What is an identity salience hierarchy?
the rank order of our own identities importance to us
Without a clear indication of how to act people typically rely on their BLANK to
determine the course forward
history
Process of internalizing the norms of society
socialization
Encompasses all of the ideas, behaviors and artifacts that can be learned and
transmitted between individuals and can be learned overtime
culture
Represent cultural standards pertaining to what people ought to feel in a given situation
feeling rules
The most prominent dimensions is the BLANK of the emotion which is either positive or
negative
valence
Name the four parts of the definition of emotions
Appraisal or evaluation
Physiological or bodily sensations
Expressive gestures
A cultural label is attached
Name the two things that make moods distinct from emotions
the intensity is lower however the duration is far longer
Affective states internal to a person without a clear source and is more impactful across
situations
mood
What do we call the manipulation of symbols in our heads which fantasize remember
and plan
imagination
Domain theorists break up morality into two aspects what are they and what is the
difference between them
Universals cross cultural - cannibalism is universally wrong
conventions intra cultural - culturally it's wrong to yell at a prof
Regulative norm v prescriptive norm
...
Describe one major difference between social identity theory and identity control theory
Identity control - self self concept
Social identity - group concepts
identity control theory; what happens when one identity doesn't match the identity
standard in a situation
produces negative emotion (anxiety, sadness, anger)
Defined as nonconformity to set of norms that are accepted by the majority of people in
society
deviance
When people describe themselves in terms of who they are not they are created a