Social Psychology Ch. 11 Prosocial Behavior
5 steps of bystandard Intervention Decision Tree
1)notice the event 2) identify the event as an emergency 3) Assume responsibity 4) know appropriate form of assistance 5) impliment decision
Prosocial Behavior
Any act performed with the goal of benefiting another person.
Out-Group
Any group with which an individual does not identify.
Attitudes are formed by peers and family; nature and nurture.
How are attitudes formed?
Are there gender differences in prosocial behavior?
In many cultures, the male sex role includes helping in chivalrous and heroic ways, whereas the female sex role includes helping in close, long-term relationships.
Factors that explain altruism according to the evolutionary theory:
Kin Selection, Norm of Reciprocity and Group Selection. Evolutionary theory explains prosocial behavior in four ways. The first is kin selection, the idea that behaviors that help a genetic relative are favored by natural selection. The seconds is the norm of reciprocity, which is the expectation that helping others will increase the likelihood that they will help us in the future. The thirds is a group selection, the idea that social groups with altruistic members are more likely to survive in competition with other groups.
Residental Mobility
People who have lived for a long time in one place more likely to engage in pro-social behaviors. In many areas of the world it is common for people to move far away from where they were raised.
strengths, virtue
Positive Psychology focuses on people's ____ and _______.
How does religiosity affects helping behaviors?
Religion foster prosocial behaviors. People who are religious report on surveys that they help more than do people who are not religious, and they actually do help more in situations in which helping makes them look good to themselves or others. They are not likely to help, however, in private situations in which no one will know that they helped.
Social Exchange Theory
Social exchange theory argues that prosocial behavior is not necessarily rooted in our genes. Instead, people help others in order to maximize social rewards and minimized social costs. PEOPLE HELP WHEN THE BENEFITS OUTWEIGH THE COST
Empathy
The ability to put oneself in the shoes of another person and to experience events and emotions (e.g., joy and sadness) the way that person experiences them.
Pluralistic Ignorance
The case in which people think that everyone else is interpreting a situation in a certain way, when in fact they are not.
Altruism
The desire to help another person even if it involves a cost to the helper.
Norm of Reciprocity
The expectation that helping others will increase the likelihood that they will help us in the future.
Bystander Effect
The finding that the greater the number of bystanders who witness an emergency, the less likely any one of them is to help.
In-Group
The group with which an individual identifies as a member.
Kin Selection
The idea that behaviors help a genetic relative are favored by natural selection.
Empathy-Altruism Hypothesis
The idea that when we feel empathy for a person, we will attempt to help that person for purely altruistic reasons, regardless of what we have to gain.
Diffusion of Responsibility
The phenomenon wherein each bystander's sense of responsibility to help decreases as the number of witnesses increases.
Altruistic Personality
The qualities that cause an individual to help others in a wide variety of situations.
Urban Overload Hypothesis
The theory that people living in cities are constantly bombarded with stimulation and that they keep to themselves to avoid being overwhelmed by it.
Egoism
Underlying your selfless act is a selfish act; what seems to be a selfless act are actually selfish act. Humans can't really perform a selfless act.
negative-state relief hypothesis
asserts that people help to alleviate their own bad mood or personal distress
Social psychology approach to positive psychology
investigate the conditions under which people act in positive and negative ways
guilty
one kind of bad mood leads to an increase in helping, feeling ________. people often act on the idea that good deeds cancel out bad deeds
Cultural Differences in Prosocial Behavior
people in all cultures are more likely to help anyone they see as a member of their in-group than those they perceive in out-groups