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David Myers 11e Chapter 1 Introducing Social Psychology

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1 David Myers 11e Chapter 1 Introducing Social Psychology
©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

2 Chapter One Introducing Social Psychology
What’s the point about Cinder Ella? Does her self-perception matter? A sub-discipline of psychology ψ What is psychology? What are some other sub-disciplines? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

3 What Is Social Psychology?
Scientific study of how people think about, influence, and relate to one another B = f (p*e) Social thinking Social influence Social relations ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

4 SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY IS . . . ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

5 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
We Construct Our Social Reality We react differently because we think differently 1951 Princeton-Dartmouth football game demonstration Objective reality Beliefs about others Beliefs about ourselves What really happened in Ferguson MO? Did the grand jury make the right decision? Perspectives from M. Brown? D. Wilson? Bystanders? Public? What’s the point here? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

6 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
Our Social Intuitions Are Often Powerful but Sometimes Perilous Dual processing (Kahneman “Thinking fast & slow” Conscious and deliberate Unconscious and automatic ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

7 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
Social Influences Shape Our Behavior Locality – give an example Educational level -give an example Subscribed media give an example Culture –same sex marriage ok with you? Ethnicity ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

8 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
Personal Attitudes and Dispositions Internal forces Inner attitudes about specific situations Personality dispositions (individual differences) Different people may react differently while facing the same situation ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

9 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
Social Behavior Is Biologically Rooted Evolutionary psychology Natural selection predisposes our actions and reactions Prejudice happens early at the brain level We prefer the familiar things – why? Hint: evolution Social neuroscience We are bio-psycho-social organisms ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

10 Social Psychology’s Big Ideas
Social Psychology’s Principles Are Applicable in Everyday Life How to know ourselves better Implications for human health Implications for judicial procedures Influencing behaviors ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

11 Social Psychology and Human Values
Obvious Ways Values Enter Psychology “personal convictions” give an example one for a social psychologist…and how it can influence her work. Research topics Types of people Do business students differ from ψ students? Object of social-psychological analysis How values form Why they change How they influence attitudes and actions ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

12 Social Psychology and Human Values
Not-S0-Obvious Ways Values Enter Psychology Subjective aspects of Science Culture –which is better, competition or cooperation? Social representations – shared beliefs taken for granted Are there any real group differences for race/gender? Psychological concepts contain hidden values Defining the good life Professional advice Forming concepts How could high self-esteem be the same as “defensive”? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

13 Labeling – some examples • “terrorist” or a “freedom fighter”
• “welfare” or “aid to the needy” • nationalism v. patriotism. • open marriage” or “adultery” • “Brainwashing” • “Perversions” Can you think of others? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

14 Is Social Psychology Simply Common Sense?
What did Cullen Murphy and Arthur Schlesinger have in common? Paul Lazarsfeld “Better-educated soldiers suffered more adjustment problems than did less- educated soldiers.” Problem with Common Sense Invoked after we know the facts (post hoc) Hindsight bias (I-knew-it-all-along phenomenon) Missed or misinterpreted clues of 9/11 2008 world financial crisis Caveat: STUDY THE MATERIAL Why? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

15 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Forming and Testing Hypotheses Theory (falsifiable) Integrated set of principles that explain and predict observed events: see Kerlinger: Hypotheses Testable proposition that describes a relationship that may exist between events What’s the difference between a “fact” and a “theory? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

16 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Correlation Research: Detecting Natural Associations Location Laboratory Controlled situation Field Everyday situations ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

17 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Correlation Research: Detecting Natural Associations Method Correlational Naturally occurring relationships among variables Carroll et al (‘94) see p. 19 Experimental Seeks clues to cause-effect relationships by manipulating one or more variables while controlling others ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

18 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Correlation Research: Detecting Natural Associations Correlation and causation Allows us to predict but not tell whether changing one variable will cause changes in another Self esteem <-> high achievement (which causes which?) Does IQ and family status play a role? Bachman & O’Malley, (1977) What happened in the study with 715 Minnesota kids? ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

19 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Correlation Research: Detecting Natural Associations Survey research Random sample (from a population) Unrepresentative samples Order of questions Response options What % of energy from nuclear power? One v. three options – “what happened” Wording of questions “Welfare” v. “assistance to the poor” Framing – e.g. “forbid” v. “not allow” ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

20 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Experimental Research: Searching for Cause and Effect Control: Manipulating variables Independent variable Experimental factor that a researcher manipulates Corr or causation Prejudice to obese persons (Snyder & Haugen, ‘94) TV violence (Boyatzis et al. ‘95) Dependent variable Variable being measured; depends on manipulations of the independent variable Can you manipulate or just measure? See: Table 1.1 p 25 ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

21 Random Assignment ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

22 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Experimental Research: Searching for Cause and Effect Random assignment: The great equalizer Process of assigning participants to the conditions of an experiment such that all persons have the same chance of being in a given condition Eliminates extraneous factors ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

23 Research Methods: How We Do Social Psychology
Ethics of Experimentation Mundane realism Experimental realism Deception Demand characteristics Informed consent Debriefing ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies

24 Generalizing from Laboratory to Life
We can distinguish between the content of people’s thinking and acting and the process by which they think and act ©2013 McGraw-Hill Companies


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