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Psychology in Our Social Lives

Psychology in Our Social Lives. Psychology in Our Social Lives. Social Cognition: Making Sense of Ourselves and Others Interacting With Others: Helping, Hurting, and Conforming Working With Others: The Costs and Benefits of Social Groups. Psychology in Our Social Lives. s ocial psychology

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Psychology in Our Social Lives

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  1. Psychology in Our Social Lives

  2. Psychology in Our Social Lives • Social Cognition: Making Sense of Ourselves and Others • Interacting With Others: Helping, Hurting, and Conforming • Working With Others: The Costs and Benefits of Social Groups

  3. Psychology in Our Social Lives • social psychology • the scientific study of how we feel about, think about, and behave toward the other people around us, and how those people influence our thoughts, feelings, and behavior • A fundamental principle of social psychology is that, our cognitions, emotions, and behaviors are strongly influenced by the social situation --the people with whom we are interacting.

  4. Social CognitionMaking Sense of Ourselves and Others

  5. Social Cognition • Learning Objectives • Review the principles of social cognition, including the fundamentals of how we form judgments about other people. • Define the concept of attitude and review the ways that attitudes are developed and changed, and how attitudes relate to behavior.

  6. Social Cognition • social cognition • the part of human thinking that helps us understand and predict the behavior of ourselves and others • Social cognition drives our judgments about other people, our impressions of other people, and our attitudes — our enduring evaluations of people or things.

  7. Perceiving Others • Our initial judgments of others are based on physical attractiveness. • We use attractiveness as a cue for health. • People we find more attractive may also have been healthier evolutionarily

  8. Forming Judgments on the Basis of Appearance: Stereotyping, Prejudice, and Discrimination

  9. Close Relationships • What makes people like, and even love, each other • The long-term intimate and romantic relationships that we develop with another person — for instance, in a marriage Interpersonal Attraction Close Relationships

  10. Close Relationships • Interpersonal Attraction

  11. Close Relationships • Close Relationships

  12. Causal Attribution: Forming Judgments by Observing Behavior • causal attribution • the process of trying to determine the causes of people’s behavior • attributional biases • fundamental attribution error -- overestimating the role of person factors and overlooking the impact of situations in judging others’ behavior • self-serving bias -- judging the causes of our own behaviors in overly positive ways

  13. Attitudes and Behavior • attitudes • our relatively enduring evaluations of people and things

  14. Attitudes and Behavior

  15. Attitudes and Behavior • Behaviors influence attitudes in part through the process of self-perception. • We use our own behavior as a guide to help us determine our own thoughts and feelings. • foot-in-the-door technique • a method of persuasion in which one is first persuaded to accept a rather minor request and then asked for a larger one after that • cognitive dissonance • the discomfort we experience when we choose to behave in ways that we see as inappropriate

  16. Social Cognition • Key Takeaways • Social psychology is the scientific study of how we influence, and are influenced by, the people around us. • Social cognition involves forming impressions of ourselves and other people. Doing so quickly and accurately is functional for social life. • Our initial judgments of others are based in large part on what we see. The physical features of other people—and particularly their sex, race, age, and physical attractiveness—are very salient, and we often focus our attention on these dimensions.

  17. Social Cognition • Key Takeaways, continued • We are attracted to people who appear to be healthy. Indicators of health include youth, symmetry, and averageness. • We frequently use people’s appearances to form our judgments about them, and to determine our responses to them. These responses include stereotyping, prejudice, and discrimination. Social psychologists believe that people should get past their prejudices and judge people as individuals. • Close relationships are based on intimacy. Intimacy is determined by similarity, self-disclosure, interdependence, commitment, rewards, and passion.

  18. Social Cognition • Key Takeaways, continued • Causal attribution is the process of trying to determine the causes of people’s behavior with the goal of learning about their personalities. Although people are reasonably accurate in their attributions, they also succumb to biases such as the fundamental attribution error. • Attitudes refer to our relatively enduring evaluations of people and things. Attitudes are determined in part by genetic transmission from our parents and in part through direct and indirect experiences. • Although attitudes predict behaviors, behaviors also predict attitudes. This occurs through the processes of self-perception and cognitive dissonance.

  19. Interacting With OthersHelping, Hurting, and Conforming

  20. Interacting With Others • Learning Objectives: • Summarize the genetic and environmental factors that contribute to human altruism. • Provide an overview of the causes of human aggression. • Explain the situations under which people conform to others and their motivations for doing so.

  21. Helping Others: Altruism Helps Create Harmonious Relationships • altruism • any behavior designed to increase another person’s welfare, and particularly those actions that do not seem to provide a direct reward to the person who performs them • reciprocal altruism and the reciprocity norm • If we help other people now, those others will return the favor should we need their help in the future. • social responsibility norm • We should try to help others who need assistance, even without any expectation of future paybacks.

  22. Helping Others: Altruism Helps Create Harmonious Relationships

  23. Helping Others: Altruism Helps Create Harmonious Relationships How the Presence of Others Can Reduce Helping • The Latané and Darley model of helping is based on the idea that a variety of situational factors can influence whether or not we help. • One factor is the number of bystanders: the more there are, the less likely that a victim will receive help. • diffusion of responsibility -- we assume that others will take action and therefore we do not take action ourselves

  24. Conformity and Obedience: How Social Influence Creates Social Norms

  25. Conformity and Obedience: How Social Influence Creates Social Norms • In Asch’s study, 76% of the participants gave at least one incorrect response. • Overall, 37% of the responses were conforming.

  26. Conformity and Obedience: How Social Influence Creates Social Norms • obedience • the tendency to conform to those in authority • Examined by Milgram in which participants believed they were giving shocks to another person as part of a “learning experiment.” • 65% of Milgram’s participants gave shock up to the 450 V maximum, even though that shock was marked as “danger: severe shock” and the participant was no longer responding.

  27. Conformity and Obedience: How Social Influence Creates Social Norms • We do not always conform. • There are individual differences in the tendency to conform, related to self-esteem and the need for approval. • However, individual differences are less important than situational factors in affecting conformity. • minority influence • Sometimes a smaller number of individuals can influence the opinions or behaviors of the larger group. • psychological reactance • a strong emotional reaction that leads people to resist conformity when they feel their freedom is being threatened

  28. Interacting With Others • Key Takeaways • Altruism is behavior that is designed to increase another person’s welfare, and particularly those actions that do not seem to provide a direct reward to the person who performs them. The tendency to help others in need is in part a functional evolutionary adaptation and in part determined by environmental factors. • Although helping others can be costly to us as individuals, helping people who are related to us can perpetuate our own genes. Some helping is based on reciprocal altruism, the principle that if we help other people now, those others will return the favor should we need their help in the future.

  29. Interacting With Others • Key Takeaways, continued • We also learn to help through modeling and reinforcement. The result of this learning is norms about helping, including the reciprocity norm and the social responsibility norm. • Research testing the Latané and Darley model of helping has shown the importance of the social situation in noticing, interpreting, and acting in emergency situations. • Aggression is physical or nonphysical behavior that is intended to harm another individual. Aggression has both genetic and environmental causes. The experience of negative emotions tends to increase aggression.

  30. Interacting With Others • Key Takeaways, continued • Viewing violence tends to increase aggression. • The social norm that condones and even encourages responding to insults with aggression is known as the culture of honor. • Conformity, the change in beliefs or behavior that occurs as the result of the presence of the other people around us, can occur in both active and passive ways. The typical outcome of conformity is that our beliefs and behaviors become more similar to those of others around us.

  31. Interacting With Others • Key Takeaways, continued • The situation is the most powerful determinant of conformity, but individual differences may also matter. The important influence of the social situation on conformity was demonstrated in the research by Sherif, Asch, Milgram, and others. • Minority influence can change attitudes and change how majorities process information.

  32. Working With OthersThe Costs and Benefits of Social Groups

  33. Working With Others • Learning Objectives: • Summarize the advantages and disadvantages of working together in groups to perform tasks and make decisions. • Review the factors that can increase group productivity.

  34. Working in Front of Others: Social Facilitation and Social Inhibition

  35. The presence of others should result in facilitation when the task is easy or well-learned, as the dominant response is the correct one. • The presence of others should result in inhibition when the task is hard or not well-learned, as the dominant response may be incorrect.

  36. Working Together in Groups

  37. social loafing • people may not work as hard in a group as they do when they are working alone • Ringlemann found that although more men pulled harder on a rope than fewer men did, the result was less than it should have been.

  38. Working Together in Groups • groupthink • a competent group makes a poor decision due to a flawed group process and strong conformity pressures • more likely to occur when: • members feel a strong group identity • there is a strong and directive leader • the group needs to make an important decision quickly • implicated in the 2002 decision to invade Iraq, the 1986 and 2003 crashes of two Space Shuttle missions, and the 1962 Bay of Pigs invasion

  39. Using Groups Effectively • illusion of group productivity • tendency for group members to overvalue the productivity of the groups they work in

  40. Using Groups Effectively

  41. Using Groups Effectively

  42. Using Groups Effectively

  43. Working With Others • Key Takeaways • The performance of working groups is almost never as good as we would expect, given the number of individuals in the group, and in some cases may even be inferior to the performance of one or more members of the group working alone. • The tendency to perform tasks better or faster in the presence of others is known as social facilitation. The tendency to perform tasks more poorly or more slowly in the presence of others is known as social inhibition. • The ability of a group to perform well is determined by the characteristics of the group members as well as by the events that occur in the group itself—the group process.

  44. Working With Others • Key Takeaways • One group process loss that may occur in groups is that the group members may engage in social loafing. Group process losses can also occur as a result of groupthink, when group members conform to each other rather than expressing their own divergent ideas. • Taken together, working in groups has both positive and negative outcomes. It is important to recognize both the strengths and limitations of group performance and use whatever techniques we can to increase process gains and reduce process losses.

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