W10 Social Influences Flashcards

1
Q

Bowlby’s Model of Attachment

A

Theory in which attachment figures (caregivers for infants and later in development peers, friends, and romantic partners) serve several functions necessary for survival—providing a safe haven to return to in times of stress and being a secure base from which to launch explorations into the world

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2
Q

Social baseline theory

A

Evolutionary argument that the presence of a benevolent partner reduces our vigilance to threat through risk distribution

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3
Q

Risk distribution

A

In ancestral times, when the social groups size increases, the spread of environmental for each person in the group decreases

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4
Q

Perceived Support

A

the perception that others will be available to help in the future if needed

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5
Q

Actual, tangible, enacted, received support

A

Support that is emotional or tangible

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6
Q

Invisible support

A

Support that is given when the receiver does not notice it

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7
Q

Thriving through relationships

A

the model of thriving through relationships proposes that social relationships is one way for individuals to thrive (in aspects such as SWB, mental, physical and relational health)

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8
Q

Relational Catalyst Support

A

relationships help to facilitate the reaching of goals and overcoming of challenges by serving as a catalyst for personal growth and thriving. closely attached to bowlby’s attachment theory

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9
Q

Self-Expansion Theory

A

People are motivated to expand their self concept through perspectives and resources, and this occurs when the individual and the person they are close to has concepts that overlap. this can also apply to looser ties.

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10
Q

Michaelangelo phenomenon

A

Social partners are also active participants in their partners’ personal development - they promote or hinder growth towards the ideal self through partner affirmations

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11
Q

Ideal self

A

the ideal self is an individual’s explicit/clearly defined set of goals to reach for self, or a vague ambition/aspiration.

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12
Q

Partner affirmation

A

Partners who see their partners as already possessing the attributes of their ideal self , and treat their partner as if they are that ideal self, actually elicit aspects of that ideal self through interactions that build one another up.

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13
Q

Compassionate goals

A

Goals that are supportive of others and are motivated by genuine concern for the other person - sees relationships with others as an ecosystem and acts interdependently

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14
Q

Self-image goals

A

Goals that work towards constructing and maintaining a desirable public and private image of self, motivated by concern for one’s owns needs and desires - egocentric and acts independently. sees relationships as zero-sum affairs

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15
Q

Passionate vs companionate love

A

Passionate love - feelings of attraction and excitement for another partner
Companionate love - feelings of liking and warmth for someone else

(both of which tie to the rewards system)

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16
Q

find-remind-bind model

A

model of gratitude that has social functions:

  • signals which people makes good partners
  • reminds us of their generosity, good attributes
  • promotes behaviours that facilitate bonding & intimacy
17
Q

capitalization

A

people often respond to positive events by telling someone else about it, to receive more positive affect through validation

18
Q

active-constructive repsonses

A

entail excitement and enthusiasm, and interest in continuing the conversation

19
Q

passive-constructive responses

A

entail calm emotions of low activation, but shows restrained information in the interaction

20
Q

active-destructive responses

A

shows interest in interaction but is responding negatively and discouragingly, diminishing the positive event

21
Q

passive-destructive

A

shows little interest in interaction and shrugs off topic, steering the conversation to something else

22
Q

objective social variables

A

factors that are based on evidence rather than opinions or emotions, focusing in quantifiable variables such as number of social ties, frequency of shared activities etc.

23
Q

social integration

A

active engagement and participation in a broad range of social relationships

24
Q

subjective social variables

A

factors that are based more on opinions and feelings about social relationships rather than actual evidence - for instance, social support. how well supported an individual feels, and is part of a social network

25
Q

social support

A

a social network of psychological and material resources that can benefit an individual

26
Q

daily diary methodology

A

individuals report on their relationships on a regular basis (i.e. 3 times a day)

27
Q

SWB

A

low NA, high PA, life satisfaction

28
Q

health

A

complete state of physical, mental and social well-being and not just the absence of diseases

29
Q

health behaviours

A

behaviours/activities that promote health such as no smoking, exercising, dietary consumption

30
Q

ostracism

A

excluding and ignoring an individual (denial of social relationships)

31
Q

shunning

A

temporary period where a member is stripped off social contact for punishment

32
Q

confidante

A

a trusted person whom secrets and vulnerabilities can be shared with

33
Q

formal vs informal relationships

A

formal - bound by rules of politeness, need to exert self-control
informal - casual relationships, can express thoughts more freely, more authentic (more comfortable and hence probably more rewarding)

34
Q

psychopathy

A

inability to empathise, egocentricity

35
Q

narcissism

A

need for self-admiration, glorification

36
Q

Machiavellianism

A

being cunning, strategic or manipulative in a relationship