Social Psychology II
Prosocial Behavior Why did people risk their lives to help those in Japan after the earthquake and nuclear fallout? Why do people run into a burning building to help someone?
Prosocial Behavior - These tragedies show humans have the potential for prosocial behavior and altruism Prosocial Behavior- a behavior carried out with the goal of helping other people
Prosocial Behavior - Altruism- prosocial behaviors a person carries out w/out considering their own safety or interests
Prosocial Behavior What makes people behave this way? Why do people feel they should risk their life for others? Depends on who “others” are… - for relatives, altruistic behavior makes sense, b/c you aid in the survival of your gene pool
Prosocial Behavior What about strangers though? Theorists believe in reciprocal altruism- idea that people perform altruistic behaviors b/c they expect others will perform altruistic behaviors for them in turn
Prosocial Behavior Reciprocal altruism is not only in humans Researchers also found that people will be altruistic even if they don’t expect the behavior to be reciprocal Evolutionary evidence for altruism
Prosocial Behavior women believe that men who provide evidence of altruism would make better fathers
Prosocial Behavior Motives for Prosocial Behavior: Altruism Egoism- perform the behavior for your own self-interest, to later receive a favor, or reward Collectivism- perform the behavior for a larger group the person is a part of
Prosocial Behavior 4. Principlism- perform the behavior to uphold moral/religious principles 5. Empathy-Altruism Hypothesis- feel empathy toward another evoking altruistic motives to provide help
Prosocial Behavior How does this motive affect prosocial behavior? Psychologists demonstrated that bystander intervention (people’s willingness to help strangers in distress) was very sensitive to the precise characteristics of the situation
Prosocial Behavior - However, sometimes people are slow to help or don’t help at all b/c of diffusion of responsibility (when more than one person could help in an emergency, people assume someone else will or should help, so they back off and don’t get involved)
Prosocial Behavior Other reasons bystanders fail to help: Have to notice the emergency Label the events as an emergency- how are other people responding? Must feel responsibility
Aggression and Prejudice
Aggression Why are people aggressive? - genetic predisposition - brain & hormone differences (amygdala) - serotonin levels
Aggression 2 Types of Aggression: Impulsive- reaction to the situation Ex. Fist-fight 2. Instrumental- goal-directed, premeditated Ex. Knock down a lady for her purse
Aggression In what situations do people seem to be aggressive? - Frustration-aggression hypothesis- frustration occurs when your goals are blocked & a rise in frustration leads to more probability of aggression
Aggression Temperature & Time of Day – warmer aggression 9pm-3am aggression - Direct Provocation/Escalation- believing the behavior was intentional is more upsetting
Aggression Some cultural constraints to aggression: More connected you are with culture/community less likely to be aggressive Regional differences- Southerners have a code of conduct; if you dishonor it, tend to be more aggressive
Aggression 3. Modeling- TV and home life become the norm
Prejudice Prejudice- a learned attitude, involving negative fear, negative beliefs (stereotypes) that justify that attitude, and intention to avoid, control, dominate, or eliminate the “target object”
Prejudice Where does prejudice come from? Social Categorization- people organize their environment by categorizing the people around them - People divide the world into “in-groups” & “out-groups”
Prejudice - “In-groups”- groups with which they identify as members - “Out-groups”- groups which they do not identify with
Prejudice These distinctions lead to in-group bias- believing that the group you are in is better than others Leads to societal problems like discrimination
Prejudice The tendency toward defining “us against them” becomes more powerful when perception grows that resources are scarce & that goods can only be given to one group at the expense of another
Prejudice Prejudice people spend time deciding who is “us” and who is “them” - Easy to create, difficult to remove leads to discrimination Stereotypes- generalizations about a group of people in which the same characteristics are assigned to all members of a group
Prejudice Stereotypes encode expectations that create social realities for people Stereotypes are used to produce behavioral confirmations - People tend to devalue information that is inconsistent with their prior stereotype thus difficult to change them
Prejudice Stereotypes can lead to stereotype threat- a stereotyped group’s knowledge that they must work against a negative stereotype
Prejudice How can we reverse prejudice? - Contact hypothesis- idea that direct contact between hostile groups alone will reduce prejudice theory has been disproven - Mutual dependence, deprovincialization, & jigsaw techniques work well (ex. Remember the Titans)