The science of psychology (Kap 15)

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  • social cognition concerns the social side of our mental processes and how people make sense of themselves and others around them
  • attributions judgements about the causes of our own and other people´s behaviour and outcomes
  • fundamental attribution error we underestimate the impact of the situation and overestimate the role of personal factors when explaining other people´s behaviour
  • actor-observer bias the tendency to make situational attributions to explain our own behaviour and personal attributions to explain the behaviour of others
  • self-serving bias the tendency to make personal attributions for one´s own success and situational attributions for one´s own failures
  • impression formation the process of how, with what info and to what effect people make judgements of others
  • recency effect the tendency to attach more importance to the most recent info that we learn about a person
  • primacy effect the tendency to attach more importance to the inital info that we learn about a person
  • stereotype a shared belief about person attributes, usually personality traits, but often also opinions or behaviours, of a group or category of people
  • self-fulfilling prosphecy when people´s erroneous expectations lead them to act towards others in a way that brings about the expected behaviours, thereby confirming their original impression
  • self-schemas mental templates, derived from memory of past experience, which represents a person´s beliefs about the self in a particular domain
  • self-perception theory we make inferences about our own attitudes by obeserving how we behave
  • social comparison theory comparing our beliefs, feelings or behaviours with those of other people
  • reflected appraisal principle we incorporate the views others have of us into our own self-concept
  • self-discrepancy theory distinguishes among representations of our actual self, our ideal self and our ought self
  • goal desired state specifying a concrete even an individual is striving for
  • regulatory focus theory the two self-guides are concerned with the pursuit of different types of goals
  • promotional goals goals concerning the pursuit of ideals
  • preventation goals goals concerning the pursuit of obligations
  • personal identity that part of an individual´s identity derived from their personality traits, idiosyncratic characteristcs and interpersonal relationships
  • social identity that part of an individual´s identity derived from the knowledge of beloning to perticular groups
  • in-groups groups individuals belong to
  • out-groups groups individuals do not belong to
  • self-esteem an individual´s sense of self-worth, or the extent to which the individual appreciates, values or likes him/herself
  • better-than-average-effect the tendency to evaluate ourselves more favourably than the average peer
  • sociometer internal monitor of social acceptance and belonging
  • collective self-esteem a measure of the value one places on one´s social groups
  • attitude a positive, neutral or negative evaluative reaction towards a stimulus, such as a person, action, situation, object or concept
  • explicit attitude attitude measured using self-report instruments such as questionnaires
  • implicit attitude attitude measured using reaction-time-based indirect measures
  • theory of cognitive dissonance people strive for consitency in their cognitions
  • dissonance a state of discomfort arising when two or more cognitions are inconsisten with each other
  • central route to persuasion when people think carefully about the message and are influenced because they find the arguments compelling
  • peripheral route to persuasion when people do not scrutinize the message but are influenced mostly by other factors such as a speacker´s attractiveness or a message´s lenght or emotional appeal
  • communicator credibility how believebal we perceive the communication to be
  • social facilitation an increased tendency to perform one´s dominant responses in the mere presence of others
  • norm of reciprocity the expectation that when others treat us well, we should respond in kind
  • door-in-the-face technique a persuader makes a large request, expecting you to reject it and then presents a smaller request
  • foot-in-the-door technique a persuader gets you to comply with a small request first and later presents a larger request
  • lowballing a persuader gets you to commit to some action and then - before you actually perform the behaviour - he or she increases the ´cost´ of that same behaviour
  • social norms shared expectations about how people should think, feel and behave
  • social role a set of norms that characterizes how people in a given social position ought to behave
  • conformity the adjustment of individual behaviours, attitudes and beliefs to a group standard
  • informational social influence following the opinions or behaviour of other people because we believe that they have accurate knowlegde and that what they are doing is right
  • normative social influence confirming to obtain the rewards that come from being accepted by other people while at the same time avoiding their rejection
  • referent informational influence individuals will be influenced primarily by members of the group they identify with (i.e, refences groups)
  • social loafing the tendency for people to expend less individual effort when working in a group than when working alone
  • social compensation working harder in a group than when alone to compensate for other members´lower output
  • group polarization when a group of like-minded people discusses an issue, the ´average´opinion of group members tends to become more extreme
  • groupthink the tendency if group members to suspend critical thinking because they are striving to seek agreement
  • deindividuation a loss of individuality that leads to disinhibited behaviour
  • stanford prison experiment a well-known social psychological experiment devised by Philip Zimbardo and colleagues at the university of stanford; its purpose was to investigate what would happen when ´normal´ people were placed in a situation with extreme power differences based on predescribed role expectations of ´prisoners´ and ´guards´
  • prejudice a negative attitude towards people based on their membership in a group
  • discrimination overt behaviour that involves treating people unfairly based on the group to which they belong
  • category accentuation a tendency to exaggerate the difference between categories
  • out-group homogeneity bias the tendency of individuals to generally view members of outgroups as being more similar to one another than are members of in-groups
  • prototypes the most typical and familiar members of a category, or class
  • in-group favouritism the tendency to favour in-group members and attributes more positive qualities to ´us´ than to ´them´
  • out-group derogation a tendency to attribute more negative qualities to ´them´ than to ´us´
  • realistic conflict theory competition for limited resources faster prejudice
  • explicit prejudice prejudiced attitudes that are measured using self-report instruments such as questionnaires
  • implicit prejudice prejudiced attributes that are measured usin reaction-time-based indirect measures
  • stereotype threat stereotypes create self-consciousness among steroetyped group members and a fear that they will live up to other people´s stereotypes
  • intergroup contact contact between members of different groups is likely to reduce prejudice when it occurs under the four conditions of equal status contact
  • mere exposure effect repeated exposure to a stimulus typically increease our liking for it
  • matching effect we are most likely to have a partner whose level of physical attractiveness is similar to our own
  • social exchange theory the course of a relationship is governed by rewards and costs that the partners experience
  • attachment a deep bond between two individuals
  • passionate love intense emotion, arousal and yearning for the partner
  • companionate love affection and deep caring about the partner´s well-being
  • triangular theory of love love involves three major components: passion, intimacy and commitment
  • kin selection organisms are most likely to help others with whom they share most genes, namely their offspring and genetic relatives
  • empathy-altruism hypothesis altruism is produced by empathy - the ability to put oneself in the place of another and to share what that person is experiencing
  • bystandar effect the presence of multiple bystandars inhibits each person´s tendency to help, largely due to social comparison or diffusion of responsibility
  • catharsis performing an act of aggresion discharges aggresive energy and temporarily reduces our impulses to be aggresive

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Utdelad övning

https://glosor.eu/ovning/the-science-of-psychology-kap-15.10023995.html

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