Groups and Pressure
Impressions and
Attitudes
Forming Relationships
Persuasion
Vocab
100

When you go along with the decisions of a crowd. 

Conformity

100

A set of assumptions about people in a given category summarizing our experience and beliefs about groups of people.

Stereotypes

100

Sharing common interests, beliefs, morals, and participating in similar activities.

Similarity

100

This term refers to the person or group presenting an argument. 

The source

100

The tendency to blame your own behavior on outside causes, but blame the behavior of others on their own internal causes

Actor-observer bias

200

A phenomenon occurring when a group’s desire for harmony and consensus overrides a realistic appraisal of alternatives, resulting in poor decision-making.

Groupthink

200

Our tendency to form opinions about others based on their first impressions.

Primacy effect

200

Intimacy, passion, and commitment make up this type of love, according to Sternberg. 

"Ideal" or "consummate" love

200

This route of persuasion relies on facts and appealing to logic. 

Central route of persuasion

200

Suggests we attribute qualities to someone based on our perception of them based on other respects (Ex: soldiers high rank=good soldier)

Halo effect

300

The most extreme way of changing a person’s attitude, involving intense pressure, intimidation, or even harm.

Brainwashing

300

A type of attribution where one acts a certain way based on the situation.

External attribution

300

Also referred to as the “familiarity principle.”

Repeated exposure

300

The method by which you deliver an argument (news, social media, etc)

Channel

300

The tendency for individuals to perform differently when in the presence of others

Social facilitation

400

A change in attitude or behavior brought about by social pressure to comply with those perceived to be authorities

Obedience

400

The mental discomfort experienced when holding 2 or more contradictory beliefs, values, or behaviors. 

Cognitive dissonance

400

A type of reward value based on the ability of a person to help you reach your goals. 

Utility value

400

When you start with a big request, and then follow up with a smaller, more agreeable one. 

Door-in-the-face

400

The tendency for decisions made in groups to be less conservative than the decision of the average group member

Risky-shift effect

500

An important study that was done to find out why people follow orders using fake electric shocks. 

Milgram's study

500

Unconscious, automatic evaluations—positive or negative—toward people, places, or things, which exist outside of conscious awareness. 

Implicit attitude

500

A type of reward value when a person interests you or exposes you to new ideas and experiences

Stimulation value

500

When one develops a resistance to persuasion by being exposed to arguments that challenge their beliefs.

The inoculation effect

500

The tendency for people to overemphasize personality-based explanations for behaviors in others while underemphasizing situational explanations

Fundamental attribution error