Overview of the Day - College of Humanities and Social and
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Transcript Overview of the Day - College of Humanities and Social and
Overview of the Day
Social Psychology
attribution theory, attitudes, conformity and
obedience, group influence
Film: persuasion, leadership, and gender
What is Social Psychology?
The psychology of how we think about,
influence, and relate to one another
Social Thinking
Attribution: the process of inferring the
causes of one’s own and others’ mental
states and behavior
How we make attributions:
External (situation) or internal (person) cause
Fundamental Attribution error:
The tendency for observers, when analyzing
another’s behavior, to underestimate the
impact of the situation and to overestimate
the impact of personal disposition.*
Social Thinking
Self serving biases
When making attributions about ourselves,
we attribute our successes to ourselves, and
our failures to the situation.
People rate themselves as above average
Recall more positive than negative
information
Attribute greater role to self than others in
group projects
Talents more striking than deficiencies
Attitudes
Beliefs and feelings that predispose our
reactions to people, objects and events
Do attitudes affect behavior?
Yes, when:
outside influences are minimal (vote for tax
increase when do not have to worry about
reelection)
The behavior is specific* (I am in favor of
candidate X)
We are aware of our attitudes
Attitudes
Do behaviors influence attitudes? Often,
they do.
Foot-in-the-door (when people who agree to a
small request, they are more likely to agree to a
larger one)
Influence of roles (“pull” of situation)
Why do behaviors influence attitudes?
Cognitive dissonance* (need to rationalize our
actions to ourselves)
Social Influence
How do and what social factors influence
our behavior, attitudes, beliefs, and
decisions
Suggestibility
Sherif study--autokinetic effect
Group pressure
Asch experiment
Obedience to authority
Milgram experiments
Personal responsibility or morality?
Social Influence
Social facilitation
Presence of others
Social loafing
Presence of others reduces individual effort in
team effort
Deindividualization (mob violence, rock
concerts, sports)
• Arouses people and diminishes responsibility
• Abandon normal restraint
• Anonymity of group
Group Influence
Group polarization
• The enhancement of a group’s prevailing tendencies
through group discussion
Group think
• Pressure to avoid disagreement and maintain harmony
in group to reach premature consensus
• Often results in poor decisions
Minority influence
• A minority in a group that holds unswervingly to his or
her position is more likely to influence the majority than
if he or she waffles
Overview of the Day
Aggression (plus film)
Prejudice
Altruism
Attraction
Love
Course Surveys
Aggression
Aggression: verbal or physical behavior
intended to harm another person or being
Are humans aggressive?
In the 20th century, so far:
• 110 million war-related deaths
• In the US alone, 21,597 murders; 1.1 million assaults
Or are some humans more aggressive
Murder rate 25% less in Canada, 20% less in
New Zealand 17 % less in Europe
Murder rates (per capita) higher in southern US
than north
Causes of Aggression-Nature (biology)
Genes (some animals are bred for
aggressiveness; twin studies)
Testosterone levels
high testosterone levels ---> aggression
dominance (also spatial abilities)*
violent criminals tend to be muscular young males
with lower-than average IQ scores, low levels of
serotonin and higher-than-average levels of
testosterone
Causes of Aggression-Natures
The male mind
95% of all prison inmates are male
male-male competition for status and resources
to attract females
• females prefer high status, dominant males
escalation of altercations of trivial origin (about
37% of murders)
– loss of face (status, reputation)--->mating
opportunities
jealous rage against unfaithful wife (20-50% of
spousal murders)
Causes of Aggression-Natures
Overactive limbic system (in brain)
studies with animals (bulls, monkeys)
studies of convicted murders show most
suffered severe head injury
Causes of Aggression--Nature
(Learning and the Environment)
Frustration-->anger-->aggression
More assaults occur in hot weather than cold
Culture and learning
southern towns have triple the homicide
rates of northern towns (herder culture)
Father absence
70% of imprisoned juveniles grew up in single
parent households
Causes of Aggression-Nurture
Violence on TV
homicide rate doubled in US and Canada
between 1957 and 1974 (same years as
introduction and spread of TV)
Why is there so much violence of TV?
Why do people like to watch it?
Prejudice
An unjustifiable (and usually negative)
attitude toward a group and its members
Causes of Prejudice
In-group and Out-group categorization
self-definition by group membership
distinguish friends from enemies
Categorization--mental short-cut
Scapegoating
blame someone or group when things go
wrong
How to lower prejudice
Knowledge
any two randomly chosen humans, on
average, are 99.8% alike genetically
Interaction (interaction, usually, fosters
liking)
Evolutionary Perspective: Intermarriage
among groups*
genetic self-interest
people become outwardly similar over time
Altruism
Altruism: the regard for others’ welfare
Types of altruism
Reciprocal altruism (tit for tat)
Pure altruism (unconditional help)
Sources of altruistic
behavior
Social exchange
You scratch my back, and I'll scratch yours
Occurs even in vampire bats
Kin-based (Genetic relatedness) altruism ]
Altruism is in proportion to relatedness and
reproductive potential
Analysis of wills
Other types of Altruism
Helping others when its not in our self
interest
Helping strangers
Bystander intervention
Kitty Genovese murder (repeated stabbing, rape,
no helped; waited 20 minutes to even call police)
Notice --> interpret as emergency--> assume
responsibility
When are we most likely to assume
responsibility?
• When there are fewer people available to help
Attraction
What binds people together in close
relationships?
Proximity
Who are you most likely to marry ?
• A person who lives close to you
Availability--people who are close are available
• Do this bode well for long-distance relationships?
Exposure
• Exposure increases liking, familiarity breeds fondness
Attraction
Physical attractiveness
People prefer others who are physically attractive
What makes someone physically attractive?
• For both sexes:
– Facial symmetry (asymmetry can be a signal of
genetic abnormality and lack of resistance to
parasites)
– Unique cultural standards
Attraction
For women:
youthful appearance (clear skin, full lips, ) and a
.70 waist to hip ratio of about .70 (signal of
fertility)
average features (symmetry, carrier hypothesis)
For men
health, dominance, and affluence (signals
capacity to support and protect)
“Power is the world’s greatest aphrodisiac” Henry
Kissinger
Attraction
Similarity
Common attitudes, interests, abilities (IQ of
spouses correlates about .50)
Blind luck, randomness
Are the spouses of identical twins similar?
(No)
Love
Components of love:
physical arousal (adrenaline makes the heart
grow fonder--studies: running in place, walking
over bridge)
Equity in social exchange (both partners receive
in exchange in proportion to what they give)
Self disclosure/intimacy (revealing intimate details
about one’s self)
Commitment
Love
Types of love
Romantic love
Intimacy + passion
Companionate love
intimacy + commitment
“love makes the time pass, and time makes love
pass”
Summary of the Day
Aggression
Prejudice
Altruism
Attraction
Love