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Social Psychology
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Social Psychology Scientific study of how we think about, influence and relate to one another. Why do people do the things they do? How does being in a group change our behavior? What is love? (Baby don’t hurt me)
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Social thinking guides future social behavior Attribution theory Tend to explain behavior through the external situation or the person’s internal disposition. Fundamental attribution error Examples Explaining our own vs. others’ behavior Effects of attribution
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Attitudes: Feelings that predispose our reactions. A & A show reciprocal determinism Central route vs. peripheral persuasion Foot-in-the-door phenomenon Examples Roles and cognitive tension can change attitudes Philip Zimbardo’s prison experiment.. Cognitive dissonance theory Leon Festinger’s exciting experimentexciting
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Our personal attitudes and actions are only one part of the social puzzle. Research in conformity, compliance, and group behaviors looks at the influences of social factors on behavior. This relates to social norms and nurture aspects discussed earlier.
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Conformity: The adjustment of thoughts and behaviors toward a group standard. Conformity is positive and negative Solomon Asch’s conformity researchconformity Strengthening conformity Influences Why do we conform? Normative social influence Informational social influence Social influence and perception
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Stanley Milgram’s obedience studies Original and variations Ogavan Real life parallels Both Asch and Milgram demonstrate the potential power of social influence vs. self. Conclusions from this research.
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Individual vs. Group Social Facilitation Social Loafing Deindividuation Group vs. Group Group polarization Groupthink Individuals within groups Social vs. personal control The vocal minority Presence of others has distinct effects: Increasing individual efforts towards individual goals Decreasing individual efforts towards group goals Decreasing individual responsibility when anonymous Justifying attitudes and beliefs
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Prejudice vs. Stereotypes vs. Discrimination Prejudice in society Changes through time and statistics Overt vs. subtle prejudice Development of prejudice Social Factors Social Factors Inequality: blame the victim Ingroup vs. outgroup Ingroup bias Emotional Factors Terror management Emotional scapegoat theory Frustration Cognitive Factors Hierarchies, the other-race effect and ethnocentrism The availability heuristic The just-world phenomenon
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Aggression: Behavior intended to cause harm Aggression is NOT an instinct – too much variation Genetic influences Selective breeding and temperament Brain structure influences Amygdala / limbic system and frontal lobes Biochemical influences Hormones, neurotransmitters and drugs Higher testosterone?, disinhibition, and attention
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Frustration-aggression principle and aversive stimuli Bobo doll and other examples Nurture and aggression Conditioning, ostracism, social disparity and family structure Aggression-replacement program Observation and modeling Media and aggression Social scripts Teaching vs. releasing violent tendencies through video games?
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Factors that influence relationship development Proximity Mere exposure effect Physical attractiveness Social and cultural influences Social Halo effect Attractiveness, self-esteem and self-assessment Similarity Do opposites attract? Opposite in what ways? Spoiler alert: Similarity and attraction positively correlate The reward theory of attraction
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Love Different levels of love Elaine Hatfield’s theory Romantic love Passionate love Biological influences Habituation Companionate love Equity Self-disclosure Robert Sternberg’s Triangular theory
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Unselfish regard for others Bystander intervention Kitty Genovese and others Bystander effect Diffusion of responsibility Factors in altruism Social exchange theory Cost-benefit analysis Reciprocity norm Social responsibility norm
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Conflict: Perceived incompatibility of actions, goals or ideas. Social traps and individual vs. group interests One person, “missing hero” and the “tragedy of the commons” traps. “Us” vs. “Them”: Mirror image perceptions Ingroup/outgroup
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Promoting resolution of conflicts Contact and mere exposure effects Cooperation Muzafer Sherif and the Robbers Cave experiment Superordinate goals New ingroup creation (and new outgroups) Communication Mediation and talking through social traps Conciliation Charles Osgood and true GRIT Small concessions and the reciprocity norm
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