Social Influence
Social Psychology Studies
Attitudes & Behavior
Attribution & Perception
Prejudice & Group Behavior
100

A doctor who preaches against smoking then goes home and lights a cigarette to smoke at the end of the day

Cognitive dissonance: when your actions contradict your deeply held beliefs, holding two conflicting values at once

100

This psychologist conducted the obedience experiments involving shocks

Stanley Milgram: 1961 psychological study conducted at Yale University to measure how far ordinary people would go in obeying an authority figure when instructed to inflict harm on another person

100

A homeowner agrees to place a small environmental sticker in their window and later agrees to display a large sign in their yard

Foot-in-the-door phenomenon: securing compliance with a small, initial request that significantly increases the likelihood that a person will later agrees to a large, more significant request

100

A basketball coach assumes a player missed practice because they are irresponsible, despite not knowing the player was hospitalized

Fundamental attribution error: a cognitive bias where people tend to overemphasize a person's character traits and underemphasize situational factors when explaining someones behavior

100

A school combines rival groups into teams that must work together to achieve a common goal. This strategy is based on:

Superordinate goals: objectives that require cooperation from two or more distinct groups or individuals to achieve

200

After hearing every other juror vote guilty, a juror changes their vote despite privately believing the defendant is innocent

normative social influence: when individuals conform to the expectations, behaviors, or unspoken rules of a group to fit in, gain approval, or avoid social rejection.

200

Which study most directly demonstrated the influence of social roles on behavior?

Standford Prison Experiment: 1971 psychological study at Standford University, placed 24 healthy male college students into a moch prison environment to examine the psychological effects of power, authority, and powerlessness.

200

It's power to influence behavior was displayed when students at Stanford agreed to be part of a 2 week prison experiment.


Role-playing: consciously adopting/changing one's behavior to assume a different persona

200

A  manager concludes an employee is lazy because of one late assignment while ignoring evidence of strong performance

Dispositional attribution: the process of assigning the cause of a person's behavior to their internal characteristics

200

Following the 9/11 attacks, some individuals lashed out and directed hostility toward innocent Muslim Americans

Scapegoat Theory: Prejudice offers an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame

300

Researchers find that participants conform significantly less when even one group member disagrees with the majority. This demonstrates the importance of:

Unanimity: a state of complete, unanimous agreement among all members of a group

300

The social act of mirroring others actions based off observation was demonstrated through this experiment

Bobo Doll Experiment: 1961 study by Albert Bandura to which he found that people learn new abilities through observing and imitating the behaviors of others.

300

After spending hours volunteering for a cause they originally cared little about, a person begins believing strongly in that cause

Cognitive dissonance reduction: easing the mental discomfort that occurs when your actions, beliefs, or values clash

300

A student attributes a poor test score to an unfair exam but attributes a high score to intelligence

Self-serving bias: tendency to attribute positive successes to your own abilities while blaming negative events to external factors

300
Jack passes by a homeless man everyday on his walk to school, he doesn't give him any money each time because he believes the man is responsible for his homelessness. 

Just-World Phenomenon: the tendency to believe the world is fair, leading people to assume that victims of misfortune or inequality get what they "deserve"

400

A student adopts the political views of their friend group after researching those views and becoming convinced they are correct

Informational social influence: when you conform because you believe they posses accurate information and you want to be correct

400

Even though Kevin knew the correct answer to a question in class, he altered his response to align with all of his other classmates. This was demonstrated through this experiment 

Solomon Asch's Experiment on Conformity: results emphasized the strong influence of social pressure on individual behavior

400

The ABCs of attitudes stand for these three components.

Affect, Behavior, Cognition

400

When driving to your friend's house, someone pulls in front of you and cuts you off. You honk your horn at them and yell "You are a terrible driver!" This is an example of this type of attribution.


Internal/Dispositional attribution: explaining a person's behavior by pointing to their internal characteristics (personality traits, abilities, motives, intelligence)

400

A teacher told her students that all the children with brown eyes were more superior to the students with blue eyes. Immediately the children with brown eyes became arrogant and hostile, dominating the children with blue eyes. 

In group-bias: the tendency to favor members of our own social groups over outsiders

500

Participants continue administering shocks because the experimenter accepts responsibility for any consequences. This finding from Milgram's study is best explained by:

Agentic state: a condition where an individual views themselves as an instrument for carrying out another person's wishes, shifting personal responsibility for their actions to the authority figure

500

Bob slacks off work all the time, when he became aware that there was going to be a supervisor on grounds the next time he worked he arrived early to his job, exceeded his work limit, and pushed himself to the max. This is explained by

The Hawthorne Effect: when people adjust their behavior when they become aware that they are being watched or observed by others

500

Your friend frequently talks about how much she hates Taylor Swift's music. The next time you hear her on the radio, you think about how bad it is and change the station. This is an example of this this effect.

Validity Effect: where people are more likely to believe a statement is true simply because it has been repeated to them frequently

500

While shopping, you overhear a father yelling at his young daughter. What is one dispositional attribution you could make? What is one situational attribution?

Dispositional: bad father, mean, harsh

Situational: he's having a bad day, he's stressed out, daughter was misbehaving


500

After Sam was told by one of her professors that she wouldn't succeed in her career, she stopped completing her assignments, dropped out of her career club, and stopped coming to school. 

Self-fulfilling prophecy: when a person has a strong belief about a future behavior and then acts unknowingly to fulfill or carry out that behavior

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