AP PSYCH UNIT 9
Define social cognition: concerns the various psychological processes that enable individuals to take advantage of being part of a social group.
**** antidepressants: depression caused by low serotonin, SSRIs-prevent the reuptake of serotonin**
**Antipsychotics- levels of serotonin are too high, block dopamine receptors in the brain
Evaluating Behavior | |
---|---|
Theory | Description |
Fundamental Attribution Error | Underestimating a situation but overestimating a person. Others fail based on characterWhen we fail - situational |
Actor-Observer Bias | making excuses for what we do wrong, but judging other people when they make a mistake. |
Blaming the Victim | Assuming that something bad happened because of something the victim did. |
Just-World Hypothesis | If something bad happens to us, then we must deserve it.People get what they deserve |
Self-Serving Bias | Taking credit for the good things but not the bad ones. |
Halo Effect | Positive impressions- overall positive |
Define self-fulfilling prophecy (pygmalion effect): thinking that something must be true because we believe it.
Define attitude: a belief or feeling that predisposes one to respond in a particular way to something.
Elaboration Likelihood Model: dual process theory describing the change of attitudes. |
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Central Route of Persuasion | Peripheral Route of Persuasion |
| Involves being persuaded in a manner that is NOT based on the arguments or the message content ( only superficial things). |
Leon Festinger |
---|
Social Influences | |
---|---|
Normative Social Influence | Informational Social Influence |
When we conform to others because we want them to like and accept us. | When we conform to others because we believe they have accurate information. |
Asch’s Conformity Study |
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Outlining what conformity is. |
Obedience to Authority | |
---|---|
The Stanford Prison Experiment | The Milgram Experiment |
Purpose: To show how people can easily lose control over who they are and how role playing can influence violence in somebody. | Purpose:How far a person was willing to go in the presence of authority.Results: ordinary people can do shocking things. Cannot be replicated. |
Define Compliance: agreeing to do something
Reciprocity | Commitment |
---|---|
Door in the Face: the tendency for people who say no to a huge request, to comply with a smaller one. | That’s Not All: adding something to the original offer which is likely to create some pressure to reciprocate. |
Foot in the Door: the tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. | Low-Ball: you make a very attractive offer, and then change it after somebody accepts the offer to something less favorable. |
Define social groups: two or more humans who interact with one another, accept expectations and obligations as members of the group, and share a common identity
Define norms: the accepted standards of behavior of social groups
Theories of Group Influence | |
---|---|
Theory | Description |
Social Facilitation | Social Facilitation: performing better because of the real or imagined presence of people. |
Social Loafing | Social Loafing (individualistic cultures): is taking less responsibility when something is in a group.Social thriving (collectivist cultures): |
Deindividuation | acting impulsively and deviantly without revealing your identity. Get swept up in a large group setting. |
Group Polarization | Group polarization: Groups tend to make more extreme decisions than the individual. The more you are around people who think like you … the stronger your beliefs get. |
Social Trap | Social trap:when you do something that only benefits you but then it comes back to you. |
Reciprocity Norm | the social standard that people who help others will receive equivalent benefits from them in return. |
Bystander Effect | Bystander effect: the more people present during an emergency the less likely somebody will take actionDiffusion of responsibility: They figure that someone else will do something. |
In-Groups | Out-Groups |
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“Us” - people with whom one shares a common identity. | “Them” - those perceived as different from one’s ingroup.Ingroup bias: the tendency to favor one’s own group. |
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Prejudice | Undeserved (usually negative) attitude towards a group of people. Ethnocentrism is an example of a prejudice |
Discrimination | An action based on prejudice (Individual vs. Institutional). |
Stereotypes | Overgeneralized idea about a group of people. |
Concepts that Explain Causes of Conflict | |
---|---|
Concept | Description |
Scapegoat Theory | The theory that prejudice provides an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame. |
Ethnocentrism | The belief that your culture is natural and correct while other people’s culture is incorrect, unnatural, or inferior. |
Out-Group Homogeneity | The outgroup homogeneity effect is a cognitive bias in which people mistakenly perceive outgroup members as being a homogeneous group. |
Increasing CooperationHow do the following concepts lead to an increase in cooperation? | |
---|---|
Concept | Explanation |
Contact Theory | Contact between hostile groups will reduce animosity if they are made to work towards a superordinate goal (common shared goal) |
Superordinate Goal | Common shared goal |
Interpersonal Attraction | |
Mere-Exposure Effect | People tend to develop a preference for things merely because they are familiar with them. |
False Consensus Effect | causes people to “see their own behavioral choices and judgments as relatively common and appropriate to existing circumstances” |
Attraction | Similarity: the widespread tendency of people to be attracted to others who are similar to themselves in important respects.Evolutionary Perspective: The evolutionary theory of human interpersonal attraction states that opposite-sex attraction most often occurs when someone has physical features indicating that he or she is very fertile.Symmetry: Facial symmetry has been found to increase ratings of attractiveness in human faces |
Altruism | Aggression |
---|---|
Define:Unselfish regard for the welfare of others. | Define: Any physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt or destroy. |
Define social cognition: concerns the various psychological processes that enable individuals to take advantage of being part of a social group.
**** antidepressants: depression caused by low serotonin, SSRIs-prevent the reuptake of serotonin**
**Antipsychotics- levels of serotonin are too high, block dopamine receptors in the brain
Evaluating Behavior | |
---|---|
Theory | Description |
Fundamental Attribution Error | Underestimating a situation but overestimating a person. Others fail based on characterWhen we fail - situational |
Actor-Observer Bias | making excuses for what we do wrong, but judging other people when they make a mistake. |
Blaming the Victim | Assuming that something bad happened because of something the victim did. |
Just-World Hypothesis | If something bad happens to us, then we must deserve it.People get what they deserve |
Self-Serving Bias | Taking credit for the good things but not the bad ones. |
Halo Effect | Positive impressions- overall positive |
Define self-fulfilling prophecy (pygmalion effect): thinking that something must be true because we believe it.
Define attitude: a belief or feeling that predisposes one to respond in a particular way to something.
Elaboration Likelihood Model: dual process theory describing the change of attitudes. |
---|
Central Route of Persuasion | Peripheral Route of Persuasion |
| Involves being persuaded in a manner that is NOT based on the arguments or the message content ( only superficial things). |
Leon Festinger |
---|
Social Influences | |
---|---|
Normative Social Influence | Informational Social Influence |
When we conform to others because we want them to like and accept us. | When we conform to others because we believe they have accurate information. |
Asch’s Conformity Study |
---|
Outlining what conformity is. |
Obedience to Authority | |
---|---|
The Stanford Prison Experiment | The Milgram Experiment |
Purpose: To show how people can easily lose control over who they are and how role playing can influence violence in somebody. | Purpose:How far a person was willing to go in the presence of authority.Results: ordinary people can do shocking things. Cannot be replicated. |
Define Compliance: agreeing to do something
Reciprocity | Commitment |
---|---|
Door in the Face: the tendency for people who say no to a huge request, to comply with a smaller one. | That’s Not All: adding something to the original offer which is likely to create some pressure to reciprocate. |
Foot in the Door: the tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request. | Low-Ball: you make a very attractive offer, and then change it after somebody accepts the offer to something less favorable. |
Define social groups: two or more humans who interact with one another, accept expectations and obligations as members of the group, and share a common identity
Define norms: the accepted standards of behavior of social groups
Theories of Group Influence | |
---|---|
Theory | Description |
Social Facilitation | Social Facilitation: performing better because of the real or imagined presence of people. |
Social Loafing | Social Loafing (individualistic cultures): is taking less responsibility when something is in a group.Social thriving (collectivist cultures): |
Deindividuation | acting impulsively and deviantly without revealing your identity. Get swept up in a large group setting. |
Group Polarization | Group polarization: Groups tend to make more extreme decisions than the individual. The more you are around people who think like you … the stronger your beliefs get. |
Social Trap | Social trap:when you do something that only benefits you but then it comes back to you. |
Reciprocity Norm | the social standard that people who help others will receive equivalent benefits from them in return. |
Bystander Effect | Bystander effect: the more people present during an emergency the less likely somebody will take actionDiffusion of responsibility: They figure that someone else will do something. |
In-Groups | Out-Groups |
---|---|
“Us” - people with whom one shares a common identity. | “Them” - those perceived as different from one’s ingroup.Ingroup bias: the tendency to favor one’s own group. |
Term | Definition |
---|---|
Prejudice | Undeserved (usually negative) attitude towards a group of people. Ethnocentrism is an example of a prejudice |
Discrimination | An action based on prejudice (Individual vs. Institutional). |
Stereotypes | Overgeneralized idea about a group of people. |
Concepts that Explain Causes of Conflict | |
---|---|
Concept | Description |
Scapegoat Theory | The theory that prejudice provides an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame. |
Ethnocentrism | The belief that your culture is natural and correct while other people’s culture is incorrect, unnatural, or inferior. |
Out-Group Homogeneity | The outgroup homogeneity effect is a cognitive bias in which people mistakenly perceive outgroup members as being a homogeneous group. |
Increasing CooperationHow do the following concepts lead to an increase in cooperation? | |
---|---|
Concept | Explanation |
Contact Theory | Contact between hostile groups will reduce animosity if they are made to work towards a superordinate goal (common shared goal) |
Superordinate Goal | Common shared goal |
Interpersonal Attraction | |
Mere-Exposure Effect | People tend to develop a preference for things merely because they are familiar with them. |
False Consensus Effect | causes people to “see their own behavioral choices and judgments as relatively common and appropriate to existing circumstances” |
Attraction | Similarity: the widespread tendency of people to be attracted to others who are similar to themselves in important respects.Evolutionary Perspective: The evolutionary theory of human interpersonal attraction states that opposite-sex attraction most often occurs when someone has physical features indicating that he or she is very fertile.Symmetry: Facial symmetry has been found to increase ratings of attractiveness in human faces |
Altruism | Aggression |
---|---|
Define:Unselfish regard for the welfare of others. | Define: Any physical or verbal behavior intended to hurt or destroy. |