Chapter 12
_______ is an emotion evoked by sympathy for another
Empathy
Darley and Latané described a sequence of decisions a bystander must make before he or she will intervene in an emergency. Which of the following is NOT one of the specific steps?
assessing the victim's desire for help
If victims seem to have created their own problems by laziness or lack of foresight, people are less willing to offer help. Helping responses are thus closely tied to
attributions
Which is NOT one of the reasons that affect us as to when we will help others?
avoiding eye contact
A person who is intensely self-focused in profound grief would
be less likely to help others
In the experimental studies of bystander non-intervention, researchers have
been careful to debrief their laboratory participants.
People who live in _______ are least likely to relay a phone message, mail "lost" letters, cooperate with survey interviewers, do small favors, or help a lost child.
big cities
Our eagerness to do well after doing something bad reflects our need to
both reduce private guilt and reclaim a positive public image
Altruism researcher Daniel Batson reported that empathy-induced altruism
can feed favoritism, injustice, and indifference
Hoffman (1981) reported that infants cry more when they hear another infant crying. This is an example of
empathy
Which of the following specifically predicts that we will be more altruistic toward our relatives than toward close friends?
evolutionary psychology
Research on gender and helping norms revealed that
females seek more help
Evolutionary psychology contends that the essence of life is
gene survival
Darley and Batson (1973) gave Princeton seminary students time to think about a talk that they were about to have recorded, and then sent them to the recording studio. Participants who had been _______ were most likely to stop and offer aid to a "victim" they encountered en route to the recording studio.
given extra time to reach the studio
Studies of the effects of mood on helping suggest that adults who feel _______ are more likely than those in a neutral control condition to help.
guilty
A classmate of Bianca's wants to borrow Bianca's notes to study for an upcoming exam. Research suggests that Bianca will most likely agree if the classmate says she needs the notes because she
has been absent due to illness
The network of traits that predisposes a person to be helpful are all of the following EXCEPT
high in awareness
According to the text, individuals who identify as _______ in terms of spiritual commitment are most likely to report working volunteer and give to charities.
highly committed
Solomon and Solomon (1978) found that bystanders who _______ were more likely to offer aid to a person.
identified themselves to one another by name and age
According to the social-exchange theory, the rewards that motivate helping are
internal or external.
Sociologist Gouldner (1960) contended that the norm of reciprocity
is as universal as the incest taboo
University students were more willing to make a charity pledge when
it was for someone who had bought them candy
Pedestrians who are more likely to help another pedestrian pick up a dropped envelope are those who
just had their photograph taken.
The idea that altruism toward one's close relatives enhances the survival of mutually shared genes is referred to as
kin selection
Which one of the following is NOT one of the ways that Myers suggests increase social altruism?
learn about egoism
Which of the following statements is NOT true? As the number of bystanders at an emergency increases, any given bystander is
less likely to walk away
When faced with potentially dangerous situations where strangers need help,
men help most.
Research on gender and helping norms revealed that _______ offered more help when the persons in need were females, and _______ offered help equally to males and females.
men; women
Which of the following is an effective way to increase helping behavior?
model prosocial behavior
Omitting certain people from one's circle of moral concern is called
moral exclusion
Regarding people who are within one's circle of moral concern is called
moral inclusion.
Katzev (1978) found that when people were reprimanded at a zoo for feeding unauthorized food to bears, they were _______ to help another person afterwards than if they had not been reprimanded.
more likely
DeBruine (2002) found that when students played an interactive game with a supposed other player, participants were _______ when the other person's pictured face had some features of their own face morphed into it.
more trusting and more generous
Batson and his colleagues (1981) had university women watch another woman suffer a series of painful shocks. Some participants were led to feel empathy for her and were then asked if they would trade places, taking her remaining shocks. The results indicated that
most participants agreed to help even if they knew that their part in the experiment was complete.
According to the text, people in a hurry may be less willing to help because they
never fully grasp the situation as one requiring their assistance.
You trip over a fallen branch and sprain your ankle. According to research on the bystander effect, a stranger who sees your plight will be most likely to offer aid if there are _______ others present.
no
Research evidence indicates that prosocial models of helping
promote altruism in the observers
Social-exchange is a _______ theory, while social norms is a _______ theory.
psychological; sociological
According to the evolutionary theory, genetic selfishness predisposes us to help based on
reciprocity
After Mr. Walters' neighbor helped him paint his house, Mr. Walters felt obligated to offer to help the neighbor remodel his kitchen. Mr. Walters' sense of obligation most likely resulted from the
reciprocity norm
The free address labels that come with mailings that solicit donations to philanthropic causes likely follow the
reciprocity norm
The notion of egoism maintains that
self-interest motivates all behavior
Keisha is stopped on the street by a panhandler. She is most likely to give money if
she just had her picture taken
Miller and his colleagues (2001) reported that we are more empathic and helpful toward those who are _______ us.
similar to
Confederates who were dressed either conservatively or in counterculture garb approached either "straight" or "hip" college students and asked for change to make a phone call. Results of this experiment confirmed a _______ bias in helping.
similarity
Latané and Darley attempted to explain people's failure to intervene in cases like that of Kitty Genovese, a woman who was violently attacked, in terms of
situational influences
Researchers have found that with door-to-door solicitation, there is more success with requests for contributions when they are
small
According to the text, the _______ of altruism propose(s) two types of prosocial behavior: a tit-for-tat reciprocal exchange and a more unconditional, intrinsic helpfulness.
social norms, social-exchange, and evolutionary theories
Before agreeing to help out at the local homeless shelter, Sharon weighs the costs (e.g., getting up at dawn) and benefits (e.g., feeling good about herself) of doing so. This strategy can be predicted by the
social-exchange theory.
You are asked to participate in a blood drive. In thinking about doing so, you weigh the costs (e.g., being pricked by a needle) and benefits (e.g., feeling good about yourself) of doing so. This strategy can be predicted by the
social-exchange theory.
Helping _______ a bad mood and _______ a good mood.
softens; sustains
Since we are born selfish, evolutionary psychologists such as Richard Dawkins propose that we attempt to
teach altruism
The fact that a person is less likely to help in an emergency when other people are present is called
the bystander effect.
What principle or concept suggests that rewarding people for their helpfulness may, in the long run, undermine their self-motivated altruism?
the over-justification effect
Research on the relationship between personality traits and helping behavior revealed that
the person and the situation interact to predict helping.
In observing people's responses to staged emergencies, Darley and Latané (1970) found that _______ greatly decreased intervention.
the presence of other bystanders
Which of the following factors is likely to increase helping behavior?
the presence of others who offer help
The notion that humans interact in such a way as to minimize costs and maximize rewards to the self is referred to as
the social-exchange theory.
In helping situations,
there are gender differences depending on the situation
People are more likely to help another person if
they expect to see them again
Both European Christians who risked their lives to rescue Jews during the Nazi era and civil rights activists of the 1950s reported that
they had warm, close relationships with at least one parent who was a "strong moralist" and committed to humanitarian causes.
In an enactment of the Good Samaritan situation, Darley and Batson (1973) studied the helpfulness of Princeton seminarians in order to assess whether helping behavior was influenced by
time pressures
In McMillen and Austin's research (1971), participants who had lied were more likely to
volunteer a large amount of time
We tend to help more often when
we have just observed someone else helping
Which of the following is NOT one of the steps in Darley and Latané's decision tree?
weighing the costs and benefits of helping
In a study by Latané and Rodin (1969), a female experimenter apparently fell and hurt her ankle. What percentage of participants who were alone offered help?
70 percent
Who among the following psychologists believes that genuine empathy-induced altruism is part of human nature?
Batson
Altruism is to _______ as egoism is to _______.
another's welfare; one's own welfare
According to the text, the social responsibility norm gets selectively applied according to which one of the following principles?
Give people what they deserve
There are many ways to increase helping behaviors in people. Which is NOT one of the ways identified in the chapter?
Guilt-laden people don't tend to help others
Few findings have been more consistent than those that show that _______ people are helpful people.
Happy
Batson believes that true altruism does exist in feelings of sympathy and compassion for others. Which is NOT an example of genuine altruism?
Helping others by giving to a charity that supports an issue we think is really important.
Who of the following is LEAST likely to help an injured pedestrian?
Ivan, who is five minutes late for a committee meeting
Evolutionary psychologists would have greatest difficulty explaining why
Jill agreed to donate bone marrow to save the life of a stranger
Who of the following is most likely to respond favorably to an unexpected request for a charitable donation to a local hospital?
Melvin's mother, who just received a very favorable job evaluation from her employer
_____ were most closely associated with other forms of civic involvement, like voting, jury service, community projects, and giving to charity.
Members in religious groups
Which of the following techniques should elementary school teachers use if they hope to promote enduring altruistic tendencies in students?
Show them films of heroes who risked their own welfare to help others
Which statement is TRUE?
Social exchange theory says we react to an emergency by considering what we can get out of it and balance that against risks
Ian is from England, Dan is from America, and Tam is from India. Which one of these people is most likely to support and act on the norm of social responsibility?
Tam
Myers suggests that there are a number of reasons why individuals who live in big cities tend to be less helpful. Which of the following is NOT one of those reasons?
They become cold and uncaring after living in a city
The motive to increase another's welfare without conscious regard for one's self-interests defines
altruism.
_______ are twice as likely as _______ to seek medical and psychiatric help
Women; men
A stranger has collapsed on a city sidewalk due to a heart attack. According to Darley and Latané, what is the first thing that must happen before you will help in this emergency?
You must notice the stranger.
Latané and Darley (1968) had university students complete questionnaires in a small room, and then had smoke pour into the room from a wall vent. Students who were working _______ tended to notice the smoke in _______.
alone; less than five seconds.
When people need our help, we are most likely to provide assistance if we attribute their need to
circumstances beyond their control
A major weakness of the reward theory is that it
easily degenerates into explaining-by-naming.
The opposite of altruism is
egoism
According to research cited in the text, which of the following is the correct order?
positive mood; positive thoughts; positive self-esteem; positive behavior
When looking at ingroup similarity and helping, researchers noted all of the following EXCEPT
one way to increase people's willingness to help others is to promote social identities that are more exclusive than inclusive.
According to the evolutionary theory, it can be predicted that it is more likely that
parents will be more devoted to their children than vice versa
The social responsibility norm refers to the expectation that
people will help those dependent upon them
According to the text, an attribution of an uncontrollable predicament (such as a family crisis or natural disaster) is likely to encourage _______ to help.
political conservatives
The relationship between our degree of self-awareness and our willingness to help is
positive