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{ SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Branch of psychology concerned with the way individuals’ thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by others.

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Presentation on theme: "{ SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Branch of psychology concerned with the way individuals’ thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by others."— Presentation transcript:

1 { SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY Branch of psychology concerned with the way individuals’ thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by others

2  DEF: the process of forming impressions of others  Factors that influence perception: physical appearance, cognitive schemas, stereotypes, and subjectivity PERSON PERCEPTION

3  We attach desirable personality characteristics to the good looking  We tend to view the attractive as more intelligent  Baby-faced people are seen as honest, submissive, and naïve  Chameleon effect: tendency to unintentionally mimic other’s movements EFFECTS OF PHYSICAL APPEARANCE

4  Social schemas: organized clusters of ideas about categories of social events and people  Helps to process info COGNITIVE SCHEMAS

5  DEF: widely held beliefs that people have certain characteristics b/c of their membership in a particular group  Commonly based on sex, age, ethnic, or occupational group  Broad overgeneralizations; inaccurate STEREOTYPES

6  Illusory correlation: when people estimate that they have encountered more confirmations of an association btwn social traits than they have actually seen  We recall facts that fit our schemas and stereotypes SUBJECTIVITY IN PERSON PERCEPTION

7  Helps to separate friend from foe  Ingroup: a group that one belongs to and identifies with  Outgroup: group that on does not belong to or identify with EVOLUTIONARY PERSPECTIVE ON BIAS

8 { ATTRIBUTION PROCESSES Attributions are inferences that people draw about the causes of events, others’ behavior, and their own behavior

9  Internal attributions: ascribe the causes of behavior to personal dispositions, traits, abilities, and feelings  External attributions: ascribe the causes of behavior to situational demands and environmental constraints INTERNAL VS. EXTERNAL

10  Harold H. Kelley  Assumes that people attribute behavior to factors that are present when the behavior takes place and absent when it does not  Consider 3 types of info:  1) Consistency  2) Distinctiveness  3) Consensus KELLEY’S COVARIATION MODEL

11  Bernard Weiner  Believes people often focus on the stability of the causes underlying behavior  Stable-unstable dimension to attribution ATTRIBUTIONS FOR FAILURE AND SUCCESS

12  Fundamental attribution error: observers’ bias in favor of internal attributions in explaining others’ behavior  Observers may not know history of actor to make correct judgment about the behavior being seen ACTOR-OBSERVER BIAS

13  DEF: tendency to blame victims for their misfortune, so that one feels less likely to be victimized in a similar way  Attributes negative traits on the victim DEFENSIVE ATTRIBUTION

14  DEF: tendency to attribute one’s success to personal factors and one’s failures to situational factors  Observers attribute your failures to your internal factors; actor will blame external factors SELF-SERVING BIAS

15  Cultural differences in individualism and collectivism  Individualism: putting personal goals ahead of group goals and defining one’s identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group membership  Collectivism: putting group goals ahead of personal goals and defining one’s identity in terms of the groups one belongs to CULTURE & ATTRIBUTION

16 { CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS: LIKING AND LOVE Interpersonal attraction refers to positive feelings toward another

17  Physical attractiveness influences course of commitment  Matching hypothesis: proposes that males and females of approximately equal physical attractiveness are likely to select each other as partners PHYSICAL ATTRACTIVENESS

18  Do “opposites attract”?  NO  Couples tend to be similar in almost every aspect SIMILARITY EFFECTS

19  Reciprocity: liking those who show that they like you  Flattery will get you somewhere  Couples will tend to “idealize” their partner RECIPROCITY EFFECTS

20 { PERSPECTIVES ON THE MYSTERY OF LOVE Blah, blah, blah

21  DEF: a complete absorption in another that includes tender sexual feelings and the agony and ecstasy of intense emotion PASSIONATE LOVE

22  DEF: warm, trusting, tolerant affection for another whose life is deeply intertwined with one’s own  Divided into:  Intimacy: warmth, closeness, and sharing in a relationship  Commitment: intent to maintain a relationship in spite of the difficulties and costs that may arise COMPANIONATE LOVE

23  Cindy Hazan and Phillip Shaver  Attachment to caregiver as an infant translates to romantic relationships in adulthood  Secure-attachment leads to secure relationships  Anxious-ambivalent = intensely emotional relationships  Avoidant = casual sex LOVE AS ATTACHMENT

24  Passionate love in a romantic relationship is not a pan-cultural emphasis  Arranged marriages still exist today CULTURE AND CLOSE RELATIONSHIPS


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