What is social psychology?
Research methods
Socialization
Self and self-esteem
Self-presentation
100

The systematic study of the nature and causes of human behavior

What is social psychology?

100

A type of sampling technique where every individual in a population has an equal chance of being selected.

What is simple random sampling?

100

The lifelong process of learning the symbols, norms, values, beliefs, and institutions relevant to a particular culture or society

What is socialization?

100

The organized structure of cognitions or thoughts that we have about ourselves

What is self-schema/concept?

100

Widely shared rules and conventions that establishes the "ground rules" for interactions

What is a frame?

200

Cognitive theory and evolutionary theory are major perspectives in this branch of social psychology.

What is psychological social psychology?

200

The extent to which an instrument produces the same results each time it is employed to measure a particular construct under given conditions

What is measurement reliability?

200

The process by which initially external behavioral standards (e.g., standards held by parents) become internal and subsequently guide a person’s behavior

What is internalization?

200

The adjectives that we use to individuate ourselves and the meaning that we attach to those adjectives

What are personal identities?

200

A characteristic that is widely viewed as an insurmountable handicap that prevents competent or morally trustworthy behavior

What is a stigma?

300

A set of interrelated propositions that organizes and explains a set of phenomena

What is theory?

300

The extent to which instruments actually measure the theoretical concepts that we intend to measure

What is measurement validity?

300

Effects that are external changes that affect all age groups at the same time.

What are period effects?

300

The social groups or categories that we belong to and the meaning that we attach to our membership in these social groups or categories

What are social identities?

300

The selective use of self-presentation tactics by a person to manipulate or control the impressions that others form of them

What is tactical impression management?

400

Symbolic interactionism, group processes, and social structure and personality are major perspectives in this branch of social psychology

What is sociological social psychology?

400

A variable that is not explicitly included in a research hypothesis but has a causal impact on the dependent variable

What is an extraneous variable?

400

The sequence of roles, each with its own set of activities, that a person enacts during their lifetime

What are life course careers?

400

Attitudes and expectations held by members of organized groups that people interact with

What is the generalized other?

400

A conception of who one is in relation to the other people involved in a situation

What is a situated identity?

500

A perspective that argues that human nature and social order are products of symbolic communication among people

What is symbolic interactionism?

500

The extent to which findings of a study can be generalized to other populations, settings, or time periods

What is external validity?

500

A socialization process wherein a person learns what response to make in a situation in order to obtain a positive reinforcement (i.e., reward) or avoid a negative reinforcement (i.e., punishment)

What is instrumental/operant conditioning?

500

The social object, passive part of the self that is shaped by society's expectations and collation of what others think of us

What is the "Me" in the self-concept?

500

The gap or mismatch between a person’s actual self (who they are) and their ideal self (who they wish to be) or normative self (who they ought to be) that leads to negative emotions

What is self-discrepancy?

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