Download presentation
Presentation is loading. Please wait.
Published byBartholomew Young Modified over 9 years ago
1
Behavior in a Social Context
3
A major influence on people’s behavior, thought processes and emotions are other people and society that they have created.
4
Understanding individual behavior in a social context Human behavior is influenced by others & social context Social norms ◦ Spoken or unspoken rules about behavior
5
Self concept Social cognition Attribution theory Social influence Group processes Aggression Prejudice & discrimination Interpersonal processes Attitudes Stereotypes
6
Social Influence ◦ Conformity ◦ Obedience ◦ Bystander Effect Social Cognition ◦ Identity ◦ Attitudes ◦ Stereotypes Social Behavior ◦ Discrimination ◦ Relationships Social Development ◦ Attachment ◦ Self-concept
7
Social Facilitation ◦ The presence of others influences behavior ◦ Audiences improve actor’s performances ◦ Home teams perform better than away teams
8
Home Advantage in Major Team Sports Home Team GamesWinning SportStudiedPercentage Baseball23,03453.3% Football 2,59257.3 Ice hockey 4,32261.1 Basketball13,59664.4 Soccer37,20269.0 Home teams win about 6 of 10 games.
9
Social inhibition ◦ The presence of others can impair performance on tasks that one is not particularly good at ◦ Ex. Parallel parking Social Loafing ◦ On group tasks, people will sometimes exert less effort if individual contributions are not possible to identify ◦ Ex. Group projects ◦ Note: Men are more likely to participate in social loafing than women
10
When we believe in something different than the people around us we feel discomfort We are motivated to change our beliefs to lessen the discomfort
11
“Free speech being a privilege rather than a right, it is proper for a society to suspend free speech when it feels threatened” Agree or Disagree?
12
19% agreed with statement in private 58% agreed under pressure of group influence
13
Adopting the social norms of a group ◦ 1. We want to be liked ◦ 2. We want to be right We are most likely to conform when… ◦ We like the group and leaders ◦ The larger the group We are least likely to conform when… ◦ The group is not unanimous
14
When divided into groups prejudices develop naturally Individuals need to maintain a positive sense of personal and social identity Desirability of qualities found within your group over less desirable traits in the other group
15
We look for an explanation of behavior in the social world Is it internal or external? Is it stable or does it change over time? Is it controllable? The fundamental attribution error overestimating internal (personal) influences and underestimating external (situational) influences when judging the behavior of others: “He’s poor because he’s lazy.”
16
Most likely occurs in unfamiliar environments The presence of authority Covert pressure Feeling that someone else is responsible
17
Milgram’s experiment https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VYv3J12pA RM Confederate strapped into chair with electrodes Teacher & experimenter go to room with shock generator… Shocks range: 15 volts (slight shock) - 450 volts (Danger/severe shock/XXX) Every time learner gets one wrong, “teacher” is to increase the shock
19
Giving up normal behavioral restraints to the group. Being less self-conscious and restrained in a group situation may account for mob behavior Ex. Students at pep assemblies are more likely to behave badly at the assembly if they cannot be identified individually for their behavior). Ex. Fan behavior (good and bad) at sports games (painting faces, screaming insults, and so on).
20
Phillip Zimbardo, psychologist at Stanford University Developed to understand mass mentality as seen in the Holocaust Zimbardo analyzed 70 male student volunteers and picked the most normal, average people in the bunch Participants divided into two groups, guards and prisoners Prisoners arrested and booked and transported to a university building where a prison had been created for a two-week stay
21
Within a few hours, the guards — who’d been instructed that physical abuse was off limits — became psychologically abusive gang. ◦ Ex. Name calling, unsanitary conditions, removal of mattresses Five of the prisoners began to experience such severe negative emotions, including crying and acute anxiety, that they had to be released from the study early Researchers lost sight of purpose Still sited as an unethical study
22
Perceived number of bystanders predicts likelihood of helping behavior Diffusion of responsibility
23
According to the police report, Catherine "Kitty" Genovese was stabbed to death over a period of 35 minutes - with 38 people watching the cruelty. By the time a neighbor finally called the police - who arrived within two minutes - it was too late for Genovese who had died just inside the front door of a nearby apartment as she was trying to escape.
Similar presentations
© 2025 SlidePlayer.com. Inc.
All rights reserved.