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The Social-Cognitive Perspective

The Social-Cognitive Perspective. Of Personality. Bandura is Back. Social cognitive theory stems from social learning theory (under the umbrella of behaviorism).

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The Social-Cognitive Perspective

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  1. The Social-Cognitive Perspective Of Personality

  2. Bandura is Back • Social cognitive theory stems from social learning theory (under the umbrella of behaviorism). Behaviorism (as introduced by Watson) supports a direct and unidirectional pathway between stimulus and response, representing human behavior as a simple reaction to external stimuli.

  3. Social Cognitive Theory • Focus on how we interact with our environment. Reciprocal Determinism: the interacting influences between personality and environmental factors.

  4. Social Cognitive Perspective • Different People choose different environments. The TV you watch, friends you hang with, music you listen to were all chosen by you (your disposition) But after you choose the environment, it also shapes you.

  5. Social Cognitive Perspective • Our personalities help create situations to which we react. If I expect someone to be angry with me, I may give that person the cold shoulder, creating the very behavior I expect.

  6. Personal Control • Our sense of controlling our environment rather than the environment controlling us.

  7. External Locus of Control • The perception that chance or outside forces beyond one’s personal control determine one’s fate.

  8. Internal Locus of Control • The perception that one controls one’s own fate.

  9. Learned Helplessness • The hopelessness and passive resignation an animal or human learns when unable to avoid repeated aversive events.

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