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Attributions
Explanations for why people behave the way they do.
Dispositional attributions
Attributing behavior to internal traits or personality.
Situational attributions
Attributing behavior to external factors or circumstances.
Explanatory style
A person's habitual way of explaining events, often either optimistic or pessimistic.
Optimistic explanatory style
Attributing bad outcomes to temporary, external, and specific causes.
Pessimistic explanatory style
Attributing bad outcomes to internal, stable, and global causes.
Actor/observer bias
Attributing others' behavior to their personality while attributing your own behavior to external factors.
Fundamental attribution error
Overemphasizing personality traits and underestimating situational factors when explaining others' behavior.
Self-serving bias
Attributing successes to yourself and failures to external factors.
Internal locus of control
Belief that you control your own destiny through effort and choices.
External locus of control
Belief that external forces, like fate or luck, control your destiny.
Mere exposure effect
Increased liking for something due to repeated exposure.
Self-fulfilling prophecy
When an expectation about a person causes them to act in ways that confirm the expectation.
Social comparison
Evaluating yourself relative to others.
Upward social comparison
Comparing yourself to someone better off.
Downward social comparison
Comparing yourself to someone worse off.
Relative deprivation
Feeling deprived when comparing yourself to others.
Stereotype
Generalized beliefs about a group of people.
Cognitive load
The mental effort required to process information.
Prejudice
A negative attitude toward a group based on stereotypes.
Discrimination
Unfair treatment of individuals based on their group membership.
Implicit attitudes
Unconscious beliefs or feelings about a group.
Just-world phenomenon
Belief that the world is fair, and people get what they deserve.
Out-group homogeneity bias
Belief that members of an out-group are more similar to each other than they actually are.
In-group bias
Favoring your own group over others.
Ethnocentrism
Judging other cultures based on the standards of your own culture.
Belief perseverance
Maintaining a belief despite evidence contradicting it.
Confirmation bias
Favoring information that supports your preexisting beliefs.
Cognitive dissonance
Psychological discomfort from holding conflicting thoughts or beliefs.
Social norms
Accepted rules of behavior in a group or society.
Social influence theory
Explains how individuals change behavior in response to social influence.
Normative social influence
Changing behavior to fit in or avoid rejection.
Informational social influence
Changing behavior based on others' perceived knowledge.
Persuasion
The process of changing someone's beliefs, attitudes, or behaviors.
Elaboration likelihood model
Explains two routes to persuasion: central and peripheral.
Central route
Persuasion through thoughtful consideration of arguments and evidence.
Peripheral route
Persuasion through superficial cues like appearance or emotions.
Halo effect
Allowing one positive trait of a person to influence overall impressions.
Foot-in-the-door technique
Agreeing to a small request makes you more likely to agree to a larger one.
Door-in-the-face technique
Refusing a large request makes you more likely to agree to a smaller one.
Conformity
Changing behavior to match the group.
Obedience
Following orders from an authority figure.
Individualism
Emphasizing personal goals and individual rights over group goals.
Collectivism
Emphasizing group goals and relationships over individual goals.
Multiculturalism
Valuing and respecting diverse cultural perspectives.
Group polarization
Group discussions lead to stronger opinions in the direction of the group's initial leanings.
Groupthink
Group harmony is prioritized over critical analysis, leading to poor decisions.
Diffusion of responsibility
Feeling less personal responsibility in a group.
Social loafing
Exerting less effort in a group task compared to working alone.
Deindividuation
Losing self-awareness and restraint in group settings.
Social facilitation
Improved performance on simple tasks when others are watching.
False consensus effect
Overestimating how much others agree with your beliefs.
Superordinate goals
Shared goals that require cooperation between groups.
Social traps
Situations where individuals or groups harm collective well-being by pursuing their own interests.
Industrial-organizational (I/O) psychologists
Study workplace behavior to improve productivity and well-being.
Burnout
Emotional, mental, and physical exhaustion caused by prolonged stress.
Altruism
Unselfish concern for the well-being of others.
Prosocial behavior
Actions intended to benefit others.