final exam psychology
social norms
A group's expectations regarding what is appropriate and acceptable for its members' attitudes and behavior
Self-Serving Bias
Attributional pattern in which one takes credit for successes but denies responsibility for failures
stereotype
Cognitive schemas of a group, in which a person believes that all members of a group share common traits
diffusion of responsibility
Dilution or weakening of each group member's obligation to act when responsibility is perceived to be shared with all group members
soloman asch
conformity-difficulty in maintaining your own beliefs Psychologist Solomon Asch's experiments illustrated the powerful influence that other people's opinions have on the judgments of an individual; when confronted by group support of a conclusion, even one unsupported by visible evidence, individuals went along with the group.
stanley Milgrim
demonstrated the powerful effects of obedience to authority Stanley Milgram and coworkers investigated whether people would follow orders, even when the order violated their ethical standards.
script
involves a person's knowledge about the sequence of events and behavioral actions that is expected of a particular social role in a given setting.
schema
is a cluster of related concepts that provides a general conceptual framework for thinking about a topic, and event, a person or situation in one's life, and once it is formed, it enables a person to make predictions about what to expect in various settings.
social psychology
is the branch of psychology that studies the effects of social variables and cognitions on individual behavior and social interactions - stated more simply, how people affect each other and how the social contexts we are in affect us.
The fundamental attribution error (FAE)
is the tendency to overemphasize personal traits while minimizing situational influences. The FAE is best thought of as a bias, not an error.
Situationism
is the view that environmental conditions or the behavioral context may influence people's behavior as much as or more than their personal dispositions under the same situations. (traffic)
groupthink
members of the group attempt to conform their opinions to what each believes to be the consensus of the group. seek to be on the same page as everyone
social context
refers to many different things: It could include: The actual people around us. Imagined or symbolic representations of other people around us The activities that take place among people The settings in which behavior occurs (whether it's home or school or a dance club, whatever) And finally, the expectations and norms governing behavior in a given setting.
social role
refers to prescribed behavior - the way you should do something, and why and when you should do it. The situations in which you live and function determine the roles that are available to you and the behaviors that others expect of you.
social neuroscience
uses methodologies from brain sciences to investigate social behaviors. brain scanning technology(fMRI) different brain regions involved in independent judgments vs. conformity
dispositionism
which is the tendency to look within the individual actor for explanations of why someone acted in a particular way. (woke up late)