Social Psychology. Social psychology the scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another.

Size: px
Start display at page:

Download "Social Psychology. Social psychology the scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another."

Transcription

1 Social Psychology Social psychology the scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another. Social Thinking Attributing Behavior to Persons or to Situations Attribution theory suggests how we explain someone s behavior by crediting either the situation or the person s disposition. o Fritz Heider o Ex: A boy acts out aggressively in class. The teacher could think it was because of his personality (internal attribution) or an abusive parental relationship at home (situational attribution) Fundamental attribution error 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 Ex: Juliet is shy in class. Observing this, we naturally think that she is a shy person in all aspects of life it is an aspect of her personality. However, we are committing fundamental attribution error by not considering how the environment impacts her behaviors. Catch her at a party and she might seem like a completely different person. o We often attribute our behaviors to external factors, while attributing others behaviors to internal dispositions. The Effects of Attribution Our attempt to attribute others behaviors to certain things can have real consequences. o Jury deciding whether a shooting was malicious or in self-defense. o Manager evaluating the poor performance of an employee. Our attributions can change depending on our emotions AND the context. o A spouse makes a snippy remark. In an unhappy marriage, the remark could be attributed to that spouses personality. In a happy marriage, the remark could be attributed to that spouse having a bad day at work. Bottom line: Our attributions to individuals dispositions or to their situations have real consequences.

2 Attitudes and Actions Attitudes feelings, often based on our beliefs that predispose us to respond in a particular way to objects, people, and events. o If we believe someone is mean, we may feel dislike for the person, and then act unfriendly. Attitudes Can Affect Actions We typically think in terms of attitudes affecting actions (common sense view). The effect of attitudes on behavior also depend on external situations, such as social pressure. Behaviors Can Affect Attitudes Surprisingly, behaviors can actually affect attitudes. Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon Foot-in-door-phenomenon the tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. To get people to agree, start small and build. Doing becomes believing. o Brainwashing during the Korean War captured, imprisoned American soldiers eventually came to believe in communist beliefs. Communist soldiers might ask prisoners to run errands, then repeat communist manifestos, and divulge military secrets. At the end of the war, some brainwashed American soldiers chose to stay with the communists. o Works with charitable donations, blood drives, and even safe driving signs. o Racial attitudes changed as school became desegregated in the 50s-60s. Moral action strengthens moral convictions. Role-Playing Affects Attitudes You adopt a new role (college student, boyfriend/girlfriend, new job title, etc) you strive to follow the social prescriptions that accompany that role. At first you may feel phony or fake, but soon after, the new role becomes you. Most famous role-playing experiment Philip Zimbardo s Stanford Prison Study o About 20 average males, half assigned to role-play as guards and half to role-play as prisoners o Experiment had to be ended after 6 days because of the aggressiveness of the guards and emotional unstableness of the prisoners. Abu Ghraib average American military officers abused Iraqi prisoners. VERY similar to the Standford Prison Study Cognitive Dissonance Cognitive-dissonance theory the theory that we act to reduce the discomfort (dissonance) we feel when two of our thoughts (cognitions) are inconsistent. For example, when our awareness of our attitudes and of our actions clash, we can reduce the resulting dissonance by changing our attitudes. When our thoughts and/or actions do not match or are not consistent, we reduce the tension/discomfort (dissonance) by forming new more comfortable thoughts. o When the US invaded Iraq in 2003, it was under the suspicion of weapons of mass destruction. Many (80%) of Americans reported believing that the weapons existed, and 38% of Americans said the war would be justified even if weapons weren t found. When no weapons were found, many Americans experienced dissonance, furthered by the war s high financial cost and the cost of life. To reduce this dissonance Americans became more interested in liberating an oppressed people and promoting democracy. A smoker who believes that smoking is unhealthy may experience cognitive dissonance. They could try to revise their attitudes by rationalizing their behavior by saying, Well I exercise so much so the effects are counteracted.

3 Social Influence Conformity and Obedience Behavior is contagious. o People often laugh, yawn, or cough after seeing or hearing another people do it. o A person passing a cluster of people who are looking up, will also look up. o Bartenders and street performers seed their tip jar to suggest that others have given. Chameleon effect we unconsciously mimic others expressions, postures, and voice tones to help us feel what they are feeling. Mood linkage we unconsciously mimic others moods. The effects of contagious behavior can be serious. o After the Columbine high school shooting, every US state (except Vermont) experienced threats of similar violence. o Suicide rates often appear in clusters. Group Pressure and Conformity Conformity adjusting one s behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard. Solomon Asch s study on conformity (1955) o Several students sit around a table (all but one of which is an actor). They are shown a series of cards, each with different size lines on them, and one line that the participants must match to the corresponding matching line. For several rounds, all the participants agree on which line the questioned line matches. Then suddenly, the group starts to choose lines that clearly are not the matching lines. The actual participant is torn between what the group thinks and what he thinks is true. More than 1/3 of the time, the participant went along with the group, even though they knew the group was wrong. Conditions that Strengthen Conformity One is made to feel incompetent or insecure The group has at least 3 people The group is unanimous but the dissent of just one person can disrupt this One admires the group s status or attractiveness One has made no prior commitment to any response Others in the group observe one s behavior One s culture strongly encourages respect for social standards Reasons for Conforming Why do we clap when others do? Eat as other eat? Believe what others believe? Normative social influence influence resulting from a person s desire to gain approval or avoid disapproval o Sensitive to social norms because the price for being different can be severe Informational social influence influence resulting from one s willingness to accept others opinions about reality. o Especially strong when the person is unsure about the correct behavior, they will look to others on how to behave o Ex: some entertainers plant actor audience members among real audience members. The actors are cued to clap and give standing ovations at certain times, therefore influencing the rest of the audience to do the same. Obedience Obedience o Complying to social pressures and authority Stanley Milgram s shock experiment studied how much people would obey an authority figure at the expense of physically shocking another human being 63% of participants fully complied to the end of the shocking session when they believed the learner was shocked unconscious or even dead. o Even though they complied, they displayed physical signs of distress: perspiring, trembling, nervous laughter, and biting their lips Milgram s experiment is controversial from an ethics perspective is it ethical to deceive humans to believe that they are hurting or even killing another human?

4 o Milgram pointed out that after an intense and thoughtful debriefing session, almost none of the participants regretted taking part in the study. The experiment was repeated, this time with the learner claiming to have to heart condition. Still 65% of the participants complied fully. Milgram found that obedience was highest when: o The person giving the orders was close at hand o The person giving the orders was perceived to be a legitimate authority figure. o The authority figure was from a prestigious institution o The victim was depersonalized or perceived at a distance o There were no role models for defiance, no other participants were seen disobeying the experimenter Lessons from the Conformity and Obedience Studies Milgram exploited foot-in-the-door phenomenon getting teachers to respond to small requests then escalating these requests These people are not bad, but corrupted by a bad situation. *** Not in book It is also important to remember that people have free will and can break with conformity and deviance. Conforming/obeying and nonconformity/disobedience have their time and place. When considering to conform/not conform or to obey/disobey, consider the context and the consequences. Group Influence How does being a member of a group influence our behaviors? Individual Behavior in the Presence of Others Social Facilitation How are we influenced by the mere presence of others? Social facilitation stronger responses on simple or well-learned tasks in the presence of others o Ex: When a light turns green, drivers take about 15% less time to travel the first 100 years when another car is beside them than when they are alone. o Ex: competing against a clock you might go fast, however you would go faster if competing against someone else When we are around others, we are aroused increased correct responses on WELL-LEARNED tasks. Bottom line what you do well, you are likely to do even better in front of an audience; what you think is difficult may seem impossible when you are being watched. Social Loafing What happens when people in a group are asked to perform a task? Social loafing the tendency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their efforts toward attaining a common goal than when individually accountable. o Ex: in a one-on-one tug of war, the individuals must exert 100% effort, however start adding people to either side, and the percent effort given decreases in each individual. o Ex: group projects the thought that someone else will do that Especially common among men in individualistic cultures People acting a group feel less accountable for their actions. They may feel as if their efforts are dispensable and ride on the efforts of others. Deindividution Sometimes the presence of others can arouse us and diminish responsibility simultaneously. Deindividuation the loss of self-awareness and self-restraint occurring in group situations that foster arousal. o Ex: tribal paint allows warriors to be more brutal o Ex: KKK outfits allow members to be anonymous and destructive o Ex: mob mentality o Ex: worshiping at a church in which people sing and sway together

5 Possible when group members feel aroused (positively/negatively) and anonymous and thus lose selfconsciousness and respond to the group experience. Effects of Group Interaction How can interacting with others have bad and good events? Group Polarization Over time, group differences widen. o Ex: college students who arrive with specific thoughts, and then join organizations and interact with people who share those thoughts, will leave college having strengthened in those thoughts and beliefs. Group polarization the enhancement of a group s prevailing inclination through discussion within the group o Ex: when high prejudiced students discussed racial prejudice with each other, they became more prejudiced. o Preaching to the choir The internet provides a great platform for group polarization chat rooms, forums, etc especially for people who hold obscure beliefs Groupthink How can group interaction distort decision making? Groupthink the mode of thinking that occurs when the desired for harmony in a decision making group overrides a realistic appraisal of alternatives. o Ex: WMD in Iraq issue review board considered few alternatives, selective gathering of information, pressure to conform within the group or withhold criticism, and collective rationalization Groupthink can be prevented when a leader welcomes various opinions, invites experts critiques, and assigns people to identity possible problems. The Power of Individuals People have the ability to think for themselves. o Ex: 3 officers at Abu Ghraib defied social influence and either abstained from or reported the activities Minority influence the power or one or two individuals to sway majorities. o Must be consistent in the position to change minds.

6 Prejudice Prejudice an unjustifiable (and usually negative) attitude toward a group and its members. o Stereotype a generalized (sometimes accurate but often overgeneralized) belief about a group of people. o Negative emotions (hostility, envy, or fear) o discriminatory actions unjustifiable negative behavior toward a group or its members. Prejudices are beliefs and discrimination is negative actions. Prejudices are schemas that influence how we notice and perceive events. Prejudices can be expressed overtly by discriminatory actions, or subtly through implicit emotions or thoughts. Social Roots of Prejudice Social Inequalities Haves vs have-nots haves develop ideas that justify their position which can form from prejudices Us and Them: Ingroup and Outgroup ingroup - "us" - people with whom one shares a common identity outgroup - "them" - those perceived as different or apart from one's ingroup ingroup bias - the tendency to favor one's own ingroup us-them distinctions can be made arbitrarily (toss of coin, drawing out of a hat) The ingroup bias leads to a natural prejudice against strangers Emotional Roots of Prejudice Distinctions among people are heavily and intensely felt after a dangerous or emotion-arousing event (ex: 9/11 and the outpouring of American patriotism Prejudice can stem from and express anger looking for someone to blame o o scapegoat theory - the theory that prejudice offers an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame. Following 9/11 many people began to demonize and discriminate against innocent Arab Americans and Muslims who were seen as terrorists Cognitive Roots of Prejudice Prejudice stems from divisions in a society, which are made cognitively in its members as a way to simplify the world. Categorization Categorizing things makes it easier to perceive the world. By categorizing people into groups, we often stereotype them (remember prototypes and the representativeness heuristic?) which overestimates the similarities in the groups. To those in one ethnic group, members of another often seem more alike in appearance, personality, and attitudes than they really are. With experience people get better at recognizing individual faces from another group. Vivid Cases Availability heuristic - misjudging the frequency of events by instances that readily come to mind Ex: Stereotyping Muslims as being terrorists based on the vivid case of 9/11 The Just-World Phenomenon just-world phenomenon - the tendency of people to believe the world is just and that people therefore get what they deserve and deserve what they get. reflects the general teaching that good is rewarded and evil is punished. short leap to thinking that those who are rewarded must be good and those who suffer must be bad (can have implications when looking at poverty, prison conditions, etc)

7 Aggression aggression - any physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt or destroy. different from our colloquial (everyday) usage of the word aggression. An assertive and persistent salesperson is not aggressive. A person committing an assault stemming from a hostile outburst is aggressive. The Biology of Aggression Aggression varies too widely from culture to culture and era to era to consider it an unlearned instinct but biology does influence aggression in everyone. genetic, neural, and biochemical Genetic Influences Twin studies show that genes can affect aggression. Animals can be bred for aggressiveness. Researchers are looking for the specific genetics to explain this, however it is commonly known that the Y chromosome (male sex) is more aggressive. Neural Influences Amygdala is influential in aggression *** Not in book - males have (on average) larger amygdalas than women. However, males because they are (on average) larger than women have larger brains as well. The frontal lobe can inhibit aggression. Biochemical Influences Hormones, alcohol, and other substances in the blood can influence aggression. Testosterone induces aggressiveness in humans and animals. Castrated or even aging males (humans and animals) show a decrease in aggression related to a decrease in testosterone. Lower level of serotonin Testosterone can influence aggressive behaviors, AND aggressive behaviors can boost testosterone. (ex: higher levels of testosterone in basketball players after a game) Alcohol also influences aggression - actually drinking alcohol and just thinking (placebo effect) you've ingested alcohol can lead to aggression. People with alcohol present in their blood commit 4 in 10 violent crimes and 3 in 4 acts of spousal abuse. The Psychology of Aggression Aversive Events frustration-aggression principle - the principle that frustration creates anger, which can generate aggression. Organisms respond to stressful events with a flight or fight response - some choose fight, especially if the situation is frustrating. Social rejection can also induce aggression school shootings, etc. Learning that Aggression is Rewarding Our reactions to events are more likely to be aggressive in situations where experience taught us that aggression pays. (ex: bully who sees that aggression makes him/her popular or boosts his/her self-confidence may continue to be aggressive or escalate his/her aggressive acts) Findings on aggression o There is more aggressive violence in societies in which the gap between the rich and poor is large. o Correlation between aggression in the children of fathers who are minimally involved in or absent from the child's life. o Aggressive behaviors are hard to replace. Parenting programs teach parents reinforce desired behaviors and frame statements more positively ("When you finish your chores you can play, " as opposed to, "You can't play until you finish your chores.") Observing Models of Aggression Observing violence can influence the presence of violence. o Bandura's bobo doll study

8 o Violent TV and video games can induce and/or desensitize children to violence Do Video Games Teach or Release Violence? Most children who play violent video games do not become violent criminals, however many violent criminals (ex: school shooters) played violent video games. Studies show that "cathartic" releases of violence, perhaps by playing video games, does not actually lead to less violent actions. Aggressive acts breed aggressive acts, not reduce them by blowing off steam. Aggressive Behaviors Biological Factors Psychological Factors Socio-Cultural Factors genetic influences dominating behavior more deindividuation from being in biochemical influences, such testosterone a crowd. as testosterone and alcohol believe you are drunk challenging environmental neural influences, such as frustration factors, such as crowding, severe head injuries aggressive role models heat, and direct provocation amygdala rewards for aggressive parental models of aggression behaviors minimal father involvement exposure to violent media

9 Conflict conflict - a perceived incompatibility of actions, goals, or ideas What in the human mind causes destructive conflict? How might the perceived threats of social diversity be replaced b a spirit of cooperation? Social Traps social trap - a situation in which the conflicting parties, by each rationally pursuing their self-interest, become caught in mutually destructive behavior Pits our own self-interests against society's well-being. o ex: not buying an environmentally friendly car because you like the way you look in your SUV that pollutes the environment Social traps challenge us to find ways of reconciling our right to pursue our personal well-being with our responsibility Enemy Perceptions People in conflict with one another form demonizing images of one another which are similar - mirror-image perceptions o Feed a vicious cycle of hostility and lead to self fulfilling prophecies

10 Attraction The Psychology of Attraction Proximity - geographic nearness o greater chance to meet o mere-exposure effect - the phenomenon that repeated exposure to novel stimuli increases liking of them o familiarity breeds fondness o adaptive - what is familiar is safer and approachable. Physical attractiveness o for most people, attractiveness is a key factor that affects first impressions o Attractive people are more likely to be perceived as healthy, happy, sensitive, successful, and socially skilled. o Beauty is in the eye of the beholder - reflect one's place and time. o Women feel attracted to healthy-looking men who seem mature, dominant, and affluent. Men are attracted to women with a youthful appearance. o We like average sized facial features and symmetry. Similarity o Opposites do not attract - friends and couples are more likely to share common interests, attitudes, and beliefs AND age, religion, education, race, intelligence, smoking behaviors, and economic status. Reward theory of attraction - we will like those whose behavior is rewarding to us and we will continue relationships that offer more rewards than costs. Romantic Love Elaine Hatfield - temporary passionate love vs enduring companionate love Passionate love - an aroused state of intense positive absorption in another, usually present at the beginning of a love relationship o the two-factor theory of emotion is useful - arousal paired with a positive passionate appraisal can lead to passionate love o To be revved up and to associate some of that arousal with a desirable person is to feel the pull of passion. Companionate love - the deep affectionate attachment we feel for those with whom or lives are intertwined o the thrill of passionate love can fade over time o adaptive? - passionate love produces children but caring for children requires that infatuation with each other fades so they can care for and love the child. o keys to enduring companionate love relationships equity - a condition in which people receive from a relationship in proportion what they give to it. self-disclosure - revealing intimate aspects of oneself to others breeds liking and liking breeds self-disclosure

11 Altruism altruism - unselfish regard for the welfare of others Bystander Intervention Darley and Latané's decision making process when deciding to intervene - We will help only if: o we notice the incident o interpret it as an emergency o feel responsibility to help At each step, the presence of others turns us away from helping. bystander effect - the tendency for any given bystander to be less likely to give aid if other bystanders are present. The best odds of our helping someone occur when: o the victim appears to need and deserve help o the victim is in some way similar to us o we have just observed someone else being helpful o we are not in a hurry o we are in a small town or rural area o we are feeling guilty o we are focused on other and not preoccupied o we are in a good mood The Norms for Helping Why do we help? social-exchange theory - the theory that our social behavior is an exchange process, the aim of which is to maximize benefits and minimize costs. o ex: if you are thinking about donating blood you would consider the disadvantages like your time, pain, and anxiety against the benefits of reduced quilt, social approval, and good feelings. reciprocity norm - an expectation that people will help, not hurt, those who have helped them. o learned through socialization o why we give tips to waiters, etc social-responsibility norm - an expectation that people will help those dependent upon them. o why people give directions to strangers

12 Peacemaking Can cooperation, communication, and conciliation transform the antagonism fed by prejudice and conflicts into attitudes that promote peace? Research says in some cases, yes. Cooperation Does it help to put conflicting parties into close contact? Sometimes. superordinate goals - shared goals that override differences among people and require their cooperation. o can help solve a shared predicament o Budget issues bring together Republicans and Democrats force them to work together. Sometimes works, sometimes doesn't Cooperation has especially positive effects when it leads people to define a new, inclusive group that dissolves their former subgroups. Senate committees comprised of Reps and Dems with special names Working toward shared goals allows diverse peoples to discover their commonalities and shared values. Communication Conflicts can be reduced by negotiation and cooperation through communication Third-party mediators can be used to facilitate communication - marriage issues to labor-management disputes Mediators help each party to voice its viewpoint and to understand the other's to lead to a win-win solution. Conciliation Cooperation and communication can sometimes be impossible. But in times of intense conflict, is there an alternative to war or surrender? GRIT - "Graduated and Reciprocated Initiatives in Tension-Reduction" - a strategy designed to decrease international tensions. Using GRIT, one side first announces its recognition of mutual interests and its intent to reduce tensions. Then it initiates one or more small, conciliatory acts. opens the door for reciprocation from the other side. o has been used in international conflicts, but can also be used in everyday life (a smile, touch, or kind word during a conflict can ease tensions.)

Myers Psychology for AP*

Myers Psychology for AP* Myers Psychology for AP* David G. Myers PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2010 *AP is a trademark registered and/or owned by the College Board, which

More information

Social Psychology. Social Thinking Social Influence Social Relations.

Social Psychology. Social Thinking Social Influence Social Relations. Social Psychology Social Thinking Social Influence Social Relations http://dove.ccs.fau.edu/~dawei/psy Social Thinking Social Psychology scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to

More information

attitude the theory that we explain someone's behavior by crediting the situation or the person's disposition attribution theory

attitude the theory that we explain someone's behavior by crediting the situation or the person's disposition attribution theory attitude feelings, often influenced by our beliefs, that predispose us to respond in a particular way to objects, people, and events attribution theory the theory that we explain someone's behavior by

More information

Psychology study guide Chapter 14

Psychology study guide Chapter 14 Psychology study guide Chapter 14 Attribution Attribution a conclusion about the cause of an observed behavior / event Attribution theory we explain other s behaviors with two types of attributions Situational

More information

CHAPTER 16 Social Psychology

CHAPTER 16 Social Psychology CHAPTER 16 Social Psychology INTRODUCTION Please watch this short clip: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=bohgujn2gk8 How do you describe the driver s behavior? What if the adjacent white car or red car belonged

More information

AP Psychology Guided Reading Chapter 16 Social Psychology

AP Psychology Guided Reading Chapter 16 Social Psychology Name: Period: AP Psychology Guided Reading Chapter 16 Social Psychology Social Thinking 1. Define social psychology: 2. Define attribution theory. How does dispositional attribution differ from situational

More information

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology Session 10 Social and community Psychology Lecturer: Dr. Joana Salifu Yendork, Psychology Department Contact Information: jyendork@ug.edu.gh College of Education

More information

Thinking About Psychology

Thinking About Psychology Thinking About Psychology Charles T. Blair-Broeker & Randal M. Ernst PowerPoint Presentation Slides by Kent Korek Germantown High School Worth Publishers, 2012 Social Context Domain Jason Doly/istockphoto

More information

Name: Period: Reading Guide Chapter 16: Social Psychology. 4. What cultures do not make the fundamental attribution error as much?

Name: Period: Reading Guide Chapter 16: Social Psychology. 4. What cultures do not make the fundamental attribution error as much? Name: Period: Reading Guide Chapter 16: Social Psychology Attribution, Attitudes, and Actions (pg. 673-679) 1. Social Psychologists: 2. Attribution Theory (Fritz Heider): 3. Fundamental Attribution Error:

More information

CHAPTER 15. Social Psychology. Lecture Overview. Introductory Definition PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY. Social Cognition.

CHAPTER 15. Social Psychology. Lecture Overview. Introductory Definition PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY PSYCHOLOGY. Social Cognition. Social Psychology CHAPTER 15 Social Cognition Lecture Overview Social Influence Social Relations Applying Social Psychology to Social Problems Introductory Definition Social Psychology: scientific study

More information

Chapter 13. Social Psychology

Chapter 13. Social Psychology Social Psychology Psychology, Fifth Edition, James S. Nairne What s It For? Social Psychology Interpreting the Behavior of Others Behaving in the Presence of Others Establishing Relations With Others Social

More information

Name: Period: Score /95. Unit 14 Study Assignment Social Psychology. 1. Social behavior arises from our social. 2. Who proposed attribution theory?

Name: Period: Score /95. Unit 14 Study Assignment Social Psychology. 1. Social behavior arises from our social. 2. Who proposed attribution theory? Name: Period: Score /95 Unit 14 Study Assignment Social Psychology 1. Social behavior arises from our social. 2. Who proposed attribution theory? 3. Create an example of the fundamental attribution error.

More information

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY. Social Influences on the Self. Self Concept. How do we see ourselves? How do we see others?

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY. Social Influences on the Self. Self Concept. How do we see ourselves? How do we see others? SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Social Cognition and Influence (how we think about ourselves) Social Influences on the Self How do we see ourselves? How do we see others? How do we compare ourselves with others? Self

More information

AP Psych Unit 14 REVIEW

AP Psych Unit 14 REVIEW Name: Date: 1. Research on physical attractiveness indicates that men are more likely than women to A) be attracted to dating partners whose hips are narrower than their waists. B) judge members of the

More information

Chapter 15 Learning Objectives with SubQuestions PERSON PERCEPTION: FORMING IMPRESSIONS OF OTHERS

Chapter 15 Learning Objectives with SubQuestions PERSON PERCEPTION: FORMING IMPRESSIONS OF OTHERS Chapter 15 Learning Objectives with SubQuestions PERSON PERCEPTION: FORMING IMPRESSIONS OF OTHERS #1) Explain how schemas, stereotypes, and other factors contribute to subjectivity in person perception

More information

PSYCHOLOGY. Chapter 12 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY PowerPoint Image Slideshow

PSYCHOLOGY. Chapter 12 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY PowerPoint Image Slideshow PSYCHOLOGY Chapter 12 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY PowerPoint Image Slideshow Social Psychology? What s that? The scientific study of how one s behavior, thoughts or feelings are influenced by the situation, or the

More information

Review Sheet Social Psych (8-10%)

Review Sheet Social Psych (8-10%) Name Ms. Gabriel/Mr. McManus Date Period AP Psychology Review Sheet Social Psych (8-10%) 1) social psychology Social Thinking 1) attribution theory 2) fundamental attribution error 3) foot-in-the-door

More information

Psychology chapter 16 Test Notes Social Psychology Altruistic Behavior - helping behavior that is not linked to personal gain; recognition and reward

Psychology chapter 16 Test Notes Social Psychology Altruistic Behavior - helping behavior that is not linked to personal gain; recognition and reward Psychology chapter 16 Test Notes Social Psychology Altruistic Behavior - helping behavior that is not linked to personal gain; recognition and reward are not expected Attitude - relatively stable organization

More information

Chapter 14. Social Psychology. How Does the Social Situation Affect our Behavior? Social Psychology

Chapter 14. Social Psychology. How Does the Social Situation Affect our Behavior? Social Psychology Chapter 14 Social Psychology This multimedia product and its contents are protected under copyright law. The following are prohibited by law: Any public performance or display, including transmission of

More information

Social Psychology. Preview

Social Psychology. Preview CHAPTER 13 Social Psychology Preview Social psychology is the scientific study of how people think about, influence, and relate to one another. In thinking about others behavior and its possible causes,

More information

Defining Psychology Behaviorism: Social Psychology: Milgram s Obedience Studies Bystander Non-intervention Cognitive Psychology:

Defining Psychology Behaviorism: Social Psychology: Milgram s Obedience Studies Bystander Non-intervention Cognitive Psychology: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Defining Psychology Behaviorism: The scientific study of how rewards and punishment in the environment affect human and non-human behavior Empirical approach: vary contingencies of

More information

Conformity ASCH S STUDY 12/8/2010 ASCH S STUDY. Social Psychology (581, ) Others Focus on Social Influences on Our Behavior

Conformity ASCH S STUDY 12/8/2010 ASCH S STUDY. Social Psychology (581, ) Others Focus on Social Influences on Our Behavior Social Psychology (581, 592-598) Study of how people behave, think, and feel in social situations Relatively recent addition to psychology Research influenced by current social problems Researchers in

More information

Factors that affect interpersonal attraction:

Factors that affect interpersonal attraction: Introduction: You are a member of a social world on a planet containing about 7 billion people. Our behaviors differ in different settings (like if we are in the college, market, or at home). Human behavior

More information

What is Social Cognition?

What is Social Cognition? Social Cognition What is Social Cognition? Social Psychology scientific study of how people s thoughts, feelings, and actions are influenced by social environment Cognitive Psychology scientific study

More information

Social Psychology. Studying the way people relate to others. Attitude. Group Behavior. Attraction Aggression

Social Psychology. Studying the way people relate to others. Attitude. Group Behavior. Attraction Aggression Social Psychology Attitude Attraction Aggression Group Behavior Studying the way people relate to others. Attitudes A set of beliefs and feelings. Attitudes predispose our reactions to people, issues,

More information

Social Influence. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Social Psychology. Module 56. Social influence

Social Influence. PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers. Social Psychology. Module 56. Social influence PSYCHOLOGY (8th Edition, in Modules) David Myers PowerPoint Slides Aneeq Ahmad Henderson State University Worth Publishers, 2007 1 Social Influence Module 56 2 Social Psychology Social influence Conformity

More information

Values. A principle, standard, or quality considered worthwhile or desirable

Values. A principle, standard, or quality considered worthwhile or desirable Values A principle, standard, or quality considered worthwhile or desirable What s more important to you: Alaska s environment or money you could save if we drilled for oil there? Values indicate what

More information

Focuses in Social Psychology

Focuses in Social Psychology Focuses in Social Psychology We cannot live for ourselves alone. Herman Melville Social psychology scientifically studies how we think about, influence, and relate to one another. Social Thinking 1. Does

More information

CHAPTER 16 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OBEDIENCE ATTITUDES & ATTITUDE CHANGE GROUP INFLUENCES PREJUDICE AGGRESSION ATTRACTION ALTRUISM

CHAPTER 16 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OBEDIENCE ATTITUDES & ATTITUDE CHANGE GROUP INFLUENCES PREJUDICE AGGRESSION ATTRACTION ALTRUISM CHAPTER 16 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY OBEDIENCE ATTITUDES & ATTITUDE CHANGE GROUP INFLUENCES PREJUDICE AGGRESSION ATTRACTION ALTRUISM ~ Professor Fazakas-deHoog lfazakas@uwo.ca AFFECT (Feelings) BEHAVIOR (Actions

More information

8 Diffusion of Responsibility

8 Diffusion of Responsibility Ruggerio Chapter : The Basic Problem: Mine is Better Aronson & Tavris Book- Chapter 1 & Self- Justification Norms Rules that regulate human life, including social conventions, explicit laws, and implicit

More information

Social Psychology Terms and Vocabulary. How one tends to act toward the object of an attitude.

Social Psychology Terms and Vocabulary. How one tends to act toward the object of an attitude. Psychology Terms and Vocabulary Action component Actor observer bias Attitude Attitude scale Attribution Autokinetic effect Belief component Brainwashing Coercion How one tends to act toward the object

More information

SOCIAL INFLUENCE: OBEDIENCE. Attitudes beliefs tinged with emotion cognitive dissonance

SOCIAL INFLUENCE: OBEDIENCE. Attitudes beliefs tinged with emotion cognitive dissonance Term Test 4 Thursday March 9 in class, 12:00-1:50 40 multiple choice questions 10% of course grade Topics covered class material: Feb 7 - Mar 2 assigned readings: see lectures web page Language and Nonverbal

More information

Social Psychology. Social Psychology

Social Psychology. Social Psychology Term Explanation Application/Example/Extension Social psychology is the study of how people think, act, are influenced, and relate to one another in social situations Implicit personality theory- quick

More information

Are they formed through education or is it just part of being a human being?

Are they formed through education or is it just part of being a human being? Social Behavior ~ Social Psychology Altruism; Conformity; Obedience; Compliance Are they formed through education or is it just part of being a human being? YouTube: Referee Helps Girl Finish Anthem YouTube:

More information

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY SOCIAL INFLUENCE TYPES OF NORMS. Chapter 18

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY SOCIAL INFLUENCE TYPES OF NORMS. Chapter 18 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Chapter 18 SOCIAL INFLUENCE Social Norms- learned, socially-based rules of behavior Generally they create orderly social behavior TYPES OF NORMS Injunctive Norms Shows what actions are

More information

What is Social Psychology

What is Social Psychology What is Social Psychology Social psychology is a scientific concept that seeks to explain how the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of individuals are influenced by the presence of others, or lack of others.

More information

Estimated Distribution of Items for the Exams

Estimated Distribution of Items for the Exams Estimated Distribution of Items for the Exams The current plan is that there are 5 exams with 50 multiple choice items that will cover two chapters. Each chapter is planned to have 25 multiple choice items.

More information

Ms. Berdelle AP Psychology UNIT 2 EXAM: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

Ms. Berdelle AP Psychology UNIT 2 EXAM: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY UNIT 2 EXAM: SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY 1. Which of the following is considered an explanation of why bystander intervention is less likely to occur if there is a large number of witnesses to a crime? a. prejudice

More information

Unit 11 Social Psychology Notes

Unit 11 Social Psychology Notes Unit 11 Social Psychology Notes I. Social Thinking 643 A. Attributing behavior to persons or to situations 644 1. Attribution theory Fritz Heider The cause of behavior is either situational (surrounding

More information

-Attitude- Abdullah Nimer

-Attitude- Abdullah Nimer -Attitude- Abdullah Nimer Attitude refers to evaluation of things. The things can be concrete objects like cars or ideas like Marxism. Attitudes have: an affective component a cognitive component a behavioral

More information

Social Psychology. Unit 2

Social Psychology. Unit 2 1 Social Psychology Unit 2 2 Focuses in Social Psychology We cannot live for ourselves alone. Herman Melville Social psychology scientifically how we think about, influence, and relate to one another.

More information

PSYC 210 Social Psychology

PSYC 210 Social Psychology South Central College PSYC 210 Social Psychology Course Information Description Total Credits 4.00 Pre/Corequisites PSYC100 or consent of instructor. Course Competencies Social Psychology introduces the

More information

9. A woman named Kitty Genovese was murdered while a number of New Yorkers watched from their apartments. The onlookers did not call the cops right aw

9. A woman named Kitty Genovese was murdered while a number of New Yorkers watched from their apartments. The onlookers did not call the cops right aw 1. A long time smoker reads an article how smoking leads to cancer. The smoker then says to himself "I exercise a lot, so it doesn't matter if I smoke." This smoker's reasoning illustrates which of the

More information

Unit 5: Individual and. Group Behaviour

Unit 5: Individual and. Group Behaviour Group Behaviour Unit 5: Individual and Group Behaviour What are groups? Groups are collections of people who have shared goals, a degree of interdependence, and some amount of communication. Groups serve

More information

Emotion. I. What is Emotion II. Theories of Emotion III. The Physiology of Emotion IV. Emotional Expression

Emotion. I. What is Emotion II. Theories of Emotion III. The Physiology of Emotion IV. Emotional Expression Emotion I. What is Emotion II. Theories of Emotion III. The Physiology of Emotion IV. Emotional Expression Emotion Defined: Positive & negative feeling states consisting of patterns of: physiological arousal

More information

Attribution Theory: we explain others behaviors by crediting the situation or the person s disposition/personality

Attribution Theory: we explain others behaviors by crediting the situation or the person s disposition/personality Social Psychology CB Learning Objective: Apply attribution theory to explain motives. Attribution Theory: we explain others behaviors by crediting the situation or the person s disposition/personality

More information

Introduction to Social Psychology p. 1 Introduction p. 2 What Is Social Psychology? p. 3 A Formal Definition p. 3 Core Concerns of Social Psychology

Introduction to Social Psychology p. 1 Introduction p. 2 What Is Social Psychology? p. 3 A Formal Definition p. 3 Core Concerns of Social Psychology Preface p. xv Introduction to Social Psychology p. 1 Introduction p. 2 What Is Social Psychology? p. 3 A Formal Definition p. 3 Core Concerns of Social Psychology p. 3 Sociology, Psychology, or Both? p.

More information

Social Psychology. What We Will Cover in This Section. Roles. PDF Created with deskpdf PDF Writer - Trial ::

Social Psychology. What We Will Cover in This Section. Roles. PDF Created with deskpdf PDF Writer - Trial :: Social Psychology Dr. Dennis C. Sweeney What We Will Cover in This Section Conformity Attitudes Group Behavior Prejudice Roles Socially defined expectations that we expect individuals to fulfill in a given

More information

Introduction to Psychology Social Psychology Quiz

Introduction to Psychology Social Psychology Quiz MULTIPLE CHOICE: 1. We usually adapt our behavior to the demands of the social situation, and in ambiguous situations: A) We take our cues from the behavior of others. B) We will do the same thing that

More information

Critics of dissociative identity disorder, 657

Critics of dissociative identity disorder, 657 Critics of dissociative identity disorder, 657 They argue it doesn t really exist. Movies and books increased the diagnosis, not actual patient symptoms. DID has not been found in other countries 1. Those

More information

Social Cognition and Social Perception

Social Cognition and Social Perception Social Cognition and Social Perception Gathered & Prepared By: Maha Wasfi Mobasher Professor of Psychiatry-Faculty of Medicine Cairo University December-2011 www.mahawmobasher.com Social Psychology -Introduction:

More information

10 Norms and behavior. What s it about?

10 Norms and behavior. What s it about? 10 Norms and behavior What s it about? (Social Psychology pp. 351 395) Norms are effective guides for social behavior. Norms must be activated before they can guide behavior. When individuals are in a

More information

Social Psychology Social Thinking & Social Influence

Social Psychology Social Thinking & Social Influence Social Psychology Social Thinking & Social Influence Module 36 Personality Psychologists Think about why different people act differently in the same situation Social Psychologists Think about situations

More information

Social Biases and Pressures. Critical Thinking

Social Biases and Pressures. Critical Thinking Social Biases and Pressures Critical Thinking Humans are Social Animals We are very sensitive to what others do and think. Most of our deep-rooted beliefs and values come from family and society we grow

More information

Social Psychology Topics we can analyze interactively

Social Psychology Topics we can analyze interactively Social Psychology Topics we can analyze interactively How we think in relation to other people How other people influence not only our thinking but our actions: How we treat each other, relate to each

More information

SAT6B SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY II UNIT: I - V

SAT6B SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY II UNIT: I - V SAT6B SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY II UNIT: I - V UNIT I Group Dynamics Types of Groups social Facilitation Social loafing Deindividuation Group Polarization Group think Minority Influence SAT6B-Social Psychology

More information

Module 30. Learning by Observation

Module 30. Learning by Observation Module 30 Learning by Observation 1 Module 30 Describe the process of observational learning, and explain how some scientists believe it is enabled by mirror neurons. Discuss the impact of prosocial modeling

More information

Defining Social Psychology. informal definition: the study of how people think about, influence, and relate to other people

Defining Social Psychology. informal definition: the study of how people think about, influence, and relate to other people Social Psychology Defining Social Psychology informal definition: the study of how people think about, influence, and relate to other people formal definition: the study of how a person s thoughts, feelings,

More information

Why do Psychologists Perform Research?

Why do Psychologists Perform Research? PSY 102 1 PSY 102 Understanding and Thinking Critically About Psychological Research Thinking critically about research means knowing the right questions to ask to assess the validity or accuracy of a

More information

Asch (1951) found that participants would even give answers which they knew to be untrue, rather than ones which deviated from the views being

Asch (1951) found that participants would even give answers which they knew to be untrue, rather than ones which deviated from the views being Asch (1951) found that participants would even give answers which they knew to be untrue, rather than ones which deviated from the views being expressed by others. The task in Asch s studies involved judging

More information

LP 12A Attribution and Stereotypes 1 04/13/15. Social Psychology

LP 12A Attribution and Stereotypes 1 04/13/15. Social Psychology Social Psychology LP 12A Attribution and Stereotypes 1 12.1 How Do We Form Our Impressions of Others? Nonverbal Actions and Expressions Affect our First Impressions We Make Attributions about Others Stereotypes

More information

AP Psychology. Unit 14: Social Psychology. Social Influences

AP Psychology. Unit 14: Social Psychology. Social Influences AP Psychology Unit 14: Social Psychology Mod.75: Conformity & Obedience: Social Influences I. Conformity: Complying With Social Pressures: A. Automatic Mimicry: 1. Behavior is contagious! fish, birds,

More information

scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another

scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another Social Thinking Social Psychology scientific study of how we think about, influence, and relate to one another Attribution Theory tendency to give a causal explanation for someone s behavior, often by

More information

Social Psychology 10 (14)

Social Psychology 10 (14) Social Psychology 10 (14) KEY TERMS Attitude False-consensus effect Pluralistic ignorance Mere exposure effect Self-serving bias Attraction research Central versus peripheral Just-world bias Social facilitation

More information

Tendencies to Distort Self and Social Reality Barriers to Critical Thinking

Tendencies to Distort Self and Social Reality Barriers to Critical Thinking 1 Psychology 496 Dr. Patterson Tendencies to Distort Self and Social Reality Barriers to Critical Thinking Cognitive Biases and Errors Affecting Self and Social Perceptions, Social Beliefs, and Social

More information

What is Social Psychology

What is Social Psychology The Social World What is Social Psychology An attempt to understand and explain how the thoughts, feelings, and behavior of individuals are influenced by the actual, imagined, or implied presence of others

More information

Social Psychology. An Overview By Halford Fairchild September 3, 2013

Social Psychology. An Overview By Halford Fairchild September 3, 2013 Social Psychology An Overview By Halford Fairchild September 3, 2013 Areas of interest Social influence - real or imagined presence of others Social cognition - how we think about social situations Attitudes

More information

Chapter 14 Social Psychology

Chapter 14 Social Psychology Chapter 14 Social Psychology PowerPoint Presentation by Jim Foley 2013 Worth Publishers Chapter 14 Social Psychology How do individuals respond to other people? Chapter 14 Overview Topics we can analyze

More information

Topics for today Ethics Bias

Topics for today Ethics Bias HCI and Design Topics for today Ethics Bias What are ethics? The study of moral standards and how they affect conduct Moral standards are A system of principles governing the appropriate conduct of an

More information

My Notebook. A space for your private thoughts.

My Notebook. A space for your private thoughts. My Notebook A space for your private thoughts. 2 Ground rules: 1. Listen respectfully. 2. Speak your truth. And honor other people s truth. 3. If your conversations get off track, pause and restart. Say

More information

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology

PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology PSYC 221 Introduction to General Psychology Session 13 Summary Lecturer: Dr. Joana Salifu Yendork, Psychology Department Contact Information: jyendork@ug.edu.gh College of Education School of Continuing

More information

Learn how to more effectively communicate with others. This will be a fun and informative workshop! Sponsored by

Learn how to more effectively communicate with others. This will be a fun and informative workshop! Sponsored by Assertiveness Training Learn how to more effectively communicate with others. This will be a fun and informative workshop! Sponsored by Lack of Assertiveness Examples Allowing others to coerce you into

More information

Social Psychology. Attitude Attraction Aggression Group Behavior. Studying the way people relate to others.

Social Psychology. Attitude Attraction Aggression Group Behavior. Studying the way people relate to others. Social Psychology Attitude Attraction Aggression Group Behavior Studying the way people relate to others. Attitudes A set of beliefs and feelings. Attitudes predispose our reactions to people, issues,

More information

Social Psychology CHAPTER 14 CHAPTER OUTLINE

Social Psychology CHAPTER 14 CHAPTER OUTLINE CHAPTER 14 Social Psychology CHAPTER OUTLINE Social psychology is the scientific study of how people s thoughts and feelings influence their behavior toward others and how the behavior of others influences

More information

Psychology Ciccarelli and White

Psychology Ciccarelli and White 1 Psychology Ciccarelli and White C H A P T E R 12: S O C I A L P S Y C H O L O G Y What is social psychology? It is the scientific study of how the individual functions as a result of being a part of

More information

Chapter 12. Aggression: Why We Hurt Other People? Can We Prevent it?

Chapter 12. Aggression: Why We Hurt Other People? Can We Prevent it? Chapter 12 Aggression: Why We Hurt Other People? Can We Prevent it? What Is Aggression? An aggressive action is intentional behavior aimed at causing either physical or psychological pain. What Is Aggression?

More information

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II

THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II THEORIES OF PERSONALITY II Learning Theory SESSION 8 2014 [Type the abstract of the document here. The abstract is typically a short summary of the contents of the document.

More information

Outcome Measurement Guidance

Outcome Measurement Guidance Outcome Measurement Guidance The following learning objectives, goal statements and accompanying outcome items were prepared by the Ohio Department of Health Rape Prevention Education Team to assist you

More information

Psychology UNIT 1: PSYCHOLOGY AS A SCIENCE. Core

Psychology UNIT 1: PSYCHOLOGY AS A SCIENCE. Core Core provides a solid overview of the field's major domains: methods, biopsychology, cognitive and developmental psychology, and variations in individual and group behavior. By focusing on significant

More information

Unit 14 Study guide. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question.

Unit 14 Study guide. Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. Unit 14 Study guide Multiple Choice Identify the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. The text defines social psychology as the scientific study of how people one another.

More information

White Supremacy Culture perfectionism antidotes sense of urgency

White Supremacy Culture perfectionism antidotes sense of urgency White Supremacy Culture From Dismantling Racism: A Workbook for Social Change Groups, by Kenneth Jones and Tema Okun, Change Work, 2001. Article distributed with permission from Kenneth Jones to Damascus

More information

Situationism. Consider a few of the famous experiments that kicked things off:

Situationism. Consider a few of the famous experiments that kicked things off: Situationism 1. Situationism: Let s return to the issue of moral luck, with which we started. Situationism is a thesis of psychology that deals with something like what we called circumstantial luck (this

More information

Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience

Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience Objectives 1) knowledge about various forms of social influence, such as social facilitation, social loafing, conformity, compliance, and obedience. 2) An

More information

VISUALIZING. Chapter 15: Social Psychology. Lecture Overview

VISUALIZING. Chapter 15: Social Psychology. Lecture Overview VISUALIZING Prepared By: Dawn More, Algonquin College Chapter 15: Social Psychology Media Enhanced PowerPoint Presentation Copyright 2013 John Wiley & Sons, Canada Ltd 2 Lecture Overview Our Thoughts about

More information

The Power Of Self-Belief

The Power Of Self-Belief PERSPECTIVES EXPOSÉ The Power Of Self-Belief Our self-belief stems from our inner dialogue about our self-worth and the confidence we have in our ability. The way we feel about ourselves is reflected in

More information

Social Psychology. Studying the way people relate to others. Group Behavior. Attitude Attraction Aggression

Social Psychology. Studying the way people relate to others. Group Behavior. Attitude Attraction Aggression Social Psychology Attitude Attraction Aggression Group Behavior Studying the way people relate to others. Attribution Theory Tries to explain how people determine the cause of the behavior they observe.

More information

Being liked. Attraction. Research results. Reward theory. Includes a wide range of situations:

Being liked. Attraction. Research results. Reward theory. Includes a wide range of situations: Attraction Includes a wide range of situations: People we find appealing to work with People we enjoy hanging out with Friends Serious love attachments Being liked Americans are deeply concerned about

More information

gender and violence 2 The incidence of violence varies dramatically by place and over time.

gender and violence 2 The incidence of violence varies dramatically by place and over time. gender and violence Everyone has the right to life, liberty, and the security of person (Article 3, UDHR, 1948; Articles 6.1 and 9.1, ICCPR, 1966). No one shall be subjected to... cruel, inhuman or degrading

More information

HOW TO BREAKTHROUGH TO YOUR BRILLIANCE AND PRODUCE RESULTS

HOW TO BREAKTHROUGH TO YOUR BRILLIANCE AND PRODUCE RESULTS HOW TO BREAKTHROUGH TO YOUR BRILLIANCE AND PRODUCE RESULTS Adam H. White III CEO Adam White Speaks Adam H. White III CEO Adam White Speaks Author of 7 Tests of Great Leadership and 7 Keys to Overcoming

More information

Groups, norms, and conformity. What s it about?

Groups, norms, and conformity. What s it about? 9 Groups, norms, and conformity What s it about? (Social Psychology pp. 310 350) This chapter is about how, when, and why people conform to group norms. People conform to group norms because of their need

More information

did you feel sad or depressed? did you feel sad or depressed for most of the day, nearly every day?

did you feel sad or depressed? did you feel sad or depressed for most of the day, nearly every day? Name: Age: Date: PDSQ This form asks you about emotions, moods, thoughts, and behaviors. For each question, circle YES in the column next to that question, if it describes how you have been acting, feeling,

More information

Social Psychology. Course Syllabus

Social Psychology. Course Syllabus Course Syllabus (3 Credits) Lecturers: Dr. ZHANG Zhongyuan zhangzhongyuan@zju.edu.cn Dr. LV Jiaying Jiaying_lu@zju.edu.cn Dr. ZHOU Xinhong zxhzheda@zju.edu.cn Office Hours: Friday, 1330-1700, 805-01 central

More information

General Psychology Social Psych. Cognitive Bias. Bystander Effect. When others are present, less likely to help Fundamental Attribution Error

General Psychology Social Psych. Cognitive Bias. Bystander Effect. When others are present, less likely to help Fundamental Attribution Error General Psychology Social Psych Cognitive Bias Bystander Effect When others are present, less likely to help Fundamental Attribution Error Also called Correspondence Bias Attribution Effect We prefer dispositional

More information

Conformity & Obedience

Conformity & Obedience Higher Psychology Conformity & Obedience Exam Revision 1 This is the mandatory topic in the Social Behaviour unit. This means it will probably come up in the exam. What to revise: - Types of conformity

More information

Scientific Method. Five Steps To Conducting A Study Formulate a hypothesis Design a study Conduct study Analyse/evaluate data Report findings

Scientific Method. Five Steps To Conducting A Study Formulate a hypothesis Design a study Conduct study Analyse/evaluate data Report findings Contents Lectures 1 & 2: Scientific Method Lecture 3: Attitudes Lecture 4: Persuasion Tutorial 3 & 4: The Bystander Effect Lecture 5: Aggression and Prosocial Behaviour Lecture 6: Assignment (not included)

More information

Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience

Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience Chapter 8- Conformity, Compliance and Obedience Objectives 1) knowledge about various forms of social influence, such as social facilitation, social loafing, conformity, compliance, and obedience. 2) An

More information

I DON T WANT TO BE CONFUSED! Social Psych topics that could be easily mixed up!

I DON T WANT TO BE CONFUSED! Social Psych topics that could be easily mixed up! I DON T WANT TO BE CONFUSED! Social Psych topics that could be easily mixed up! Groupthink vs. Group Polarization Both are effects the larger group has on an individual s behavior within that group Groupthink

More information

Behavior in Groups: Joining With Others Bystander Effect, Group Productivity & Social Loafing; Decision Making in Groups

Behavior in Groups: Joining With Others Bystander Effect, Group Productivity & Social Loafing; Decision Making in Groups Behavior in Groups: Joining With Others Bystander Effect, Group Productivity & Social Loafing; Decision Making in Groups How does being part of a group influences the way individuals behave? Why people

More information

CHAPTER 16 - SOCIAL BEHAVIOR - EXAM

CHAPTER 16 - SOCIAL BEHAVIOR - EXAM CHAPTER 16 - SOCIAL BEHAVIOR - EXAM Multiple Choice Identify the letter of the choice that best completes the statement or answers the question. 1. Jill assumes her new biology professor is probably studious

More information