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100

Experiment done by Zimbardo:

 - guards developed disparaging attitudes, devising cruel

  - prisoners broke down rebelled or passively resigned

Prisoner-Guard : Role-Playing affects attitudes 

100

Individuals in groups lose their self-awareness / feel anonymous and sense of responsibility.  

Deindividuation

100

Socially unacceptable impulses, urges, or anxieties are unconsciously transformed into socially acceptable, productive behaviors. (defense mechanism)

Sublimation

100

People to perform better on simple or well-learned tasks when in the presence of others

Social facilitation

100

People experience psychological discomfort when their attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors are inconsistent.(Festinger)

Cognitive dissonance theory

200

Person's behavior, personal factors and environment all interact and influence each other simultaneously (Bandura, Social-cognitive theory)

Reciprocal determinism

200

Desire for group harmony overrides realistic appraisal of alternatives, leading to poor decision-making.

Groupthink

200

Adjusting behaviors or beliefs to align with group norms, often driven by a desire for normative influence vs informational influence.

Group conformity

Normative influence (social acceptance)

Informational influence (belief group is correct)

200

Belief in their capacity to execute behaviors necessary to produce specific performance attainments

Self-efficacy

200

Expectation, either positive or negative, about people or events that may affect a person's behavior, causing those expectations to be fulfilled

Self-fulfilling prophecy

300

Drive to engage in an activity for its own sake, stemming from internal satisfaction, enjoyment, or personal interest rather than external rewards

Intrinsic motivation

300

Behavior is determined by unconscious drives, childhood experiences, and interpersonal relationships.

Unconscious mind

Psychodynamic

300

Motivation arises from biological needs that create unpleasant states of tension, or "drives." Organisms are motivated to reduce these drives to maintain homeostasis

Drive-reduction theory

300

Person’s tendency toward self-discipline, organization, responsibility, and achievement-striving.

Big Five theory of personality : OCEAN

Conscientiousness

300

Person is faced with a single goal or event that possesses both positive (attractive) and negative (repelling) aspects.

Lewin’s motivational conflicts theory

approach-avoidance conflict

400

tendency to overemphasize personal traits and underestimate situational influences when explaining others' behavior.

Fundamental attribution error

400

Person unconsciously attribute their own unacceptable thoughts, feelings, or impulses onto others to reduce anxiety (defense mechanism)

Projection

400

Facial expressions can influence and modulate emotional experiences, rather than just reflecting them

Facial-feedback hypothesis

400

Positive emotions (joy, interest, contentment) broaden an individual’s awareness and encourage novel, exploratory thoughts and actions

Broaden-and build theory

400

Cognitive bias where individuals overestimate the extent to which others share their beliefs, behaviors, and attitudes.

False consensus effect

500

Cognitive framework where individuals habitually interpret negative events as personal, permanent, and pervasive

Explanatory style (pessimistic)

500

Individuals feel less personal obligation to act in a group setting because they assume others will intervene

Diffusion of responsibility ==> Bystander effect

500

Explore the unconscious by analyzing responses to ambiguous stimuli. Examples include the Rorschach inkblot test and the Thematic Apperception Test (TAT).

Projective test

500

Interpreting and evaluating an event or situation, which directly dictates an individual's emotional and behavioral response

Cognitive appraisal

500

Perceive that one is worse off relative to a comparison standard—such as peers, expectations, or the past—leading to dissatisfaction and frustration

Relative deprivation

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