Social Thinking Flashcards

1
Q

What is interpersonal interaction and what are the three factors that influence this attraction?

A

It is what makes people like each other and is influences by at least 5 factors; physical attractiveness, similarity, self-disclosure, reciprocity and proximity

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2
Q

What is aggression

A

Behavior that is intended to cause harm or increase social dominance; physical, verbal or nonverbal

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3
Q

4 types of attachment

A
  1. Secure: Upset at departure of caregiver, comforted by return; trusts care giver, who is viewed as a secure base
  2. Avoidant: Shows no preference for a stranger or care giver; shows little distress at departure and little relief by return of care giver.; caregiver has little/no response to a distressed child
  3. Ambivalent: caregiver has an inconsistent response to a child’s distress; Distressed by departure of caregiver with mixed reactions at return
  4. Disorganized: No clear patter of behavior; sometimes exhibits repetitive behavior or seems dazed, frozen or confused
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4
Q

anxious ambivalent attachment

A

child anxious about reliability of caregiver

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5
Q

sensory bias

A

development of trait to match preexisting preference that exists in the population

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6
Q

fisherian/runaway selection

A

positive feedback mechanism which a particular trait has no effect/negative effect on survival

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7
Q

empathy altruism hypothesis

A

individual helps another person when they feel empathy for the other person regardless of the cost

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8
Q

game theory

A

attempts to explain decision making behavior

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9
Q

evolutionary stable strategy

A
  • natural selection prevent alternative strategies from arising and inherited traits passed along the population
  • objective = become more fit than competitiors
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10
Q

4 alternatives hawk dove

A
  • altruism = donor provides benefit to the recipient at a cost to himself
  • cooperation = both donor + recipient benefit
  • spite = both donor + recipient neg
  • selfishness = donor benefits while recipient neg
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11
Q

inclusive fitness

A

measure of organism’s success in population

based on number of offspring

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12
Q

primacy effect

A

first impressions more important than subsequent impressions

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13
Q

recency effect

A

most recent info that is most impt in impressions

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14
Q

monogamy

A

only one mate

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15
Q

Polygamy

A

one member of a sex have multiple exclusive relationships with members of opposite sex

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16
Q

Polygyny

A

A male with multiple females

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17
Q

polyandry

A

A female with multiple males

18
Q

implicit personality theory

A

categories we place others during impression formation

19
Q

reliance on central traits

A

indiv organize the perception of others based on traits and personal characteristics of target most relevant to the perceiver

20
Q

halo effect

A

cognitive bias in which judgments about a specific aspect of a person can be affected by one’s overall impression of the person

21
Q

attribution theory

What are the two main type of attributions?

A

tendency for people to infer the causes of other people’s behavior

  1. Dispositional (internal)
  2. Situational
22
Q

self serving bias

A

indiv view own success based on internal factors while view failures based on external factors

23
Q

self enhancement

A

need to maintain self worth which is done through internal attribution of successes and external attribution of failures

24
Q

dispositional attributions

A

attributions that related to behavior is being considered

25
Q

situational attributions

A

those that relate to surroundings

26
Q

consistency cues

A

consistent behavior of person over time

27
Q

consensus cues

A

extent which a person’s behavior differs from others

28
Q

distinctiveness cues

A

extent which a person engages in similar behavior across situations

29
Q

Fundamental attribution error

A

General bias toward making dispositional attributions rather than situational attributions about the behavior of others, especially in negative situations

30
Q

Attribution substitution

A

Occurs when individuals must make judgements that are complex but instead substitute a simpler solution or heuristic

31
Q

Steretypes

A

Occur when attitudes and impressions are made based on limited and superficial information about a person or a group of individuals and are cognitive

32
Q

Prejudice

A

It is defined as an irrational negative, or occasionally positive, attitude toward a person, group, or thing, which is formed prior to an actual experience and is affective

33
Q

Discrimination

A

It is when prejudicial attitudes cause individuals of a particular group to be treated differently than others and is behavioral

34
Q

List three types of social inequality that can influence prejudice

A

Power, prestige and class all influence prejudice through unequal distribution of wealth, influence an resources

35
Q

What is the difference between ethnocentrism and cultural relativism?

A

Ethnocentrism refers to the practice of making judgments about other cultures based on the values and beliefs of one’s own culture.
Cultural relativism refers to the recognition that social groups and cultures must be studied on their own terms.

36
Q

Stereotype threat

A

It is concern or anxiety about confirming a negative stereotype about one’s social group

37
Q

paternalistic stereotypes

A

Are those in which the group is looked down upon as inferior, dismissed or ignored
- Not Competitive, Low Status

38
Q

Contemptuous stereotypes

A

Are those in which the group is viewed with resentment, annoyance and anger
-Competitive, Low Status

39
Q

Envious stereotypes

A

Are those in which the group is viewed with jealousy, bitterness or distrust
-Competitive, High Status

40
Q

Admiration stereotypes

A

Are those in which the group is viewed with pride and other positive feelings
-Not Competitive, High Status