Psych 372
subgoal
A step that brings a person closer to achieving a long-term goal.
deception
A trick; an attempt to make someone believe something that is not true
Which of the following definitions is correct?
-evolutionary perspective focuses on social behaviors as evolved adaptations that helped our ancestors survive and reproduce -sociocultural perspective focuses on how social behavior is influenced by group level factors, such as social class and nationality -social learning perspective focuses on past experiences with direct and indirect rewards and punishments -social cognitive perspective focuses on the mental processes involved in paying attention to, interpreting, and remembering social experiences
naturalistic observation
recording everyday behaviors as they unfold in their natural settings
IRB (Institutional Review Board)
Board that reviews research proposals for ethical violations/procedural errors
adaptations
a characteristic that is well designed to help an animal survive and reproduce in a particular environment
Aadhira comes from a culture in which family groups are commonly considered more important than just one person and in which people are taught to put the needs of others before their own needs. Aadhira comes from what kind of culture? a. a social culture b. a collectivistic culture c. an individualistic d. a cultural script
a collectivistic culture
Goals
a desired outcome; something one wishes to achieve or accomplish
debriefing
a discussion of procedures, hypotheses, and participant reactions at the completion of the study
representative sample
a group of respondents having characteristics that match those of the larger population the researcher wants to describe
Motives
a high-level goal fundamental to social survival
correlation coefficient
a mathematical expression of the relationship between two variables
Self-concept
a mental representation capturing our views and beliefs about ourselves
Schema
a mental representation capturing the general characteristics of a particular class of episodes, events, or individuals
Exemplar
a mental representation of a specific episode, event, or individual
experiment
a research method in which the researcher sets out to systemically manipulate one source of influence while holding others constant
hypotheses
a researcher's prediction about what he or she will find
social norm
a rule or expectation for appropriate social behavior
survey method
a technique in which the researcher asks people to report on their beliefs, feelings, or behaviors
social learning perspective
a theoretical viewpoint that focuses on past learning experiences as determinants of a person's social behaviors
social cognitive perspective
a theoretical viewpoint that focuses on the mental processes involved in paying attention to, interpreting, and remembering social experiences
evolutionary perspective
a theoretical viewpoint that searches for the causes of social behavior in the physical and psychological predisposition that helped our ancestors survive and reproduce
confound
a variable that systematically changes along with the independent variable, potentially leading to a mistaken conclusion about the effect of the independent variable
According to Kelley's (1973) covariation model, we are particularly likely to infer that a behavior reflects something about an actor's internal disposition when consensus is (1)__________, distinctiveness is (2)__________, and consistency is (3)__________. a. (1) low, (2) low, (3) high b. (1) high, (2) high, (3) low c. (1) high, (2) high, (3) high d. (1) low, (2) low, (3) low
a. (1) low, (2) low, (3) high
On a recent survey, Pierre was asked to indicate on a 7-point scale (very bad to very good) how he was feeling right now. What kind of a measure was used to assess Pierre's emotional state? a. a self-report measure b. a physiological measure c. a behavioral measure d. an emotional measure
a. a self-report measure
According to your text, research on counterfactual thinking suggests that an Olympic athlete who received a bronze medal (i.e., third place) would feel ___ than an athlete who received a silver medal (second place). a. better b. worse c. about the same d. worse initially, then better later
a. better
According to your textbook, the use of cognitive "shortcuts" to efficiently process and simplify social information is driven by which goal of social cognition? a. conserving mental effort b. accurately understanding the self c. managing self-image d. accurately understanding others
a. conserving mental effort
According to your text, when people experience negative feelings (e.g., sadness) they should be ___ likely to use cognitive shortcuts and ___ likely to think accurately, compared to when people experience positive feelings (e.g., happiness). a. less; more b. more; equally c. more; less d. equally; less
a. less; more
People can act as situations in which of the following ways: a. mere presence, affordances, and communicating descriptive norms b. injunctive norms, scripted situations, pluralistic ignorance c. motivation, knowledge, and feelings d. attitudes, emotions, and mood
a. mere presence, affordances, and communicating descriptive norms
Dana wants Anna's opinion about a guy she's considering dating. Dana shows Anna his instagram profile, an in most photos he is wearing a backwards hat, has a sport-team or Greek letters on his shirts, and is drinking and partying. Based on the photos, Anna tells Dana that the guy seems like a typical frat (fraternity) boy. Anna was most likely using which cognitive heuristic to form an impression of the guy? a. representativeness heuristic b. anchoring and adjustment heuristic c. availability heuristic d. judgement heuristic
a. representativeness heuristic
informed consent
an ethical principle that research participants be told enough to enable them to choose whether they wish to participate
case study
an intensive examination of an indivudal or group
which of these methods uncover correlations but do not establish causes?
archival method, naturalistic observation, case studies, surveys
which of the following are examples of correlation without necessary causation?
as ice cream consumption increases, the number of reported shark bites increases
Self-report measures
asking a simple series of questions
Your textbook specifically states that expectations help us conserve mental effort by____ a. "helping us avoid having to consider the situation in our judgement of others" b. "providing an initial rough estimate of behavior that we can later adjust" c. "narrowing our focus to social information that is most relevant" d. "saving us the effort of having to evaluate each new situation form scratch"
d. "saving us the effort of having to evaluate each new situation from scratch"
According to correspondent inference theory (Jones & Davis, 1965), people determine whether a behavior corresponds to an actor's internal disposition by asking whether the behavior was (1) ___, the behavior's consequences were (2) ___, the behavior was (3) ___, the behavior occurred despite (4) ___. a. (1) intentional, (2) foreseeable, (3) freely chosen, (4) behavior consistent forces b. (1) intentional, (2) foreseeable, (3) freely chosen, (4) countervailing forces c. (1) intentional, (2) freely chosen, (3) foreseeable, (4) countervailing forces d. (1) foreseeable, (2) intentional, (3) freely chosen, (4) behavior-consistent forces
b. (1) intentional, (2) foreseeable, (3) freely chosen, (4) countervailing forces
Your text describes a study in which Bartholow, Sestir, and Davis (2005) examined the effects of violent video games on aggressive behavior. Specifically, they tested whether a person-situation interaction between the type of video game participants' played in the lab (violent or non-violent) and participants' level of experience at playing violent video games (experienced or inexperienced) influenced differences in aggressive behavior towards another player. In this study, ___ is the person-level variable, and ___ is the situation-level variable. a. type of video game (violent or non-violent); level of experience (experienced or inexperienced) b. level of experience (experienced or inexperienced); type of video game (violent or non-violent) c. level of experience (experienced or inexperienced); aggressive behavior d. type of vide game (violent or non-violent); aggressive behavior
b. level of experience (experienced or inexperienced); type of video game (violent or non-violent)
When he goes to his job interview at a very high-end store, Pablo discards his casual jeans and t-shirt. He shaves, combs his hair, and wears a suit. What term best describers the behavior Pablo is engaging in? a. an affordance b. self-presentation c. person-situation fit d. socialization
b. self-presentation
According to your text, which of the following is a way that researchers can be confident that they are accurately assessing a person's feelings? a. when the person assures the researcher that they are experiencing the feeling b. when multiple methods of measurement provide converging evidence of what the person is feeling c. when the feeling is associated with brain activity d. when the person uses emojis to describe their feeling
b. when multiple methods of measurement provide converging evidence of what the person is feeling
Clara asks a classmate about his grade on the last exam so she can better assess her own performance. What behavior best describes what Clara is engaging in? a. an affordance b. self-presentation c. a scripted situation d. a social comparison
d. a social comparison
which of the following is not an ethical risk in social psychological research?
debriefing
The four core processes involved with understanding the self and others involve: (1) ___, which means to consciously focus on certain aspects of our social environments; (2) ___, which means to give meaning to the information in focus; (3) ___, which means forming impressions and making decisions about the information in focus, and (4) ____, which means storing information for future use. a. (1) memory, (2) judgement, (3) interpretation, (4) attention b. (1) interpretation, (2) judgement, (3) attention, (4) memory c. (1) attention, (2) interpretation, (3) judgement, (4) memory d. (1) attention, (2) judgement, (3) interpretation, (4) memory
c. (1) attention, (2) interpretation, (3) judgment, (4) memory
Baum and Davis, two researchers, conducted an experiment about social life in a campus dorm. Your text describes how they made a change to the situation that resulted in more friendships between the students who lived on that floor of the dorm. What about the situation did Baum and Davis change? a. they created more friendships b. they encouraged a positive emotional state in the students c. they put lounge areas in the middle of the floor d. they cleaned and repainted the dorms
c. they put lounge areas in the middle of the floor
the study of virtuous behaviors and optimal group performance directly links social psychology with
cognitive neuroscience
According to your text, no matter how motivated people are to think accurately, people require sufficient __________ to be accurate.
cognitive resources
to say that social psychology is the ultimate bridge discipline means that the field:
connects multiple perspectives on social behavior, from biology, anthropology, economics, and other disciplines
demand characteristic
cue that makes participants aware of how the experimenter expects them to behave
situation
environmental events or cirmcstances outside the person
observer bias
error introduced into measurement when an observer overemphasizes behaviors he or she expects to find and fails to notice behaviors her she does not expect
archival method
examination of systematic data originally collected for other purposes (such as marriage licenses or arrest records)
Knowledge of a specific episode,event or individual is a(n)_, where a(n) _ is knowledge of the general characteristics of a particular class of episodes, events, or individuals.
exemplar; schema
Attitude
favorable or unfavorable evaluations of a particular person, object, event or ourselves
person
features or characteristics that individuals carry into social situations
which of the following are types of experimental methods?
field experiment
which example demonstrates a person-situation interaction?
men are more likely to help in emergencies that require heroic action; whereas women are more likely to help when emotional support is needed
According to the text, what the connection between everyday gals (such as making an impression on the boss or getting a date) and fundamental motives (such as gaining status or establishing social ties)?
fundamental goals link our everyday goals to their ultimate functions
social psychology is the study of:
how people's thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by other people
psychological test
instrument for assessing a person's abilities, cognitions, or motivations
Which of these factors is a limitation of an experiment?
low external validity
Emotions
relatively intense feelings characterized by psychological arousla and complex cognitions
Self-esteem
our attitude toward ourselves
descriptive method
procedure for measuring or recording behaviors, thoughts, and feelings in their natural state (including naturalistic observations, case studies, archival studies, surveys and psychological tests)
Moods
relatively long-lasting feelings that are diffuse and not directed toward particular targets
invasion of privacy
revealing personal information about an individual without his or her consent
theory
scientific explanation that connects and organizes existing observations and suggests fruitful paths for future research
A(n) ___ theorist would be relatively more interested in similarities between people in different societies, whereas a ___ theorist would likely focus more on differences across societies.
social cognitive, social learning
Automaticity
the ability of a behavior or cognitive process to operate without conscious guidance once it's put into motion
culture
the beliefs, customs, habits, and languages shared by the people living in a particular time and place
reliability
the consistency of the score yielded by a psychological test
validity
the extent to which a test measures what it is designed to measure
internal validity
the extent to which an experiment allows confide testaments about cause and effect
generalizability
the extent to which the findings of a particular research study extend to other similar circumstances or cases
external validity
the extent to which the results of an experiment can be generalized to other circumstances
correlation
the extent to which two or more variables are associated with one another
Motivation
the force that moves people toward desired outcomes
field experimentation
the manipulation of independent variables using unknowing participants in natural settings
random assignment
the practice of assigning participants to treatments so each person has an equal chance of being in any condition
natural selection
the process by which characteristics that help animals survive and reproduce are passed on to their offspring
Priming
the process of activating knowledge or goals, of making them ready for use
Attention
the process of consciously focusing on aspects of our environmental or ourselves
Counterfactual thinking
the process of imagining alternative, "might have been" versions of actual events
Social comparison
the process through which people come to know themselves by comparing their abilities, attitudes, and beliefs with the of others
Reflected appraisal process
the process through which people come to know themselves by observing or imagining how others view them
Self-perception process
the process through which people observe their own behavior to infer internal characteristics such as traits, abilities, and attitudes
self-regulation
the process through which people select, monitor , and adjust their strategies in an attempt to reach their goals
self-presentation
the process through which we try to control the impressions people form of us
Chronically accessible
the state of being easily activated, or primed, for use
social desirability bias
the tendency for people to say what they believe is appropriate or acceptable
sociocultural perspective
the theoretical viewpoint that searches for the causes of social behavior in influences from larger social groups
independent variable
the variable manipulated by the experimenter
dependent variable
the variable measured by the experimenter
Which of the following best describes scientific theories?
theories are scientific explanations that connect and organize existing observations
which of the following is true?
unlike environmental psychologists, social psychologists focus on personality determinants of behavior
collective self
where a person derives his or her identity in large measure from a social group