Unit 4: Sociocultural Approach

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53 Terms

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Enculturation

The process of learning the cultural norms and values of one's heritage (home) culture.

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Acculturation

The change in attitudes or behaviour that happens as a result of interacting with a new culture.

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Child training practice (cultural transmission)

A general, umbrella term that refers to how parents (and societies) raise their children.

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High food accumulation culture

A culture that produces and stores food for long periods of time (e.g. farmers).

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Low food accumulation culture

A culture that produces small amounts of food that aren't stored.

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cultural norms

A common behaviour or way of thinking that is accepted (and expected) across a group.

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Cultural value

A belief about the importance of something that is shared by a cultural group.

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Compliance

To obey or follow a request or demand.

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Conformity

To behave in a way that is consistent with social norms.

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Acculturation strategy

The way someone adapts to a new culture. Berry identified four strategies that people use when adopting to a new culture.

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Assimilation

An acculturation strategy that involves dropping one's home culture and adopting fully the new culture.

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Separation

An acculturation strategy that involves rejecting the new culture and maintaining one's home culture.

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Integration

An acculturation strategy that involves keeping one's home culture and participating in the new culture.

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Marginalization

An acculturation strategy that involves rejecting one's home culture and rejecting the new culture.

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Acculturative Stress

Any negative psychological stress that results because of acculturation, often called culture shock

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discrimination

Behaving differently, usually unfairly, toward the members of a group.

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stereotype

a widely held but fixed and oversimplified image or belief of a particular type of person or group.

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stereotype threat

the apprehension experienced by members of a group that their behavior might confirm a cultural stereotype

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prejudice

an unjustifiable (and usually negative) attitude toward a group and/or its members.

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Cultural Iceberg

Symbol for the idea that most of culture is "hidden;" there is usually much more meaning than what we can see and hear

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surface culture

Part of culture that can be seen: Language, clothing, food, customs, and art.

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deep culture

Below the surface are the more meaningful and powerful aspects of culture: a. Beliefs- what we see as truth b. Norms- unwritten rules for behavior c. values- what we hold most important

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software of the mind

According to Dutch management professor Geert Hofstede, culture can be referred to as the:

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emic approach

anthropological research approach to studying behaviors from within one culture

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etic approach

an approach that is cross-cultural, searching for generalities across cultures

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cultural dimensions

Six fairly permanent and enduring sets of related norms and values according to Geert Hofstede.

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Individualism vs. Collectivism

describes whether a person functions primarily as an individual or as part of a group

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content analysis

applying a systematic approach to record and value information gleaned from questionnaires or surveys used by Geert Hofstede to develop his theory.

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ethnocentrism

Belief in the superiority of one's nation or ethnic group.

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Pygmalion effect (self-fulfilling prophecy)

A process that explains how the expectations in the mind of one person, such as a teacher or researcher, come to influence the behaviors of others, such as students or subjects, such that the latter achieves the former's expectations.

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expectancy-based illusory correlation

when a relationship is believed to exist between two variables due to our pre-existing expectations surrounding them

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distinctiveness-based illusory correlation

when a relationship is believed to exist between two variables due to focusing too much on information that stands out

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confirmation bias

a tendency to search for information that supports our preconceptions and to ignore or distort contradictory evidence

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Clark Doll Study

out of black or white doll, asked kids which are better, nicer, smarter, etc.; even present day studies show that these stereotypes still exist

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social identity theory

Tajfel's theory that in-groups consist of individuals who perceive themselves to be members of the same social category and experience pride through their group membership

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social cognitive theory

Bandura's theory that emphasizes both cognition and learning from models as sources of individual differences in behavior

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vicarious reinforcement

process where the observer sees the model rewarded or punished making the observer more likely or less likely to imitate the model's behavior

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Attention-Retention-Motivation-Potential

The cognitive "mediating processes" that Bandura argued play a role in whether an observer will imitate a model or not.

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mirror neurons

Frontal lobe neurons that fire when performing certain actions or when observing another doing so. The brain's mirroring of another's action may enable imitation, language learning, and empathy.

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Testability, Empirical Evidence, Applications, Constructs, Unbiased, Predictive Validity

Teacup Model to evaluate theories

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Positive distinctiveness

the motivation to show that our ingroup is preferable to an outgroup in Social Identity Theory

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social categorization

the assignment of a person one has just met to a category based on characteristics the new person has in common with other people with whom one has had experience in the past, within Social Identity Theory

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salience

when a particular social identity is made more important or accessible than others at a particular moment.

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Priming

the activation, often unconsciously, of certain associations, thus predisposing one's perception, memory, or response

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heritage culture

a culture identified as a person's culture of origin

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Informational social influence

the influence of other people that results from taking their comments or actions as a source of information about what is correct, proper, or effective

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normative social influence

influence resulting from a person's desire to gain approval or avoid disapproval and fit into a social group

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confederates

in psychological and social research, a person who is working with the experimenter and posing as a part of the experiment, but the subjects are not aware of this affiliation

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reciprocal determinism

Bandura's idea that though our environment affects us, we also affect our environment (bidirectionality)

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Stanford Prison Experiment

Philip Zimbardo's study of the effect of roles on behavior. Participants were randomly assigned to play either prisoners or guards in a mock prison. The study was ended early because of the "guards'" role-induced cruelty.

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social comparison theory

the hypothesis that people compare themselves to other people in order to obtain an accurate assessment of their own opinions, abilities, and internal states, a part of Social Identity Theory

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acculturative gaps

generational differences in acculturation and how this leads to conflict within the family. Immigrant parents and their children live in different cultural worlds

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reverse culture shock/reentry shock

culture shock experienced by travelers upon returning to their home countries