We use group membership as a source of pride and self-worth Increasing contact between the target of stereotyping and the holder of the stereotype Make values and norms against prejudice more conspicuous Providing information about the objects of stereotyping Positive feelings for others; liking and loving Liking ◦ Proximity ◦ Mere exposure ◦ Similarity Reciprocity-of-liking effect ◦ Physical attractiveness Passionate (or romantic) love ◦ Represents a state of intense absorption in someone that includes intense physiological arousal, psychological interest, and caring for the needs of another Companionate love ◦ Strong affection that we have for those with whom our lives are deeply involved Decision/commitment component Intimacy component Passion component Aggression ◦ Intentional injury or harm to another person ◦ Frustration Instinct approaches ◦ Catharsis Process of discharging built up aggressive energy Frustrationaggression approaches The thwarting or blocking of some ongoing, goal-directed behavior Observational learning approaches ◦ Effects of modeling Prosocial behavior ◦ Altruism ◦ Helping behavior Helping behavior that is beneficial to others but clearly requires selfsacrifice Diffusion of responsibility ◦ Tendency for people to feel that responsibility for acting is shared, or diffused, among those present