Unit 4 Social Psych & Personality

Learning Target CheckList

  • Attribution Theory: Understand how it applies to behavior and mental processes.

  • Locus of Control: Differentiate between internal and external locus and their impact.

  • Person Perception: Explore how we form impressions of others and its implications.

  • Stereotypes and Implicit Attitudes: Analyze their contribution to prejudice and discrimination.

  • Belief Perseverance and Cognitive Dissonance: Explain their roles in attitude formation and change.

  • Social Situation and Behavior: Examine how social contexts affect individual behavior.

  • Group Influence: Understand how group dynamics impact personal behavior.

  • Prosocial Behavior: Explore how it influences mental processes and actions.

  • Theories of Personality: Discuss psychodynamic, humanistic, social-cognitive, and trait theories in personality assessment.

  • Motivation and Behavior: Understand theories of motivation and their applicability.

  • Emotion Theories: Examine how emotions influence behavior and expression.

Social Psychology Defined

  • Social Psychology: The study of how individuals' thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by others.

Person Perception

  • Definition: Process of forming impressions of others during interactions.

  • Subjectivity: Ambiguous behaviors are often interpreted through expectations or biases.

  • **Common Issues:

    • Illusory Correlation: Overestimating associations between social traits and actual encounters.

    • Evolutionary Bias: Tendency to categorize for reproductive success.

Attribution Theory

  • Attribution: The process of explaining causes of behavior.

  • Types of Attribution:

    • Internal (Dispositional): Attributing behavior to personal traits/abilities.

    • External (Situational): Attributing behavior to environmental factors or constraints.

  • Example Scenario: Analyzing a friend's behavior at a dinner party.

Explanatory Style

  • Definition: Tendency to explain life's events.

  • Pessimistic vs. Optimistic Styles:

    • Pessimistic: Views setbacks as personal and permanent.

    • Optimistic: Sees failures as temporary and external.

  • Impact on Feelings and Adaptation: How explanatory styles affect emotional responses and adaptability.

Fundamental Attribution Error

  • Definition: The tendency to underplay situational factors while emphasizing personal factors for others' behaviors.

  • Example: Differentiating reactions to other drivers based on internal vs. external attributions.

Actor-Observer Bias

  • Definition: Attributing one's own actions to situational factors while attributing others' actions to their personality.

  • Self-Serving Bias: Explains successes through internal factors and failures through external factors.

Perception of Control

  • Types of Control:

    • Internal Locus: Belief in personal control over fate.

    • External Locus: Belief that outside forces control outcomes.

  • Example of Locus of Control in Test Performance.

Other Influences on Person Perception

  • Mere Exposure Effect: Increased liking through repeated exposure.

  • Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: Expectations lead to behaviors that affirm those expectations.

  • Social Comparison: Evaluating self against others can affect self-esteem.

  • Relative Deprivation: Feeling worse off compared to others, impacting emotional state.

Attitudes and Their Influence

  • Definition: Feelings influenced by beliefs, leading to reactions.

  • Role of Advertising in Attitude Formation: Emotional appeals to connect people to products.

Prejudice and Discrimination

  • Prejudice: An unjustifiable negative attitude towards a group.

  • Stereotypes: Overgeneralized beliefs, can lead to discrimination.

  • Example: Blonde stereotype as a basis for prejudice and discriminatory behavior.

Implicit vs. Explicit Prejudice

  • Implicit Prejudice: Unconscious biases measured through tools like IAT.

  • Explicit Prejudice: Acknowledged and expressed beliefs or attitudes.

Social Roots of Prejudice

  • Just World Phenomenon: Belief in a just world leading to victim blaming.

  • In-group vs. Out-group: Bias favoring one's own group.

  • Ethnocentrism: Evaluating other cultures against one's own standards.

Cognitive Dissonance

  • Definition: The discomfort experienced when actions conflict with beliefs.

  • Cognitive Dissonance Theory: Strategies to alleviate discomfort include changing actions/attitudes.

  • Example Scenario: Dissonance arising from the act of shoplifting vs. self-perception.

Norms and Social Influence

  • Social Norms: Unwritten expectations of behavior in situations. Conformity can arise from social norms.

  • Types of Social Influence:

    • Normative Influence: Compliance for social approval.

    • Informational Influence: Changing opinions based on new information.

Techniques of Persuasion

  • Elaboration Likelihood Model:

    • Central Route: Deep processing of information.

    • Peripheral Route: Influence by superficial cues.

Conformity and Factors Influencing It

  • Definition of Conformity: Adjusting behaviors/thoughts to group standards.

  • Factors:

    • Feeling incompetent, group size, group agreement, and admiration can all increase conformity.

Obedience Studies

  • Milgram's Experiment: To understand obedience to authority; many participants continued to administer shocks despite moral conflict.

Cultural Influences

  • Individualist vs. Collectivist Cultures: Differences in values affecting personal identity and behavior.

Altruism and Helping Behavior

  • Definition of Altruism: Selfless concern for others.

  • Factors Influencing Helping Behaviors: Situational awareness, perceived need, and social exchange theory.

Theories of Motivation ‘

  • Types of Motivation:

    • Instinct, Drive-Reduction, Arousal, and Hierarchy of Needs.

Emotion in Psychology

  • Defining Emotion: Involves physiological arousal, behavior, and cognitive experience.

  • Universal Emotions: Recognized across cultures and associated with facial expressions.

  • Cultural Variations: Differences in emotional expression and gestures across cultures.

Summary of Theories of Personality

  • Freud’s Psychodynamic Theory: Emphasizes unconscious influences.

  • Humanistic Theories: Focus on personal growth and self-fulfillment, notably by Rogers and Maslow.

  • Trait Theories: Characteristics and personality traits defined through consistent patterns.

End of Notes

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