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Defining Roles and Rules. _____________Rules that regulate human life, including social conventions, explicit laws, and implicit cultural standards.____________A given social position that is governed by a set of norms for proper behavior.__________A program of shared rules that govern the beha
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1. Behavior in Social and Cultural Context Chapter 8
2. Defining Roles and Rules _____________
Rules that regulate human life, including social conventions, explicit laws, and implicit cultural standards.
____________
A given social position that is governed by a set of norms for proper behavior.
__________
A program of shared rules that govern the behavior of members of a community or society, and
A set of values, beliefs and attitudes shared by most members of that community.
3. The Obedience Study Stanley Milgram
Yale University social psychologist
4. Milgram’s Obedience Study Stanley Milgram and coworkers investigated whether people would follow orders, even when the order violated their ethical standards.
Most people were far more obedient than anyone expected.
Every single participant complied with at least some orders to shock another person.
2/3 shocked the learner to the full extent.
Results are controversial and have generated much research on violence and obedience.
5. Factors Leading to Disobedience in Milgram’s study When the experimenter left the room.
When the victim was in the same room.
When the experimenter issued conflicting demands.
When the person ordering them to continue was an ordinary man.
When the subject worked with peers who refused to go on.
6. Zimbardo’s Prison Study Subjects were physically and mentally healthy young men who volunteered to participate for money.
They were randomly assigned to be prisoners or guards.
Those assigned the role of prisoner became distressed, helpless, and panicky.
Those assigned the roles of guards became either nice, “tough but fair,” or tyrannical.
Study had to be ended after 6 days.
7. The Power of Roles Factors causing people to obey:
Allocating responsibility to the authority.
Routinizing the task.
Wanting to be polite.
Becoming entrapped.
______________: A gradual process in which individuals escalate their commitment to a course of action to justify their investment of time, money, or effort.
8. Social Influences on Beliefs Defining social cognition
Attributions
Attitudes
9. Social Cognition An area in social psychology concerned with social influences on thought, memory, perception, and other cognitive processes.
Researcher are interested in how people’s perceptions of themselves and others affect:
Their relationships, thoughts, beliefs and values.
10. Attributions Attribution Theory
The theory that people are motivated to explain their own and other peoples’ behavior by attributing causes of that behavior to a situation or a disposition.
____________: behavior is due to internal factors, such as traits or motives
____________: behavior is due to external factors, such as other people
11. Attributions Fundamental Attribution Error
Tendency in explaining others’ behaviors to overestimate personality factors and underestimate situational influence.
12. Other Attributions ___________ bias
Tendency, in explaining own behavior, to take credit for one’s good actions and rationalize one’s mistakes.
Just-world hypothesis
The notion that many people need to believe that the world is fair and that justice is served
Bad people are punished and good people rewarded.
13. Attitudes A relatively stable opinion containing beliefs and emotional feelings about a topic.
_________
We are aware of them, they shape conscious decisions
__________
We are unaware of them, they may influence our behavior in ways we do not recognize.
14. Factors Influencing Attitude Change Change in social environment
Change in behaviors.
Due to a need for consistency.
Cognitive Dissonance
A state of tension that occurs when a person simultaneously holds two cognitions that are psychologically inconsistent, or
when a person’s belief is incongruent with his or her behavior.
15. Influencing Attitudes _________ Effect
Tendency to believe something is true just because it has been repeated many times
_________ Effect
Tendency to feel more positively towards something as we become more familiar with it
Classical Conditioning
Association of the message with a good feeling
16. Methods of indoctrination The person is subjected to ______________.
The person’s problems, personal and political, are explained by one simple attribution.
The person is offered a new identity and is promised salvation.
The person’s access to disconfirming (dissonant) information is severely controlled.
17. Conformity Asch
Subjects in a group were asked to match line lengths.
Confederates in the group picked wrong line.
Subjects went along with wrong answer 37% of trials.
18. Conformity Behavior or attitudes that come from group pressure
Why do people conform?
How do you conform?
What is the danger of conformity?
19. Groupthink In close-knit groups, the tendency for all members to think alike and suppress disagreement for the sake of harmony.
Symptoms of groupthink include
Illusion of invincibility.
Self-censorship.
Pressure on dissenters to conform.
Illusion of unanimity.
Groupthink can be counteracted by:
Creating conditions rewarding dissent
Basing decision on majority rule.
20. The Wisdom and Madness of Crowds ______________________________
In organized or anonymous groups, the tendency of members to avoid taking responsibility for actions or decisions because they assume that others will do so.
Bystander apathy
People mistakenly perceive this, when diffusion of responsibility is a better explanation
Social loafing
When people work less in the presence of others, allowing others to work harder.
21. Deindividuation In groups or crowds, the loss of awareness of one’s own individuality.
Result may be aggressive or antisocial behavior
Factors influencing deindividuation.
Size of city, group.
Uniforms or masks.
Deindividuation can influence friendly behaviors as well .
Depends on norms of the specific situation.
22. Altruism and Dissent Altruism – helping others
From conscience and situational influences
Situational factors contributing to dissent and altruism:
You perceive the need for intervention or help.
Situation makes it more likely that you will take responsibility.
You have an ally.
You become entrapped.
23. Ethnic Identity Ethnic identity
A person’s identification with a racial or ethnic group
Acculturation
The process by which members of minority groups come to identify with and feel part of the mainstream culture
____________
The belief that one’s own ethnic group, nation, or religion is superior to all others
Aids survival by making people feel attached to their own group and willing to work on group’s behalf
24. Group Identity: Us versus Them Social Identity
The part of a person’s self-concept that is based on identification with a nation, culture, or group or with gender or other roles in society.
Us versus Them social identities are strengthened when groups compete with one another.
Robber’s Cave studies
25. Stereotypes Cognitive schemas or a summary impressions of a group, in which a person believes that all members of the group share a common trait or traits (positive, negative, or neutral).
Allow us to quickly process new information and retrieve memories.
Distort reality in 3 ways.
Exaggerate differences between groups.
Produce selective perception.
Underestimate differences within groups.
26. Origins of prejudice ____________ causes
People inflate own self-worth by disliking groups they see as inferior.
Social causes
By disliking others we feel closer to others who are like us.
Economic causes
Legitimizes unequal economic treatment
Cultural and national causes
Bonds people to their own ethnic or national group and its ways
27. Measuring prejudice Social distance
What people do when they are stressed or angry
Brain activity
Implicit attitudes
28. Measures of implicit (unconscious) prejudice
29. Measures of Explicit Prejudice
30. Defining and Measuring Prejudice Measuring implicit prejudice.
Measures of symbolic racism.
Measures of behaviors rather than attitudes.
Measures of unconscious associations with a target group.
IAT link on Kuehn’s web
31. Reducing Prejudice and Conflict Groups must have equal legal status, economic opportunities, and power.
Authorities and community institutions must endorse egalitarian norms and provide moral support and legitimacy for both sides.
Both sides must have opportunities to work and socialize together, formally and informally.
Both sides must cooperate, working together for a common goal.
32. Human nature Human nature contains the potential for unspeakable acts of cruelty and inspiring acts of goodness.
Most people believe that some cultures and individuals are inherently evil and therefore not fully human; if we can just get rid of them, everything will be fine.
From the standpoint of social and cultural psychology, all human beings, like all cultures, contain the potential for both good and evil.