Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn Direct beschikbaar na je betaling Online lezen of als PDF Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen 4,6 TrustPilot
logo-home
Samenvatting

Summary Social Psychology (book and lecture notes), ISBN: 9781848728943 Introduction to Social Psychology

Beoordeling
-
Verkocht
-
Pagina's
29
Geüpload op
20-10-2021
Geschreven in
2017/2018

Concise summary of lecture notes and the essential reading.

Instelling
Vak

Voorbeeld van de inhoud

Social Psychology Revision Notes
Week 1 – Definitions and Introduction
- The scientific study of how thoughts, feelings and behaviours of individuals are influences by
the actual, imagine or implied presence of others (Allport)
- The scientific study of the effects of social and cognitive processes on the way individuals
perceive, influence and relate to others and situations (Smith and Mackie)
Historical trends
- Became empirical science with studies of social influence
- Even Plato described mob behaviour and a ‘crowd mind’
- Splits from behavioural psychology as it emphasises important of thoughts and feelings
- Behaviour depends on an individual’s life space
Current themes
- Integration of cognitive and social processes
- How memories, thoughts and emotions guide understanding of world and actions
- Social processes  how thoughts, feelings and actions are influenced by other people, groups
we belong to and personal relationships
Important principles
- Construction of reality  subjective reality more influential than objective reality  we have
impressions of everything and expect others to share them, but we can discover this is not the
case
- Each person’s view of reality is a construction shaped by cognitive processes and social
processes
- Pervasiveness of social influence  others influence our thoughts, feelings and behaviours
regardless of whether others are physically present
Motivational principles
- Striving for mastery  we seek to understand and predict social events in order to control
outcomes/obtain reward
- Seeking connectedness  belonging  seek support, liking and acceptance from individuals
and groups
- Identity and ownership  people value ‘me and mine’ and self-esteem  seeing oneself and
group in positive light
Processing principles
- Conservatism  established views are slow to change
- Accessibility  readily available information has the strongest impact on
thoughts/feelings/behaviour
- Superficiality versus depth  people can process information superficially or in depth 
prefer superficial

,Validity




Week 2 – Perceiving Individuals
- The way people construct, change and maintain their impressions of others
Physical appearance
- ‘what is beautiful is good’
- Male and female university students paired for a night of talking and dancing  end of
evening they rated on attractiveness, social skills, intelligence and personality  date
satisfaction correlated with physical attractiveness (Walster et al, 1966)
- College students prefer more attractive political candidates (Hart, Ottati & Krumdick, 2011)
- Babyfaced-ness 
- Less likely to be chosen for jobs that require ‘mature’ characteristics: competence, leadership
- Less likely to be convicted of violent crimes
- Berry & Mcarthur – baby faced adult males perceived as more naïve, honest, warm and kind
than those with mature facial appearances
- Perceived competence 
- Todorov et al (2005)  asked ppts which electoral candidate appeared more competent, those
who looked threatening less likely to be voted those chosen as competence more likely to win
elections
- In the workplace  good looking and tall men have higher starting salaries
- Attractiveness helped women more when they applied for feminine jobs rather than masculine
- But attractiveness helpful for men in feminine or masculine roles
Nonverbal communication
- Prefer feelings expressed non-verbally
- Body language offers insight into moods and emotions
- Some researchers even concluded that emotional expression is a kind of universal language
 but recent findings show that interpretations of expressions differ among cultures
- USA prefer people who orient posture towards us and have dilated pupils
- Interpretations of surprise, sadness and disgust differ across cultures

, - Can be extremely accurate interpretations/first impressions
- Ppts who see only a few behaviours are quite accurate in identifying end-of-semester teacher
evaluations and they can determine status differences between people
- After hearing brief clips of two people talking ppts are quite successful at identifying people’s
voices
Detection of deception
- People tend to use the wrong cues in assessing whether someone is lying
- Best cues = nonverbal e.g. tone of voice, movements of hands or feet
- Research by Rule et al (2013)  people are bad at judging how trustworthy someone is by
looking at pictures
- Lie detectors in the legal system  not precise enough to correctly detect guilty suspects
The look of love
- When people look directly at us we prefer them and pay more attention
- Mason et al (2005)  female and male ppts shown clips of attract women looking towards or
away
- Attention toward = likeability (for male and female) and greater attractiveness (just for males)
Familiarity
- Develop positive feelings towards people we encounter frequently
- Moreland & Beach study  women attended lectures  those who attended more were
judged as more intelligent, warm and interesting
- Mere exposure effect  seeing someone more increases liking, even if no interaction
- See someone a lot and they have caused you no harm = liking
- Works in advertising too  but if exposed too much can have adverse effect
Impressions from environment
- Because people select and create environments that reflect and reinforce who they are,
observers can quire accurately form impressions of others from environmental cues like dorm
rooms, single-person offices and social-networking profiles
- Gosling et al (2002)  got observers to look round apartments and rate impressions  they
were similar to self-ratings of occupiers
Impressions of behaviour
- Many behaviours are strongly linked to particular personality traits
- People’s behaviour is most genuinely useful resource for developing impressions
Noticing and interpreting cues
- Most useful resource for forming impressions is interpreting behaviour
- Salient characteristics capture attention
Automatic interpretation of cues
- None of the cues we use in perceiving people have much meaning in themselves
- Our impressions rely on automatic processes  operate superficially without conscious
processing
- Cued associations already learned and accessibility of thoughts  influences what type of
processing
The role of associations in interpretation

Gekoppeld boek

Geschreven voor

Instelling
Studie
Vak

Documentinformatie

Heel boek samengevat?
Nee
Wat is er van het boek samengevat?
Summary of key areas needed for the exam (at the time of studying)
Geüpload op
20 oktober 2021
Aantal pagina's
29
Geschreven in
2017/2018
Type
SAMENVATTING

Onderwerpen

$11.73
Krijg toegang tot het volledige document:

Verkeerd document? Gratis ruilen Binnen 14 dagen na aankoop en voor het downloaden kun je een ander document kiezen. Je kunt het bedrag gewoon opnieuw besteden.
Geschreven door studenten die geslaagd zijn
Direct beschikbaar na je betaling
Online lezen of als PDF

Maak kennis met de verkoper
Seller avatar
jessmakepeacex

Maak kennis met de verkoper

Seller avatar
jessmakepeacex The University of Birmingham
Volgen Je moet ingelogd zijn om studenten of vakken te kunnen volgen
Verkocht
1
Lid sinds
4 jaar
Aantal volgers
1
Documenten
9
Laatst verkocht
4 jaar geleden

0.0

0 beoordelingen

5
0
4
0
3
0
2
0
1
0

Waarom studenten kiezen voor Stuvia

Gemaakt door medestudenten, geverifieerd door reviews

Kwaliteit die je kunt vertrouwen: geschreven door studenten die slaagden en beoordeeld door anderen die dit document gebruikten.

Niet tevreden? Kies een ander document

Geen zorgen! Je kunt voor hetzelfde geld direct een ander document kiezen dat beter past bij wat je zoekt.

Betaal zoals je wilt, start meteen met leren

Geen abonnement, geen verplichtingen. Betaal zoals je gewend bent via iDeal of creditcard en download je PDF-document meteen.

Student with book image

“Gekocht, gedownload en geslaagd. Zo makkelijk kan het dus zijn.”

Alisha Student

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Maak nauwkeurige citaten in APA, MLA en Harvard met onze gratis bronnengenerator.

Bezig met je bronvermelding?

Veelgestelde vragen