Intro to Social Psych
Research Methods
Social Cognition
Social Perception
Attribution and Bias
100

What is social psychology 

The scientific study of how people's thoughts, feelings, and behaviours are influenced by the real or imagined presence of others 


100

What is hindsight bias?

the tendency to believe we could have predicted an outcome after it occurred 

100

Define Schema 

mental structures used to organize knowledge about the social world 

100

Define the actor/observer difference

The tendency to see others' behaviour as dispositionally caused, while focusing more on the role of situational factors when explaining one's own behaviour

100

When people's self esteem is threatened, they make _____ such as: a tendency to take credit for one's own successes (internal) a tendency to blame others or the situation for one's own failures (external)

self-serving attributions

200
What is the fundamental attribution error 

The tendency to overestimate dispositional factors and underestimate situational ones 

200

The three types of methods used to study social problems

observational, correlational, experimental

200

Define counterfactual reasoning 

mentally changing the past to imagine "what might have been" 

200

Define perceptual salience

The information that is the focus of people's attention

200

what are the three points in the Covariation principle

consensus information, consistency information, distinctiveness information

300

What are the two basic human motives

The need to be accurate about ourselves and our social world, and the need to feel good about ourselves 

300

what does the Correlational method do

assess the relation between variables

300
Define self-fulfilling prophecy 

People can inadvertently make their schemas come true by the way they treat others

300

What are the 6 facial expressions of emotion

anger, happiness, surprise, fear, disgust, sadness

300

What is the two-step process of making attributions

1. Internal attribution. (safer) 

2. situation (requires cognitive effort/motivation)

400

What kind of science is Social Psychology

Empirical Science 

400

Define Operational definition 

the precise specifications of how variables are measured and manipulated

400
Define availability heuristic

the mental shortcut where people judge based on how easily something comes to mind 

400

what are the three points in the Covariation principle

consensus information, consistency information, distinctiveness information

400

Define Augmentation principle

We increase in the perceived role of a particular cause if other factors are present that would work against the behaviour (increase other)

500

Define Construal

How people perceive, comprehend, and interpret their social world

500

Define Ethnography 

A method of research where researchers attempt to understand a group or culture by observing it from the inside

500

Overconfidence barrier 

people tend to have too much confidence in the accuracy of their judgements, they aren't as correct as they think they are

500

implicit personality theory

When we make inferences about someone's personality based on what we already know about some characteristics, we are using an

500

Correspondent Inference Theory

Behaviour is more likely to be reflective of an internal, stable trait if it is 

*freely chosen

*differs from expectations (social norms)