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Chapter 12: Social Psychology

Chapter 12: Social Psychology. Psychology in the News. Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. What happened here? US government explanation? Would you have behaved differently than the guards at Abu Ghraib? Characteristics of the individual or the situation?. Take Home Message:.

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Chapter 12: Social Psychology

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  1. Chapter 12: Social Psychology

  2. Psychology in the News • Abu Ghraib prison in Iraq. What happened here? • US government explanation? • Would you have behaved differently than the guards at Abu Ghraib? • Characteristics of the individual or the situation?

  3. Take Home Message: Power of social context or situation in explaining human behavior

  4. Characteristics of the situation at Abu Ghriab • Absence of any real authority in the prison • Obedience to authority • Working conditions promoted aggression. • Stress of wartime.

  5. Zimbardo et al. (1973) • Prison study • Description of design • What happened? • What does this demonstrate? • Ethics of study? • http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Z0jYx8nwjFQ&feature=player_detailpage

  6. How Do We Form Our Impressions of Others? • Social psychology is concerned with how people influence our thoughts, feelings, and actions • Also concerned with the social judgments we make and how we automatically classify people into social categories • First impressions.

  7. Nonverbal Actions and Expressions Affect Our First Impressions • How you initially feel about others will be determined mostly by their nonverbal behavior (i.e., facial expressions, gestures, mannerisms, and movements) • Thin slices of behavior: Seconds-long observations offer powerful cues for impression formation • Participants viewed soundless 30-second film clips of professors lecturing and then were asked to rate the professors’ teaching ability • Ratings corresponded very highly with the ratings given by the professors’ students (Ambady & Rosenthal, 1993)

  8. We Make Attributions About Others • Attributions: explanations for events or actions, including other people’s behavior • Just World hypothesis: When bad things happen to people, wemake sense of it by blaming the victim—victims must have done something to justify what happened to them. Examples?

  9. Attributional Dimensions • Fritz Heider distinguished between two types of attributions: • Personal/internal or dispositional attributions: referto things within people, such as abilities, moods, or efforts • Situational/external attributions: refer to outside events, such as luck, accidents, or the actions of other people • Bernard Weiner noted that attributions can vary on other dimensions: • They can be stable over time (permanent) or unstable (temporary) • They can be controllable or uncontrollable

  10. Attributions About the Self • We tend to have a self-serving bias in making attributions about our own behavior: • We attribute our successes to internal/stable characteristics. • We attribute our failures to external/unstable characteristics.

  11. Attributional Bias • People tend to be systematically biased when they process social information • Fundamental attribution error:pervasive tendency to overemphasize the importance of personality traits and underestimate the importance of a situation when explaining another’s behavior. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Uv7LwFPp3SY • Actor/observer discrepancy: When interpreting our own behavior, we tend to focus on situations; when interpreting other people’s behavior, we tend to focus on dispositions

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