Vocabulary Word | Definition | Personal Connection/Drawing/Doodle |
Social Psychology | the branch of psychology that deals with social interactions, including their origins and their effects on the individual. | |
Attribution Theory | People attempt to understand events and actions by attributing intentions, beliefs, and feelings to event as being internal or external | Trying to understand events as internal or external |
Fundamental attribution error | the tendency people have to overemphasize personal characteristics and ignore situational factors in judging others' behavior. | |
Attitude | a set of emotions, beliefs, and behaviors toward a particular object, person, thing, or event. | Example- being mad at dogs |
Peripheral route to persuasion | when a person is persuaded by something other than the argument that's central to the merits of the product or idea being put forth. | Having a popular athlete advertise shoes to encourage young adults to buy |
Central route to persuasion | when a person is persuaded by the actual argument about the merits of the product or idea. | A car company seeking to persuade you to buy there model by emphasizing the cars safety features |
Foot-in-the-door phenomenon | a compliance tactic that aims at getting a person to agree to a large request by having them agree to a modest request first. | Asking someone to shop for cake ingredients first and then asking them to help you bake the cake. |
Role | considers most of everyday activity to be the acting-out of socially defined categories (e.g., mother, manager, teacher). Each role is a set of rights, duties, expectations, norms, and behaviors that a person has to face and fulfill. | The roles of a mother, scientist, etc. |
Conformity | The act of matching attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors to group norms or standards | Peer pressure |
Normative social influence | The desire to be included the “in group” of society and culture | To be liked and accepted in a group |
Informational social influence | Being influenced by others peoples information rather than group norms | Choosing a restaurant based on online ratings |
Social facilitation | An increase in response merely from the sight of sound of others making the same movement( people working harder on tasks in the presence of others) | An musician performing better in the presence of a audience |
Social loafing | People are less productive working as an team | Working in a group project and not working as hard as you would doing it alone |
Deindividuation | when individuals lose their self-awareness and self-restraint in group situations | The formation and operation of gangs |
Group polarization | when a group of like-minded people reinforce each other's opinions, positive or negative, and these opinions become more extreme as they're discussed. | Teens together in the car make riskier decisions then 1 teen alone |
Groupthink | a group of people in which the desire for harmony or conformity in the group results in an irrational or dysfunctional decision-making outcome. | The leader of the group telling the members of the group to ban all members of a particular ethnic group and they doing it without question |
Culture | the values, beliefs, language, rituals, traditions, and other behaviors that are passed from one generation to another within any social group. | |
Norm | the accepted standards of behavior for any given group. | |
Prejudice | a preconceived judgment, opinion or attitude directed toward certain people based on their membership in a particular group. |
Stereotype | a fixed, oversimplified, and often biased belief about a group of people. | |
Discrimination | the ability to perceive and respond to differences among stimuli. | |
Ingroup bias | the tendency to favor one's own group, its members, its characteristics, and its products, particularly in reference to other groups. | |
Scapegoat theory | The theory suggests that much prejudice is rooted in one group blaming another for all the sins or harm that they encounter. | |
Other-race effect | a well-documented phenomenon showing that people are generally better at recognizing faces of their own race, compared to faces of different races. |
Aggression | any behavior or act aimed at harming a person or animal or damaging physical property. | |
Frustration-aggression principle | frustration often leads to aggressive behavior | |
Social script | a set of actions that are previously expected by an individual in certain circumstances or contexts. | |
Mere exposure effect | which people tend to develop liking or disliking for things merely because they are familiar with them. | |
Passionate love | a type of love in which emotional arousal and usually sexual passion are prominent features |
Companionate love | a deep commitment between two people who share affection for each other but who lack sexual desire or passion. | |
Equity | what individuals are likely to view as a fair return from activities involving themselves and a number of other people. | |
self-disclosure | sharing personal information – such as your thoughts, dreams, fears, goals, preferences, and experiences. | |
Altruism | a motivational state that a person possesses with the goal of increasing the welfare of another person. | |
Bystander effect | individuals are less likely to offer help to a victim in the presence of other people. |
Social exchange theory | the social behavior in the interaction of two parties that implement a cost-benefit analysis to determine risks and benefits. | |
Reciprocity norm | The norm of reciprocity requires that people repay in kind what others have done for them. | |
Social-responsibility norm | a societal expectation that people should engage in positive social behavior to contribute to the welfare of their community as a whole. | |
Conflict | the arousal of two or more strong motives that cannot be solved together. | |
Social trap | a conflict of interest or perverse incentive where individuals or a group of people act to obtain short-term individual gains, which in the long run leads to a loss for the group as a whole. |
Mirror image perceptions | the human tendency to see oneself (especially while in the throes of conflict) as the opposite of the person with whom they are having a conflict. | |
Self fulling prophecy | Tendency to blame external forces when bad things happen and to give ourselves credit when good things happen | |
Superordinate goals | a goal that takes precedence over one or more other, more conditional goals | |
GRIT | graduated and reciprocated initiatives in tension reduction. | |
Phillip Zimbardo | Worked on stanford prison experiment |
Stanley milgram | Worked on milgram experiment | |
Solomon asch | Known for conformity experiments | |
Leon festinger | Known for theory on cognitive dissonance | |