Row #1
Deuce
Tres
Four
Last
100

An attitude is best defined as

a learned, stable response toward people, objects, or events

100

What does not affect the development of an attitude?

Biological Components (genetic influences)

100

Attitudes are most often formed through

direct experience and observation

100

The process of changing attitudes through communication and reasoning is called

persuasion

100

A self-fulfilling prophecy occurs when

a person’s expectations lead to behavior that causes those expectations to come true

200

The central route to persuasion focuses on

logic and evidence

200

The peripheral route to persuasion works using what

emotions and works best when people are distracted or unfocused. 

200

When someone changes their attitude to reduce the discomfort caused by conflicting beliefs or actions, this is called

 conformity

200

The wholehearted acceptance of an attitude 

Internalization 

200

A stereotype is

an unchanging, oversimplified, and often inaccurate belief about a group

300

Prejudice differs from discrimination because prejudice involves

beliefs and attitudes, while discrimination involves behavior

300

An example of self-justification would be

 explaining away a bad decision to protect your self-image

300

The mere exposure effect suggests that

the more we are exposed to something, the more we tend to like it

300

Which of the following is an example of a self-fulfilling prophecy?

You believe you’ll fail a test, so you don’t study—and then you fail.

300

The three main processes involved in forming or changing attitudes are

conditioning, observation, and cognitive evaluation

400

Conformity occurs when

people change behavior to match group standards

400

Cognitive evaluation involves

judging something based on personal experiences and beliefs

400

When people act differently because they believe others are watching, it’s called

social influence

400

Role playing can lead to attitude change because

people adjust their beliefs to match the roles they perform

400

A self-perception theory suggests that

people infer their attitudes by observing their own behavior

500

Who studied the relationship between a dominant and deferential group?

Thomas Pettigrew 

500

Who studied the effect of stimulus to trigger certain stereotypes? 

Patricia Devine

500

The uncomfortable feeling that arises when a person's behaviors conflicts with his or her other thoughts, beliefs, attitudes, feelings or even other behaviors. 

Cognitive Dissonance

500

When you want to fit in or be in a group, therefore you adopt their beliefs and attitudes.

Identification 

500

The ability to avoid contradictions between our attitudes and behaviors

Cognitive Consistency