Theorists
MISC. Concepts
Social Perception, Cognition, Attribution, Beliefs
Group and the Influence of Others
True or False
100

Who is considered to be the founder of the field of social psychology. Also conceived field theory, which is the total influences upon individual behavior. 

 Who is Kurt Lewin 

100

Thinking that if someone has one good quality, then they ONLY have good qualities

What is Halo Effect

100

Type of optimism bias that suggests we believe that a task will take far less time than it actually does 

What is Planning Fallacy

100

This concept refers to what is considered normal behavior for a particular society

What is Social Norm

100

True or False: 

The social exchange theory suggests that humans interact in ways that maximize reward and maximize cost

False (Minimize cost)

200

What theorist suggested that people feel tension, or dissonance, when they hold two thoughts that do not match? 

Hint: "Cognitive Dissonance Theory"

Who is Leon Festinger

200

What concept explains why persuasive communication from a source of low credibility may become more acceptable after the fact?

What is Sleeper Effect

200

What concept refers to the making of predictions and judgements about ourselves without considering relevant facts. 

What is Overconfidence Bias

200

This concept refers to the ways in which a person tries to get another person to do something. 

What is Compliance 

200

True or False: Opposites Attract 

False (opposites do not attract)

300

Which theorist proposed a theory that offered an alternate explanation to cognitive dissonance? This person asserted that when people are unsure of their beliefs, they take their cues from their own behavior *rather than changing their behavior to match their beliefs* 

Hint: Self-Perception Theory

Daryl Bem

300

This concept is the tendency of people to go along with real or perceived group pressure. 

What is conformity 

300

What concept refers to attributing of a person's bad behavior to a character flaw rather than to the situation? 

What is Fundamential Attribution Error

300

The inhibiting influence of the presence of others on a person's willingness to help someone in need. 

Hint: The Kitty Genovese Case

What is Bystander Effect

300

True or False: The four reasons we are attracted to people are due to...

- Closeness, physical attractiveness, similarity, and reciprocity 

False (Proximity! not the word closeness)

400

Who studied stress and coping. This theorist also differentiated between problem-focused coping and emotion-focused coping. 

Who is Richard Lazarus

400

This occurs in situations in which there is a high degree of arousal and a low degree of personal responsibility. In these situations, individual identity or accountability is de-emphasized. 

What is deindividuation 

400

What concept explains interpreting one's own actions and motives in a positive way, blaming situations for failures and taking credit for successes. 

Hint: Like to think we are "better than average"

What is Self-Serving Attribution Bias

400

This concept was studied by James Stoner and explains how group discussion with like-minded people generally serves to strengthen the already dominant point of view. 

What is Group Polarization

400

True or False:

In a collectivist society, members are communally oriented and focus on the common good. In contrast, members of an individualist society care more about personal gain than the welfare of the community as a whole. 

True

500

Who used the Prisoner's Dilemma & The Trucking Company Game to illustrate the struggle between cooperation and competition? 

Morton Deutsch

500

What concept explains why people's performance changes when they are being observed

What is the Hawthorne Effect

500

Ellen Langer studied this concept that explains how many tend to believe they have control over things that you actually have no influence on. 

What is illusion of control

500

What are 3 out of the 6 different strategies for compliance?

Door-In-The-Face: This is a sales tactic in which people ask for more than they would ever get and then “settle” for less. 

Foot-In-The-Door Phenomenon: Refers to a situation in which a person who is willing to perform a small favor first is then more willing to do larger ones later.

Low-Ball Technique: A method in which a person is offered something at a very low cost and then the cost is raised after they agree. 

That’s not all Technique: Involves sweetening a deal before the person has had a chance to say yes or no. 

Deadline Technique: Occurs when a sellers use the threat of a looming deadline to induce complience. 

Integration: Involves using flattery to gain compliance 

500

True or False: 

Social loafing is the tendency to work more in a group than one would by themselves 

False (One is more likely to work less when in a group, rather than by themselves)