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Social Psychology
- Social psychology focuses on development and expression of attitudes, attributions, how we are influenced and how we influence, and how we interact.
- Social Loafing: The tendency for any individual of a group to put in less effort as a result of being in a large group.
- Social cognition discusses attitude formation and attribution theory.
- The idea behind social cognition is that people act like scientists; that is, they are constantly gathering data and making predictions about what will happen, and trying to act accordingly.
- Attitude: An attitude is a set of beliefs and feelings.
- Do attitudes always predict behavior?
- Richard LaPiere travelled around the United States in the 1930s with an Asian couple, and found that the Asian couple was treated poorly due to their race only on occassion.
- Later, he contacted the establishments they visited and asked employees/management whether they would serve Asians; the establishments said they would not serve Asians.
- Stereotypes: Are attitudes about what members of different groups are like.
- Prejudice is an undeserved, negative, attitude toward a group of people.
- Discrimination is treating categories of people of race, age, sex, gender, or ability differently.
- Ethnocentrism: The belief that one’s culture is superior to others.
- If you change someone’s behavior, can you change their attitude?
- Cognitive Dissonance Theory is based on the idea that people are motivated to have consistent attitudes and behaviors.
- When someone's behavior does not match their beliefs, they experience mental tension or "dissonance".
- Someone who wants to live a long healthy life will experience cognitive dissonance if they are a heavy smoker.
- Leon Festinger & James Carlsmith conducted a famous experiment where participants experienced cognitive dissonance.
- Participants completed a boring task (twisting, turning some knobs).
- After finishing, the participants were told that for either $1 or $20, depending on the group they were in, to lie about the boring task being great to the next participant (actually a part of the experiment).
- After they were paid to tell the next ‘participant’ that the task was interesting, their attitudes were record on a brief survey.
- The group paid only $1, having known the task was boring, but having to say it was interesting, experienced dissonance.
- Those who had been paid $20, a high reward, did not experience dissonance, and reported on the survey that the task was boring.�
- Those who had been paid only one dollar, a small reward, changed their belief about the task and said it was somewhat interesting on the later survey.
- Attribution Theory tries to explain how people determine the cause of what they observe.
- Attributions are either dispositional (internal, referring to one's personality or set of skills, talent, innate ability, or IQ) or situational (beyond the person's immediate control).
- Say someone cuts you off in traffic. Is it because they are a terrible driver (dispositional) or because their driving to the hospital for an emergency (situational)?
- Attributions can also be Stable or Unstable
- Robert is a math whiz and always does well in math. This is a person-stable attribution.
- Robert simply studied very hard for this test. This is a person-unstable attribution.
- Robert’s teacher, Mr. Smith always gives easy math tests. This is a situation-stable attribution.
- Mr. Smith, Robert’s teacher, gave one easy test. This is a situation-unstable attribution.
- Harold Kelly explains that the kind of attributions people make are based on three kinds of information: Consistency, Distinctiveness, and Consensus.
- Consistency refers to how similarly the individual acts over time (does this person always do this?).
- Distinctiveness refers to how similar some situation is to other situations in which you’ve seen somebody act (did they act like this before?).
- Consensus refers to taking into consideration how others in the same situation would have acted (would someone else have done this?).
- Fundamental Attribution Error: When looking at the behavior of others, people tend to overestimate the importance of dispositional (personality) factors and underestimate situational factors.
- In addition, people are more likely to view others behavior as dispositional, but in judging their own behavior, they are more likely to say that their behavior depends on the situation.
- Different cultures may commit the fundamental attribution error less often.
- Individualist cultures emphasize the importance and uniqueness of the individual (error occurs in these cultures more often).
- Collectivist cultures emphasize a person's link to various groups like family or a company (error does not occur as often in these kinds of cultures).
- Additional terms regarding social cognition and attribution theory.
- False-consensus effect: The tendency for people to overestimate the number of people who agree with them.
- Self-Serving Bias: Tendency to attribute our success to personal/internal factors, but attribute our failures to situational/external factors.
- Just-world Bias: The belief that good things happen to good people, and bad things happen to bad people.
- How can you make an argument more persuasive?
- When presenting are argument, is it better to present the facts in a straightforward manner or dress up the message with nice sounds and images?
- Central Route of Persuasion focuses on details, statistics, and facts about the object or service to persuade an audience.
- Peripheral Route of Persuasion is using tactics other than the facts or logical arguments to persuade an audience.
- These could be using an attractive person, flashing lights, pleasant sounds, an authoritative figure, or something else.
- Youtube关联视频链接:Psychology of Persuasion.
- Some research suggests that people who have attained a higher education are less likely to be swayed by the peripheral route.
- Research also suggests that when presenting to a uniform audience, a one-sided message is better.
- When presenting to a broader audience, it is better to show both the pros and cons of the object or service.
- Another possible way to make a message more persuasive is to repeatedly show it.
- Mere Exposure Effect: Even if you've only seen something once, you're more likely to have a positive attitude towards it over something that you've never encountered before.
- Is there anyway to increase the likelihood that you'll do what I ask?
- Compliance Strategies:
- Foot-in-the-door phenomenon: If you get people to agree to a small request (do you have the time?), they will be more likely to agree to a larger follow-up request (can you spare a dollar?).
- Door-in-the-face: If you want something, ask for something really big before asking for what you really want (can I have $5? “No” Can I have $1?).
- Norms of Reciprocity: The idea that if you do something nice for someone else, they’ll do something nice in return.
- Do others' expectations affect our behavior and performance?
- In the 1960s, Robert Rosenthal and Lenore Jacobson hypothesized that a teacher's expectation could influence a child's performance.
- Study: They randomly assigned five children to the "spurter/bloomer" group, but told teachers these students were selected based on test performance that indicated future success.
- Findings: The children who were expected to "spurt" made larger improvements than the others.
- Self-fulfilling Prophecy/Pygmalion effect/Rosenthal effect is the phenomenon whereby others' expectations of a person affect that person's performance.
- Opposite of this effect is called the Golem effect.
- Does performing in front of a crowd help or hinder us?
- Social Facilitation: If it is an easy task, a person will perform better in front of an audience.
- Social Impairment: When the task being observed is a difficult task, being watched by many people, performance decreases.
- Psychology of Aggression & Prosocial Behavior
- Instrumental aggression is when the aggressive act is intended to secure a particular end.
- Hostile aggression Has no clear purpose, like some acts of vandalism.
- Frustration-aggression hypothesis holds that the feeling of frustration makes aggression more likely.
- 'Is there any way we can make hostile groups get along?
- The Robbers Cave study‘’‘’ focused on intergroup behavior, observing 22 eleven- and twelve-year-old boys.
- The children were split into two teams and forced to compete for rewards.
- Eventually things became so hostile between the two groups that researchers intervened.
- Contact Theory if hostile groups are made to work toward a superordinate goal that benefits all and necessitates participation from all, then animosity will be reduced between the two groups.
- Youtube关联视频链接:Contact Theory.
- Prosocial behavior: Acts which help other people.
- Bystander effect: The larger the number of people who witness an emergency situation, the less likely any one is to intervene.
- Youtube关联视频链接:Bystander effect.
- One explanation for the bystander effect is the diffusion of responsibility.
- Diffusion of Responsibility: The larger the group of people who witness a problem, the less responsible any one individual feels that they are for helping.
- Pluralistic ignorance: People tend to assume that someone else will take action so they need not do it themselves.
- What makes us like or dislike other people?
- Research indicates that we like people who are similar to us, with whom we come in frequent contact, and who return our positive feelings.
- Factors that influence liking are similarity, proximity, and reciprocal liking.
- Psychology of Attraction
- Research has demonstrated that attractive people are perceived as having all sorts of characteristics and attributes that you could not infer from just looks.
- People may perceive this man as more honest, hard-working, ambitious, etc.
- What makes someone physically attractive?
- Research findings show that people who have very symmetrical features are judged as more attractive.
- Psychology of Love
- Love is hard to define.
- Self-disclosure is when one shares a piece of personal information with another.
- Close relationships with friends and intimate others are often built through a process of self-disclosure.
- To what extent do social forces alter people's opinions and actions?
- Soloman Asch's Conformity studies:
- Groups of students participated in a simple "perceptual" task.
- All but one of the participants were actors, and the true focus of the study was about how the remaining participant would react to the actors' behavior.
- Youtube相关视频链接:Conformity studies by Asch
- Stanley Milgram
- Can you make someone more obedient?
- Milgram measured the willingness of participants, men from a diverse range of occupations with varying levels of education, to obey an authority figure who instructed them to perform acts conflicting with their personal conscience.
- 65 percent (26 of 40) of experiment participants administered the experiment's final massive 450-volt shock.
- Youtube相关视频链接:Milgram Obedience Study
- Psychology of Groups: How do people act in groups?
- Norms are rules about how group members should act.
- Being a lawyer at an established law firm means going into work well-dressed, prepared, etc.
- Roles are the actions we carry out in a group.
- The corporate lawyer takes on legal cases dealing with business arrangements/disagreements.
- In-group: Who you perceive as within your own circle. People view the members of their own group as more diverse than people of the out-group. There is also a preference for member’s of your in-group. This is called in-group bias.
- Out-group: Everyone outside your group.
- Out-group Homogeneity: Viewing the out-group as all the same.
- Group Polarization is the tendency of a group to make more extreme decisions that individual group members would not make on their own.
- Explanations for group polarization include that in a group, individuals may be exposed to new arguments they had no previous exposure to and that the responsibility of the success or failure of some plan is diffused among the group – deindividuation (see slide ahead).
- Groupthink, describes the tendency for some groups to make bad decisions, occurs when group members suppress their reservations about the ideas supported by the group, and, as a result, a false sense of unanimity is encouraged.
- Deindividuation: People may get swept up by a group and do things they would never have done if on their own such as rioting or looting.
- Philp Zimbardo & The Stanford Prison "Experiment"
- The Stanford Prison Experiment was a social psychology experiment that attempted to investigate the psychological effects of perceived power, focusing on the struggle between prisoners and prison officers.
- Is the person inherently bad or does the situation/role/institution make him bad?
- Youtube相关视频链接:Stanford Prison Experiment