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Introduction to Psychology, James W. Kalat, Chapter 13: Social Psychology Flashcards

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800483327Social Psychologyhow humans behave0
800483328Social psychologistsStudy ways people influence and are influenced by each other, incorporating the study of attitudes and perceptions, persuasion, compliance and obedience.1
800483329Social perception and cognitionMental processes that allow a person to collect and remember information about others and to make inferences and judgments based on that information.2
800483331Primacy effectfirst information learned about someone will be a more powerful influence on our views about that person (perceptions) than any later information3
800483334Empirical support for the importance of "first impressions"positive/negative word list4
800483335Attributionset of thought processes we use to assign causes to our own and others' behavior.5
800483336What are the two types of attributions?Internal and External6
800483337Internal attributionsExplanations based on an individual's perceived stable characteristics, such as attitudes, personality traits, or abilities.7
800483338Dispositional attribution(internal attributions) Internal characteristics of the individual.8
800483403External attributionsExplanations based on the current situation and events surrounding the individual.9
800483404Situational attribution(external attribution) External environmental factors behind the behavior observed.10
800483405Fundamental Attribution ErrorWhen we make Internal (Dispositional) attributions for a person's behavior despite the presence of possible external influences.11
800483406The actor observer effectRelated to the fundamental attribution error, we also tend to make situational attributions for our own behaviors and dispositional ones for the behavior of others.12
800483410Attribution associated with actor observer effectActor (our view of ourselves) = external attribution; Observer (our view of others) = internal attribution13
800483411Why are our views skewed in the actor observer effect?More aware of how our own behavior varies from situation to situation. Less aware of situation to situation change in behavior of others.14
800483412StereotypeA generalized belief about group of people.15
800483413Prejudicean irrationally unfavorable (or favorable) attitude toward a group of people.16
800483416Aversive racismExpressing the belief that all people are equal while holding negative views toward another race and unintentionally discriminating against some groups.17
800483417Ambivalent sexismParallel to aversive racism but with regard to sex (gender) roles.18
800483418The Implicit Association TestUsed for personality assessment can also be used to detect subtle prejudice.19
800483419Cognitive Dissonance Theorysuggests that an individual's behavior can change his or her own attitudes.20
800483420Cognitive dissonanceA state of tension that exists when an individual realizes that he or she holds contradictory attitudes on an issue, or has exhibited behavior that is inconsistent with an expressed attitude.21
800483421Explain the study done by Festinger and Carlsmith in 1959Made people do an easy task then lie about it.22
800483423$1 vs. $20 experimentPeople who were paid $1 though the task was more positive and the people paid $20 thought the task was still boring23
800483424Foot in-the-door techniqueA modest request is followed by a larger one24
800483425Door in-the-face techniqueAn outrageous initial request is followed by a more reasonable one25
800483426Bait and-switch techniqueA very favorable deal is followed by additional demands after a commitment has been made26
800483618That's not-all techniqueThe offer is improved before any reply is given27
800483619Interpersonal Influencehow presence of others change our behavior and convince us28
800483620What are the two major ways other people influence us?give us information and set norms by which we conduct ourselves in situations.29
800483621Normsthe rules that establish expected behavior30
800483622Explain Asch's conformity studiessubjects were asked to match one line with one of three other lines on another card. They were surrounded by people who gave obviously wrong answers.31
800483623Conformitythe maintenance or alteration of one's behavior to match the behavior and expectations of others.32
800483964What did Asch's classic experiment demonstrate?that conformity was also likely even when one could be fairly sure that his or her judgment was correct.33
800484044The need to conform is likely to overwhelm what?our need to be correct or feel right in our judgments.34
800484045Does the size of group have an impact of conformity?No, it was as hard for a subject to disagree in a group of 3 as in a group of 13.35
800484047In Asch's experiments how did the unanimity of a decision effect conformity?it is less difficult to be in a minority of two36
800484312Kitty Genovese Casegot murdered and no one called the police37
800484315Why do people fail to intervene sometimes during a crime or accident?The presence of many people during a crime may create a sense of diffusion of responsibility. We may convince ourselves that if there are many other people present, someone else will help, so we need do nothing.38
800484323Pluralistic ignorancea situation in which a majority of group members privately reject a norm, but incorrectly assume that most others accept it, and therefore go along with it39
800484324What do people will sometimes assume in the absence of information?That others have a different and better-informed opinion. They will decide therefore to say or do nothing.40
800484327ObedienceSocial situation where there's an authority figure that gets you to conform and even conduct destructive behavior41
800484328Stanley Milgramset up an experiment to find out how far individuals would go in obeying an authority figure.42
800484334What is the "Teacher - Learner" paradigm?almost three-quarters of experimental subjects would follow orders to hurt someone if the authority figure and the situation demanded it.43
800484339Variations of the Stanley Milgram's experimentWere done, and although compliance could be lowered in some instances, some of participants still "followed orders."44
800484340How did Milgram vary his procedure and what did he find?Division of responsibility increased obedience; an implication of personal responsibility decreased obedience.45
800484350Why did Milgram vary his procedure?To find out what elements promoted or inhibited obedience.46
800486505What did most experts think about the outcome of Milgram's experiment?It was thought that only a very few, very abnormal people would agree to give the higher levels of shock. Some scientists and others refused to believe these results. Milgram's career suffered because what he told us about ourselves was not very comforting.47
800486513Explain the findings of the study done by Philip Zimbardo and his colleaguesProvided evidence that people are inclined to change their behavior in response to assigned roles and to follow outrageous and immoral orders when in those roles.48
800486544Explain the study done by Zimbardo at Stanford in the 1970'sThe study involved the establishment of a simulated prison for two weeks.49
800486545How did behavior change in the Zimbardo experiment?The behavior of the students involved became so real and so brutal, the study had to be called off after 6 days.50
800486546The Power of the Social SituationWe can teach people to cooperate and help each other in some instances but it is possible that in order to discourage destructive behavior in people, sometimes we would be well advised to consider changing the situation instead.51

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