Social Psychology
Personality
Motivation and Emotion
Social Psychology
Personality
100

After seeing a student fall asleep in class, Mia assumes he is lazy without considering he worked all night. This BEST demonstrates:

Fundamental attribution error

100

A teenager buys a product mainly because a famous celebrity promotes it. This BEST demonstrates:

Peripheral route persuasion

100

Students strongly support members of their own school team while criticizing rival schools. This BEST demonstrates:

In-group bias

100

Students working on a group project put in less effort than when they work alone. This BEST demonstrates:

Social loafing

100

A stressed college student begins sucking their thumb again during exams. Freud would describe this as:

Regression

200

Jordan blames his bad test grade on difficult questions, but says another student failed because they are careless. This BEST demonstrates:

Actor-observer bias

200

Emma knows smoking is unhealthy but continues smoking, so she tells herself “it helps me relax anyway.” This BEST demonstrates:


Cognitive dissonance

200

A teenager begins dressing like their friend group to fit in socially. This BEST demonstrates:

Conformity

200

A committee ignores obvious problems with a plan because everyone wants to avoid disagreement. This BEST demonstrates:

Groupthink

200

A person who is organized, dependable, and careful would likely score high in:

Conscientiousness

300

After winning a soccer game, Ava says it happened because of her talent. After losing the next game, she blames the referee. This BEST demonstrates:

Self-serving bias

300

A charity first asks people to sign a petition, then later asks them to donate money. This BEST demonstrates:

Foot-in-the-door technique

300

A student laughs at a joke they do not find funny because everyone else is laughing. This BEST demonstrates:

Normative social influence

300

During a riot, people act more aggressively because they feel anonymous in the crowd. This BEST demonstrates:


Deindividuation

300

A basketball player strongly believes they can improve through practice and succeed in games. This BEST demonstrates:


Self-efficacy

400

After hearing a new song many times on social media, Liam begins to like it more. This BEST demonstrates:

Mere exposure effect

400

A student assumes all athletes are poor students. This belief is BEST described as:


Stereotype

400

During a fire alarm, students look at others to decide whether the alarm is serious. This BEST demonstrates:


Informational social influence

400

A person cannot remember a traumatic childhood event because it has been pushed into the unconscious mind. According to Freud, this is:


Repression

400

A student performs best on exams when they feel moderately stressed, but too much anxiety lowers performance. This BEST supports:

Yerkes-Dodson law

500

A student changes their opinion about school uniforms after hearing strong evidence and statistics during a debate. This BEST represents:

Central route persuasion

500

A manager refuses to hire someone because of their ethnicity. This behavior BEST represents:

Discrimination

500

A person collapses in a crowded mall, but nobody immediately helps because everyone assumes someone else will. This BEST demonstrates:

Bystander effect

500

Someone who is angry at a friend accuses the friend of being hostile instead. This BEST demonstrates:

Projection

500

After forcing herself to smile for several minutes, Maya begins feeling happier. This BEST supports:

Facial feedback hypothesis

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