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Social
Psychology (PSY403)
VU
Lesson
45
FINAL
REVIEW
Aims:
·
To
understand the syllabus and content of social
psychology in relation to important
questions of
interest
Objectives:
·
To
discuss various theoretical
concepts of social
psychology
·
To
describe the link between various
concepts of social psychology
·
To
discuss the practicality of social
psychology concepts
Final
Review
The
syllabus of social psychology actually
consisted on following first 4
sections. The last and fifth
section,
however,
is based on the practical use of
various concepts learned in these
four sections.
Section
I: Overview
Section
II: Thinking about the Self and
Others
Sections
III: Evaluating Persons and
Relationships
Section
IV: Social Interactions
Section
V: Social Psychology
Applied
Section
I: Overview of Social
Psychology
Introduction
"A
discipline that uses
scientific methods in "an attempt to
understand and explain how
the thought, feeling
and
behavior of individuals are
influenced by the actual, imagined or
implied presence of others"
(Gordon
Allport,
1985, p. 3).
Other
influences on feeling, though
and behavior of an
individual:
·
Broad
group level explanations,
i.e., evolutionary and
cultural factors
·
Individual-level
explanations: such as childhood
experiences, and family
history
·
Mediating
variables: internal factors such as
personality traits, and
attitudes.
Social
Psychology and related
fields
·
Sociology
·
Biology
·
Personality
Psychology
The
profession of Social
Psychology
PhD
level social psychologists are
mostly working in universities,
while M.Sc. level are
working in divers
efields.
History:
(1884-present)
Conducting
Social Psychology
Research
·
Characteristics of
empirical research and scientific
method
196
Social
Psychology (PSY403)
VU
·
Research
process: Steps in conducting
Research
o
Develop
a research question & review
literature
o
Develop
a research theory/ hypothesis
o
Variables
and operational definitions
o
Choose
a research design
o
Evaluate
the ethics
o
Collect
data
o
Analyze
data and form conclusions
o
Report
research results
·
Most
Common Research
Methods
o
Observation
o
Correlational
o
Experimental:
·
Other
Methods:
o
Meta
analysis
o
Emerging
technologies:
Internet
research
Brain
imaging
Virtual
environment technology
Section
II: Thinking about the Self
and Others
The
self
·
Contemporary
Self Theories Based on the insights of
George Herbert Mead and
William James
·
The
"I" is the active perceiver, initiator,
and regulator of action; the "me" is the
knowledge one has
about
oneself.
·
Culture,
family affecting self
schemas
·
Self-esteem
How
do we know the
self?
·
Reflecting
on individual characteristics:
·
Using
the social context:
Person
perception
·
Impression
formation:
o
by
nonverbal (facial expressions &
movement), and
o
verbal
communications (paralanguages)
·
Commonly
shared meanings of many
physical gestures as well as
culturally different.
·
Impression
formation with traits:
central vs. peripheral
traits
·
Integrating
impressions:
o
Averaging
principle
o
Implicit
personality theory
o
Halo,
primacy & recency effects
·
When
is person perception most
challenging?
o
Perceiving
baby faces
Detecting
lies: cues to
deception
o
197
Social
Psychology (PSY403)
VU
Attributions:
Three
dimensions of attributing
causality:
·
Locus
of causality (Heider,
1958)
·
Stability
& controllability (Weiner,
1982)
Biases
in the Attribution
Process
·
Fundamental
Attribution Error
·
Actor-Observer
Bias
·
False
Consensus Effect
·
The
Self-Serving Attribution
Bias
·
The
ultimate attribution
error
Social
cognition
·
We
understand world by:
o
social
categorization and
o
schemas
·
Cognitive
misers:
o
Representativeness
heuristics
o
Availability
heuristics
·
How
do past and expectations
shape our social
thinking?
o
Social
cognition as a result of recollection of
past events: hindsight bias,
counterfactual
thinking
Due
to expectations:
o
False
consensus effect
Confirmation
bias
Self-fulfilling
prophecy
Belief
in Just World
Learned
helplessness
Part
III: Evaluating Persons and
Relationships
Attitudes
·
Components
"ABC",
·
Attitude
formation:
o
Mere
Exposure
o
Classical
conditioning
o
Operant
conditioning
o
Self-perception
theory
o
Facial
and posture feedback
o
Functional
·
Attitude
and behavior
·
Attitude
change:
o
Cognitive
dissonance
o
Persuation:
Message
variables
Audience
variables
198
Social
Psychology (PSY403)
VU
Prejudice
& Discrimination
·
Explanations
of prejudice
o
Cognitive
sources - Categorizing
people
o
Emotional
sources scapegoating, Authoritarian
personalities
o
Social
sources-
Social
inequalities, Social identity,
Social
competition
·
Reducing
prejudice & discrimination
Contact
hypothesis
o
Recategorization
o
Interpersonal
Attraction
·
Situational
factors
o
Proximity
o
Familiarity
o
Anxiety)
·
Other
Factors
o
Physical
attractiveness
o
Similarity
o
Desirable
attributes
Close
Relationships
Attachment
styles & later adult
relationships
·
secure,
preoccupied, Dismissing-avoidant,
Fearful-avoidant
Section
IV: Social Interactions
Social
influence
·
Conformity
·
Obedience
·
Compliance
Aggression
·
Gender
and personality
·
Explanations
o
Biological
o
Cathartic
o
Cognitive
neoassociationist model
o
Social
learning theory
·
Reducing
aggression
o
Punishment
o
Induce
incompatible responses
o
Reduce
frustration
o
Teach
nonaggressive responses
Prosocial
Behavior
·
Why
do we help?
·
When
do we help?
·
Bystander
intervention model
·
Emotional
arousal & Cost-Reward assessments
·
Who
helps? Mood, gender differences?
·
199
Social
Psychology (PSY403)
VU
Group
Behavior
·
Influence
of group
o
Social
facilitation
o
Social
loafing
o
Deindividuation
·
Group
decisions
·
group
think
Interpersonal
Power: Leadership
·
Theories of
leadership
·
Types
of leadershio
·
How do
leaders wield power?
Section
V: Social Psychology
Applied
·
Use
of social psychology in court
·
Use
of social psychology in clinic
200
Table of Contents:
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