If you do not like someone because you have a negative, unjustifiable view of the group they are a part of, you are .... towards them.
Prejudice
When in a group project, everyone tends to give less effort because other people will pick up the slack. This phenomenon is called..
Social loafing
You get your mom to agree to give you $5. A week later, she is more likely to give you $15. You used ...
Foot-in-the-door phenomenon
When there are more people around, people are less likely to help someone in need because they assume others will do it. This is called ...
Wearing a school uniform at a Catholic school. Clapping after someone is done a performance. Making eye contact when someone is talking to you. These are examples of social ...
Norms
Stereotype
Groupthink
You spend a lot of time with your coworker. When you first met him, you thought he was weird. After working with him for a few months, you now have a crush on him. This is likely due to ...
You think your teacher believes you are a bad student. You then lay down during class, and do not pay attention. You then get even worse grades. This is an example of...
Self-fulfilling prophecy
Name three reasons someone would help and not fall to the bystander effect
There are many! Make someone feel responsible, there is a serious danger, they can't be in a hurry, be in a rural town, a woman needs help, they feel guilty, they are in a good mood.
Fundemental attribution error
We have cheerleaders and fans at home games because ... helps people perform well learned tasks better.
Social facilitation
You say you think vapes are unhealthy, but you smoke anyway. This leaves you with a feeling of discomfort. You are experencing...
Cognitive dissonance
You help someone pick up their bags after they dropped everything on the ground. You are running late and don't have to help them, but you want to anyway. You are showing the trait of ....
Altruism
When conflicting parties, both want what is best for themselves, so they only act in destructive behavior for both parties.
Social trap
After you took a test in a hot, dark room, you blame your test score on the room and not your intelligence. You are using ...
Situational attribution
After only being in a group of people who agree with them, a person's political beliefs become even stronger. The group is not open to other opinions either. The group is experiencing ...
Group polarization
A student is very well behaved in class. You assume that they make high grades because they seem so focused. This is an example of ....
Halo effect
You are a waiter and a certain family always tips you $10 extra. You bring them a $10 dessert as a thank you. You are exhibiting ...
Reciprocity norm
This experiment had subjects shock other participants to test if they would blindly do what an authority figure told them.
Milgrim Experiment
You assume you did well on the test because you are very intelligent. It has nothing to do with how the material was taught. You are using ...
Dispositional attribution
You join a new club. You notice that all the members are going to the front of the room and signing in. You get up and follow their lead. You were influenced to do this because of ...
Informational social influence
To get people to agree with you, you use facts and analytics instead of appealing to their emotions. You are using ...
Central route persuasion
You see a lost child at a fair. You want to help the child even though they cannot help you in return. This exchange of helping is called ...
Social responsibility norm
When you can hide behind a screen, you do not feel responsible for you actions anymore. You are more likely to do things you wouldn't do in public. You are feeling ...
Deindividualization