* Your assessment is very important for improving the workof artificial intelligence, which forms the content of this project
Download Social Psychology Notes - Morgan Park High School
Social loafing wikipedia , lookup
Self-categorization theory wikipedia , lookup
Carolyn Sherif wikipedia , lookup
Communication in small groups wikipedia , lookup
Belongingness wikipedia , lookup
Social dilemma wikipedia , lookup
Group dynamics wikipedia , lookup
Impression formation wikipedia , lookup
False consensus effect wikipedia , lookup
Albert Bandura wikipedia , lookup
Social tuning wikipedia , lookup
Attitude change wikipedia , lookup
Attitude (psychology) wikipedia , lookup
Social Psychology Social psychology is the scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another. Person versus the situation o Attribution error theory states we tend to give a causal explanation for someone’s behavior, often by crediting either the situation or the person’s disposition. o We often overestimate the influence of personality and underestimate the influence of situations. o Fundamental attribution error is the tendency for observers, when analyzing another’s behavior, to underestimate the impact of the situation and to overestimate the impact of personal disposition. o When explaining our own behavior, we are sensitive to how our behavior changes with the situation we encounter. When observing others in one situation, people automatically jump to the conclusion of defining their behavior by the person’s personality. o We attribute: Other’s successes to outside forces Other’s failures to their personality Our own successes to our personality Our own failures to outside forces or the situation Attitudes and actions o Attitudes are beliefs and feelings that predisposes one to respond in a particular way to objects, people, and events. o Change the way you think – and things will never be the same. o Attitudes are specifically relevant to the behavior o People readily profess general attitudes that contradict their behavior o Attitudes about a specific act do guide one’s actions (behavior) o We are keenly aware of our attitudes When one makes us self conscious of how we feel and how we are actually acting, we tend to make the two, our attitudes and behavior match each other. o Do our actions affect our attitudes? o People come to believe in what they have stood up for. Thus, we know that attitudes follow behavior. o Two examples: Foot in the door is the tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. The pattern of action followed by attitude o When person is asked to speak and/or write on a position that they have qualms with, they begin to believe their own words. Their actions (behavior) makes them begin to rationalize and persuade themselves that they believe what they did to be true to their nature (attitude). o Action followed by attitude a.k.a. behavior followed by attitude o Saying and doing becomes believing o WORDS ARE POWER!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! Role playing affects attitudes o When you adopt new roles – you tend to follow preconceived notions or observed examples of what you think that role should entail you doing. o Before long, your behavior no longer feels forced. o Simulated prison experiment (Zimbardo, 1972) Wardens and inmates – became so real that the experiment had to be stopped after six days o “No man for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude without finally getting bewildered to which may be the truer.” - Nathanial Hawthorne Cognitive dissonance theory happens when we are aware that our attitudes and actions do not coincide with each other, so we try to bring our attitudes in line with our actions – with the use of defense mechanisms. We want and need to find consistency within ourselves Social influence o How do we influence each other? o How are we affected by pressures to conform and obey the group? Conformity and obedience We are natural mimics and exemplify the “the chameleon effect” and “mood linkage” o We piece ourselves together from the fabric of society, relationships, friends, and family – we from each qualities and trends and we become US. Group pressure o Conformity is adjusting one’s behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard. o Conditions that strengthen conformity: One is made to feel insecure and incompetent The group has least three or more group members The group is unanimous One admires group status One’s culture strongly encourages group respect and respect for social standards One has a commitment to the group Others in the group observe one’s behavior Reasons for conforming o Normative social influence o Informational social influence Obedience o Stanley Milgram (1963, 1974) teacher/ learner punishment scenario o 63 percent of men aged 20 to 50 complied fully with the amount of shock (435-50volts) o Milgrams use of deception and stress – ethics o Milgram learned obedience was highest when: The person giving the orders was close at hand and was perceived to be a legitimate authority figure The authority figure was supported by a prestigious institution The victim was depersonalized or at a distance There was no one who disobeyed orders, thus everyone was mentally forced to comply Group influence o Social facilitation o We perform well learned task better in front of an audience, rather than task that we can not perform so well or that we do not know how to do o Be mindful that we perform well in front of a comfortable audience (friends, family, etc) o Social loafing When part of a group people feel less accountable and do not worry about what others think o Deindividuation o Group polarization o Groupthink The power of individuals o Social control (the power of the situation) and personal control (the power of the individual) interact. When feeling pressured, people may react how they truly feel instead of what is expected. o “the test of courage comes when we are in the minority; the test of tolerance is when we are in the majority.” Social relations o Prejudice o Stereotypes o Social roots of prejudice Social inequalities and social competition – goods, resources, money, and living space Us versus Them a.k.a the in-group and the out-group Using each other as scapegoats Our need to see things in categorizes --- WE are individuals, but they all look and act alike Frustration aggression principle Sexual aggression and violence in the media o The seduction of rape o Violent videogames – training killers Altruism and social responsibility o Kitty Genovese (1964) o Altruism o Bystander effect We notice the situation We interpret the situation as an emergency We assume responsibility for helping in the situation The psychology of helping o The best odds of our helping someone occur when: We have just observed someone else being helpful We are not in a hurry The victim appears to need and deserve help The victim is in some way similar to us We are in a small town or rural area We are feeling guilty We are focused on others and not preoccupied We are in a good mood Social exchange theory o Peacemaking o Cooperation and superordinate goals