Group Dynamics
Social Influence + Perception
Prejudice + Discrimination
The Art of Influence
Miscellaneous
100

The process by which individuals adjust their thoughts, feelings, or behavior to align with those of a group, as a result of real or imagined group pressure

What is conformity?

100

Explains how people decide whether someone’s behavior is caused by their personality or their situation

What is attribution theory?

100

A generalized belief about a particular category of people, often oversimplified and not based on direct experience

What is stereotype?

100

The process of influencing others’ attitudes, beliefs, or behaviors through communication, often involving appeals to reason, emotions, or authority

What is persuasion?

100

Unwritten rules that dictate acceptable behavior within a society or group, influencing how individuals act and interact

What is social norms?

200

The tendency for individuals to exert less effort when working in a group than when working alone

What is social loafing?

200

How a person usually explains the reasons behind events—whether they blame themselves or outside factors

What is explanatory style?

200

When a belief about a situation or a person leads to actions that make the belief come true

What is self-fulfilling prophecy?

200

The cognitive bias where a positive impression in one area (like attractiveness) leads to positive evaluations in other areas, influencing overall judgments about a person

What is the halo effect?

200

Assuming a person's actions are due to their personality, not their situation

What is dispositional attributions?

300

When people in a group talk about an idea, they often end up agreeing even more strongly with each other, making their group opinion more extreme

What is group polarization?

300

The tendency to blame people’s actions more on their personality and less on their situation

What is the fundamental attribution error?

300

An unjustifiable and usually negative attitude toward a group and its members. It generally involves negative emotions, stereotyped beliefs, and a predisposition to discriminatory action

What is prejudice?

300

A persuasion strategy where a large, initial request is made knowing it will be refused, followed by a smaller, more reasonable request that is more likely to be accepted

What is door-in-the-face technique?

300

A psychological state where individuals lose their self-awareness and sense of individuality in group settings, often leading to impulsive and deviant behavior

What is deindividuation?

400

The tendency for people to perform differently when in the presence of others, typically showing improved performance on simple or well-practiced tasks and worse performance on complex or new tasks

What is social facilitation?

400

The habit of blaming our own actions on the situation but blaming other people’s actions on their personality

What is actor-observer bias?

400

The belief in the inherent superiority of one's own ethnic group or culture, often accompanied by a feeling of contempt for other groups

What is ethnocentrism?

400

A psychological discomfort experienced when simultaneously holding conflicting beliefs, attitudes, or values, often leading to an alteration in one of the beliefs or behaviors to reduce the discomfort

What is cognitive dissonance?

400

The belief that outcomes and events are determined by external forces or fate, rather than one's own actions

What is external locus of control?

500

The phenomenon where individuals are less likely to offer help to a victim when other people are present 

What is bystander effect?

500

The tendency to attribute one’s successes to personal characteristics and failures to external factors, enhancing one's self-esteem

What is self-serving bias?

500

A belief that the world is fundamentally fair, leading people to rationalize injustice or misfortune as deserved

What is just-world phenomenon?

500

A cognitive bias where people overestimate how much others agree with their own beliefs, behaviors, and attitudes

What is false consensus effect?

500

A method of persuasion that involves deeply engaging with the content of a message, leading to careful analysis and thoughtful consideration, typically resulting in more durable attitude change

What is central route of persuasion?