Bio-Psycho-Social model
cultural norms
Obedience/Conformity
Deindividuation
Self Serving Bias
100

Bio-Psycho-Social Model

The workings of the body, mind, and environment all affect each other

100

Cultural norms

A shared set of rules, values, beliefs, and attitudes that govern the behavior of members of a community.

100

Obedience

Compliance with an order, rule, or law to another's authority

100

Deindividuation

The loss of awareness of one's own individuality in groups or crowds

100

Self-serving bias

Tendency to take credit for one's good actions but to nationalize one's mistakes

200

People may start smoking for which perspective, with the reasoning that it makes them less stressed of it is a personality trait.

What is psychological perspective. 

200

What is the definition of cultural norm?

Rules or expectations of behavior and thoughts based on shared beliefs within a specific cultural or social group

200

Conformity

The process of changing beliefs, attitudes, actions, or perceptions to more closely to those held groups

200

What is Deindividuation?


In groups or crowds, the loss of awareness of ones own individuality

200

A student gets a good grade on a test and tells herself that she studied hard or is good at the material. She gets a bad grade on another test. What might be an excuse that they may use. 

Claims that the teacher doesn't like her or the test was unfair.

300

People may start smoking for what perspective, with the reasoning that other people do it and perceived culture norms allow it. 

What is social perspective. 

300

What are the three types of cultural norms?

Folkways, mores, taboos, and laws

300

A child who cleans his or her room when told to do so by a parent

Obediance

400

People may start smoking for what perspective, with the reasoning that smoking addiction is hereditary. 

What is biological perspective. 

400

Someone drinks and drives because friends do it, or because friends assure that person he or she can safely do so

Conformity

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