Vocabulary - 1
Vocabulary - 2
Connecting the dots...
Connecting the dots-2
Vocabulary - 3
100

in the presence of others, improved performance on simple or well-learned tasks, and worsened performance on difficult tasks.

Social facilitation

100

complying with an order or command

Obedience

100

Provide an example of aggression

Physical acts of violence and emotional acts such as cyberbullying do count as acts of aggression.

100

Social psychologists focus on what?

The power of the situation...and how the situation can affect a persons behavior.

100

any physical or verbal behavior intended to harm someone physically or emotionally.

Aggression

200

adjusting our behavior or thinking to coincide with a group standard.

Conformity

200

the tendency for repeated exposure to novel stimuli to increase our liking of them.

Mere exposure effect

200

Provide an example of a social script

⁠Ex: the sequence of behaviors involved in being in the bridal party for a wedding. This script helps people understand and navigate the interaction smoothly based on shared cultural expectations.

200

Provide an example for the Halo effect

Celebrities are often used to endorse products because they have the halo effect: a belief that beautiful or famous people are trustworthy and smart.

200

the tendency for people in a group to exert less effort when pooling their efforts toward attaining a common goal than when individually accountable.

Social loafing

300

the act of revealing intimate aspects of ourselves to others.

Self-disclosure

300

a condition in which people receive from a relationship in proportion to what they give to it.

Equity

300

There are three ingredients of our liking for another, what are they?

proximity, attractiveness, and similarity.

300

Provide an example of social facilitation

EX: professional athletes perform better with fans in the stadium than they do without fans in the stadium.
(What you already do well, you will do even better – what you don’t do well, you’ll do worse.)


300

the mimicking of behaviors we see around us, can increase prosocial and antisocial behaviors.

Social contagion

400

the enhancement of a group’s prevailing inclinations through discussion within their group.

Group polarization

400

a culturally modeled guide on how to act in various situations.

Social script

400

Social contagion is also known as what...

The chameleon effect 

400

What is the difference between social loafing and diffusion of responsibility?

Social loafing is when someone doesn't carry their own weight (project) because they know someone else will pick up the slack - diffusion of responsibility is when someone passes the responsibility on to someone else. 

400

the principle that frustration – the blocking of an attempt to achieve some goal – creates anger, which can generate aggression.

Frustration-aggression principle

500

the loss of self-awareness and self-restraint occurring in group situations that foster arousal and anonymity.

Deindividuation

500

the mode of thinking that occurs when the desire for harmony in a decision-making group overrides a realistic appraisal of alternatives.

Group-think

(If someone goes along with the group (even if they disagree), simply to keep the peace within the group.)

500

Provide an example of social contagion

yawning, sneezing, laughing...

500

What is one key component of aggression?

Aggression must have intention to harm another person either physically or emotionally.

  • Physical acts of violence and emotional acts such as cyberbullying do count as acts of aggression.
500

changing people’s attitudes, potentially influencing their actions.

Persuasion

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