SOCIAL PSYCH TEST 2 CAROLYN ADAMS PRICE
cognitive dissonance
situation where you have conflicting attitudes, beliefs or behaviors.
details of Milgram experiment
-Experiment designed to study "just following orders" statement of some Nazi soldiers -You know the basics: learner (a confederate) and teacher (real subject) -The panel with voltage marked from 15-450 volts that wasn't really hooked to anything "shocking" --but the teacher receives a sample shock -Markings: mild, moderate, strong, very strong, and XXX -Teacher reads word pairs and is instructed to shock the learner when they make a mistake
Theory of Planned Behavior
-When attitudes are strong, they are more likely to predict behavior -When our attitudes are supported by those we care about, our attitudes are likely to predict behavior -When we believe we can control our behavior consistent with the attitude, then attitudes predict behavior
dispositional vs. situational attributions
-dispositional: assumes that the cause of a behavior or outcome is internal -situational: assigns the cause of a behavior or outcome to the environment or external conditions-people are likely to make
implicit associations test
A computer reaction time test that measures a person's automatic associations with concepts. For instance, the IAT could be used to measure how quickly a person makes positive or negative evaluations of members of various ethnic groups.
ABC's of attitudes
A is for affect (emotional feeling and valence) B is for behavior (tendency to behave accordingly with one's attitude) C is for cognition (thoughts associated with the attitude)
low ball technique
A tactic for getting people to agree to something. People who agree to an initial request will often still comply when the requester ups the ante. People who receive only the costly request are less likely to comply with it.
central path
A type of persuasion in which appeals are direct, elaborate, and systematic; requires close attention and careful evaluation of alternatives by the individual being persuaded.
peripheral path
A type of persuasion in which appeals are indirect, implicit, and emotion based; requires little effort by the individual being persuaded, leading to quick and easy conclusions.
conformity
Adjusting one's behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard.
conformity and culture
Collectivist cultures has been associated with greater levels of conformity Cultural norms provide clues about how groups of human beings have managed to adapt to life
Stanford Prison Experiment
Philip Zimbardo's study of the effect of roles on behavior. Participants were randomly assigned to play either prisoners or guards in a mock prison. The study was ended early because of the "guards'" role-induced cruelty.
Persuasion principles
Reciprocity Scarcity Authority Consistency (foot in the door) Liking Consensus
compliance
Sometimes people conform to others even though they don't agree with what they're conforming to
Solomon Asch Experiment
Study supposedly about judging line lengths
valence
The degree to which an attitude is positive or negative
self-serving bias
The tendency to take credit for your successes (internal) and to blame failures on external causes
self-fulfilling prophecies
a belief that leads to its own fulfillment
false consensus
a belief that others share the same opinion about something, when actually most don't
locus of control
a person's tendency to perceive the control of rewards as internal to the self or external in the environment
terror management theory
a theory of death-related anxiety; explores people's emotional and behavioral responses to reminders of their impending death
Kelley's Covariation Model
a theory that states that to form an attribution about what caused a person's behavior, we systematically note the pattern between the presence or absence of possible causal factors and whether the behavior occurs; consistency, consensus, distinctiveness
consensus
agreement between people (ex: do other people flirt with you regularly?)
attitudes
an enduring and general evaluation of an object, person, group, issue, or concept; can be positive, negative and strong, weak
Mailbox technique
an experiment to see if people will mail stamped envelopes they find addressed to controversial groups
Attributions
an inference you make about the causes of a person's behavior or feelings by observing that person's behavior
implicit attitudes
attitudes that exist outside of conscious awareness
explicit attitudes
attitudes that we consciously endorse and can easily report
consistency
constant (ex: does he always flirt with you??)
Elliot Aronson
different initiations regarding sexual literature and words and then determine how much participants like the group they were initiated into; Aronson's Law #1• You will look at ads and reviews for the car you choose more AFTER you buy it than before. Rate your choice MUCH higher. Aronson's Law #2: People come to love the things for which they suffer.
social norms
expected standards of conduct, which influence behavior
baby faces
faces with baby-like characteristics
bogus pipeline
fake lie detector used to try to get more truthful answers in self-report
maltreatment effects
happen when hazing elicits social dependency that promotes allegiance to the group
fundamental attribution error
he tendency to underestimate the situational causes of someone else's behavior, and to overestimate the influence of internal causes such as personality
distinctiveness
high or low (ex: does he flirt with just you, (distinctiveness high) or does he flirt with everyone (distinctiveness low))
autokinetic effect
illusion, caused by very slight movements of the eye, that a stationary point of light in a dark room is moving
dual attitudes
new attitudes override old ones, so there's often some of the old attitude left
Anonymity (effects of)
not responsible, it wasn't me who did that bad thing
Stanley Milgram
obedience to authority; had participants administer what they believed were dangerous electrical shocks to other participants; wanted to see if Germans were an aberration or if all people were capable of committing evil actions
door-in-the-face
people are more likely to agree to a small request after they have refused a large request
equanimity
psychological stability and composure
attitude-behavior consistency
refers to the extent to which a strong relationship exists between attitudes and actual behavior
Leon Festinger
social cognition, cognitive dissonance; Study Basics: Studied and demonstrated cognitive dissonance
Phil Zimbardo
stanford prison experiment; importance of social roles
spool spinning theory
study on cognitive dissonance theory where people spun spools and told others if the experiment was exciting or not; Leon F.
just-world hypothesis
the belief that people get what they deserve in life and deserve what they get
facial feedback hypothesis
the idea that facial expressions can influence emotions as well as reflect them
Foot-in-the-Door
the tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request
halo effect
the tendency to draw a general impression about an individual on the basis of a single characteristic
false uniqueness
the tendency to underestimate the commonality of one's abilities and one's desirable or successful behaviors
Attitude-consistency principle
when a person's attitude is consistent with their behavior which makes them more comfortable
Deindividuation
when an individual seems to lose himself or herself in the group's identity (the guards are a block, rather than individuals who are responsible for their actions)