Social Cognition Flashcards

1
Q

What is a stereotype?

A

Beliefs about a social group that affects how behaviour is interpreted
- Process information when engaged in social interactions

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2
Q

What is a stereotype threat?

A

When negative beliefs about your group interferes with performance
- More when salient
- Direct threat to cognitive performance

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3
Q

How can stereotype threat affect older people’s cognition?

A

Increases the decline of cognition, IF you believe it to be true
- Not productive
- Cannot learn
- Dependant on others
- Reduces will to live
- More rigid, cant adapt

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4
Q

What are the two theoretical ideas about how older adults handle stereotypes of aging?

A
  • Labelling theory
  • Resilience theory
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5
Q

Labeling theory

A

Tendency to apply the stereotype to yourself with confrontation of an age-related stereotype
- Older people are more likely to do it
- Impression formation and priming of stereotypes support it
- Negative self-perception of age

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6
Q

Resilience Theory

A

Tendency to confront the negative stereotypes that leads to rejection of said stereotype
- Distance oneself from negative stereotypes
- Positive self-perception of age

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7
Q

What are the aspects in social judgement?

A
  • Emotional intelligence
  • Impression formation
  • Accessibility of social information
  • Context influence
  • Processing capacity
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8
Q

What is emotional intelligence and its two aspects?

A

The ability to recognize emotional information about oneself and others, identify it, contrast it and use it to guide thinking and behavior
1. Seen as a trait, a persons self-perceived dispositions and abilities, crystal intelligence
2 Being able to understand and process emotional information an apply them in the right context, success-rate , fluid intelligence

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9
Q

How does emotional intelligence change over the years?

A

Increases with life experiences
- Association with subjective well-being, may be the reason
- Specific ability to perceive others emotions declines

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10
Q

What is impression formation?

A

Forming a first impression, happens within 10 seconds, and being able to revaluate it
- Flexibility

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11
Q

How does impression formation change?

A

Positive to negative
- Older adult seem more willing to change
Negative to positive
- Older adult maintain their first impression

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12
Q

Negativity Bias

A

Negative information creates a stronger impression than positive

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13
Q

What can interfere with formation processing?

A
  • Emotional information has more weight
  • Older seems for sensitive to diagnosticity of available information
  • Social context
  • More resources to go through with negative information, higher arousal
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14
Q

Social Knowledge

A

Using previous experiences and learned information and applying them to new situations
- Availability and accessible

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15
Q

Attributional Biases

A

What kind of explanation you’re giving to explain others behavior
- Dispositional, within a person
- Situational, with in the context

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16
Q

Correspondence Bias

A

Relying on dispositional attributes instead of situational
- Fundamental attribution bias
- Younger adults draw inferences of older peoples behavior
- Ignoring critical information, more stereotypes

17
Q

How does the correspondence bias change with age?

A

Younger adult
- More prone
- Contributes to stereotypes
Older
- Consider both types of information to draw inferences
- Life experiences

18
Q

What can affect the tendency to use correspondence bias?

A
  • If a situation is unclear, too ambiguous
  • Relationship situations
    Older tend to be more prone to the bias
  • Existing beliefs
    Older use this bias more
  • Culture differences
    Collective vs individualistic
19
Q

Positivity Effect

A

Tendency to avoid more negative information and focus positive when making decisions or judgments as well as remembering events

20
Q

What is SAVI?

A

Strength and vulnerability integration model
- Difficult to regulate high levels of negative arousal when getting older
- Positive arousal reduces the load

21
Q

How does positivity effect relate to SOC models?

A
  • SOC suggest development occurs as we continuously update our personal goal in comparison to our resources available
  • Focus on physical health and socio-emotional domains
  • Goal selection, often toward retaining autonomy
  • Emotional goals, supportive context for their cognitive functioning
  • Optimizing our well-being
22
Q

What is personal control?

A

My actions are what affected my performance
- Entity (innate) vs Skill (learned)
- Multidimensional
- Linked to better quality of social relationships, better health and higher cognitive functioning

23
Q

Heckhausen - Strategy for maintaining control

A
  • Control as motivational system to regulate individuals abilities to control outcomes throughout life
  • Primary control strategies
    Change of environment; Loss of friends makes you look out for new ones, more adaptive
  • Secondary control strategies, cognitively changes, seeing a situation from a different point of view, minimize losses
  • Primary used more in early and middle adulthood
  • Primary is what you strive for most
  • When function decline, use of secondary increases
24
Q

What are some of the critics to Heckhausen’s theory?

A
  • Age-related changes in goals and maintaining control could be a result of living, life experiences
  • Cultural differences, focus on individualistic strategies vs collectivistic
25
Q

Collaborative Cognition

A

Better together than alone, to remember something or solving a cognitive task
- Enhance cognition, especially memory and problem-solving tasks
- Compensation
- Two people, close relationship and a long period of time together

26
Q

Why is collaborative cognition considered an example of SOC?

A
  • Its implicit, it just happens
  • Compensatory for cognitive decline
  • Selective of situations that promotes collaborative cognition
  • Optimizing resources by relying on others expertise