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Social Psychology Notes

This document provides an overview of key topics in social psychology covered across multiple chapters of a textbook. Some of the major themes discussed include: 1) Social cognition and how people perceive and make sense of the social world around them, including influences like naive realism and different thinking styles. 2) Methodological approaches in social psychology like observational studies and experiments, and how to balance internal and external validity. 3) The self and self-concept, including theories of self-awareness, social comparison, and self-presentation. Motivations around self-esteem and self-regulation are also examined. 4) Social influences on cognition, such as priming, conformity, and attribution biases

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100% found this document useful (2 votes)
330 views13 pages

Social Psychology Notes

This document provides an overview of key topics in social psychology covered across multiple chapters of a textbook. Some of the major themes discussed include: 1) Social cognition and how people perceive and make sense of the social world around them, including influences like naive realism and different thinking styles. 2) Methodological approaches in social psychology like observational studies and experiments, and how to balance internal and external validity. 3) The self and self-concept, including theories of self-awareness, social comparison, and self-presentation. Motivations around self-esteem and self-regulation are also examined. 4) Social influences on cognition, such as priming, conformity, and attribution biases

Uploaded by

Sara Shao
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Ch.

1: Introducing Social Psychology


● construal : how people perceive, interpret, comprehend social world
● People’s construals fueled by need to be accurate and need to feel good about
ourselves
● The goal of social psychology is to identify psychological properties that make almost
everyone susceptible to social influence, regardless of social class or culture
● Naive realism - underestimating how subjectively we see the world compared to
objectively

Ch. 2: Methodology
● Observational: ethnography, archival analysis
● Psychological realism - extent to which psychological process in experiment is similar to
real life
● Basic dilemma of the social psychologist - tradeoff between internal and external validity
● New frontiers of research: cross-cultural, social neuroscience, online studies, IAT

Ch. 3: Social Cognition


● Analytical thinking style - focusing on main objects, Western cultures
● Holistic thinking style - looking at context, Eastern cultures
● Counterfactual thinking - mentally changing the past and imagining a different outcome
● Covariation model - when someone behaves a certain way, you evaluate how they’ve
responded to similar situations in the past: uses consensus (how others react to same
stimulus), distinctiveness (how they react to other stimulus), consistency (if response to
stimulus is consistent across time and circumstance)
● Perceptual salience influences how we view people

8/27
● Social psych is the study of how individuals come to think about, connect with, and
influence others
○ Emphasis on social cognition, social influence, social relations
○ Person x situation interaction, Kurt Lewin
● Illusory superiority (the above average effect), bias blind spot (others more prone to
bias), below average effect (I’m worse than others at things that are hard), hindsight bias
● Power of social construal study: observers rated caller and callee as more warm and
friendly when picture of callee was an attractive vs. unattractive woman
● Wisdom of proverbs study

9/3
● Credibility of studies: replication, diverse samples, controls for biases and confounds
● Aims of psych research
○ Causes (cause/effect direction)
○ Components (underlying reasons/processes)
○ Contingencies (qualifying results, when or for whom is the connection strongest)
● Measures: observations, self-reports, lab assessments
● Assessing methods: external validity (generalizability) and internal validity (experimental
design), pragmatics (logistics), significance, ethics

9/8
● Facebook study
○ people who received negative feedback spent more time on facebook compared
to other websites
○ Emotional contagion study
● Attribution theory
○ Discounting (decreasing weight of one attribution) and augmenting (increasing
weight of one attribution)
○ Fundamental attribution error: just world, lack of motivation to consider less
salient influences
● Schemas - mental representations, generalizations, categorizations, theories about our
environment, can vary based on individual experiences

9/10
● Illusory correlation - seeing a correlation that isn’t there
● Schemas as self-fulfilling prophecies
● Planning fallacy - consistently overoptimistic when planning, failing to remember past
behavior
● Affective forecasting (predicting how you will feel about an event)
○ Undermined by immune neglect (underestimating how well you adapt), focalism
(underestimate impact of other events)
● Controlled and automatic information processing - social psych focuses on triggers and
consequences of automatic cognition

9/15
● Priming - have automatic consequences for how we think/feel/behave
○ Subliminal priming: present primer without conscious awareness
○ Supraliminal priming: present primer consciously but disguised as task
○ Types of primes: semantic, motivational, affective, metaphoric, embodied
(physical)
● Habit formation: aided by routine, specific time, places, tracking progress, keeping it
enjoyable and feasible
● Chameleon effect - people tend to automatically mimic others, especially people high in
perspective taking
● Difficult to regulate social cognition: stroop effect, ironic monitoring (don't think of ___)
● Self concept differs in complexity, content, and configuration
● Sense of self/multitudes develop from rumination, being told

Ch. 5: The Self


● Self-awareness theory - evaluating ourselves objectively by comparing behavior to
internal standards/values
● Self-perception theory - evaluating ourselves by observing our own behaviors, but only
when we’re unsure how we feel
● Intrinsic, extrinsic motivation, overjustification effect
● Performance-contingent reward may increase interest as opposed to task-contingent
rewards, which may decrease interest, be careful not to put extra pressure by using
performance-contingent reward
● Social comparison theory
● Social tuning - adopting other people’s attitudes
● Implementation intentions - “if-then”, specific plans about avoiding temptations to fulfill
long-term goals
● Impression management - trying to manage other people’s impressions of you
● Ingratiation - using flattery to make oneself more likable
● Self-handicapping - making external excuses for failures in order to preserve image and
self-esteem, reported vs. behavioral

9/17
● Cocktail party effect, self-reference effect - self-relevant info is paid more attention to,
processed and remembered more thoroughly
● Motivated to see ourselves accurately but also in good light
● Self-presentation has cognitive, social and motivational function
● High self-monitor - focuses on being the right person for a situation
● Low self-monitor - focuses on being consistent across situations

Self Regulation Reading


● Three component processes
○ Goal selection
■ expectancy-value framework - expectancy of achieving x value of
achieving/ not achieving
○ Preparation for action - implementation plan
○ Cybernetic cycle of behavior
■ TOTE: test, operate, test, exit
● Shielding intention - putting irrelevant tasks out of your mind
● High private self-consciousness - spending a lot of time examining own thoughts/feelings
● Defensive pessimism - over exaggerating chances of failure to motivate them to be more
prepared
● Performance oriented vs. mastering (learning) oriented
● Extrinsic motivation stifles creativity

Ch. 6: Self-Esteem
● Post-decision dissonance, irrevocability hypothesis
● Lowballing - creating the illusion of irrevocability to get someone to commit
● Justification of effort
● External justification vs. internal justification (requires counterattitudinal behavior -
changing belief to match behavior)
● The Ben Franklin effect - liking someone more after you do a favor for them
● Insufficient punishment
● Self-evaluation maintenance theory - dissonance when a close friend outperforms you in
an area that is important to you

9/22: Self-assessment
● Social nature: others serve as comparison points, points of connection, “reflected” glory
● Sociometer theory - self esteem reflects sense of belonging
● Local ladder effect - comparing yourself to people around you/ most accessible to you
● Counterfactual reasoning - thinking about how you could’ve done things differently
(bronze/silver model study)
● Spotlight effect
● Facebook study: high/low self esteem spend same time on facebook but low self esteem
posts more negatively for less social reward
● Interpretations of negative feedback: people who interpret negative feedback personally
(my fault), pervasively (I’m bad at everything), and permanently (I’m never going to get
better) are more likely to be depressed
● Self-compassion - self-kindness, common humanity, mindful acceptance

9/24: self-regulation
● Motivation - what are we trying to become
● Volition - how are we working towards new self
● (Goal → pursuit → assessment → feedback) loop
● Behavior = expectation x value
● 5 fundamental needs (BUCET): belonging, understanding, control, enhancement, trust
● Self discrepancy theory - want to achieve ideal and ought self
● Overjustification (crowding out intrinsic motivation) vs. insufficient justification

9/29
● Process visualizations better than outcome visualizations
● Volitional challenges involve planning and executing
● Implementation intention - specifying when, where, how can be helpful
○ Unless plans too rigid, not enjoyable, not reasonable
● Ego depletion (depletion of self control) - radish study
● Optimal amount of choice: not too much or too little (no choice, 6 choice, 10 choice)
● Marshmallow study
● Planning for distraction
● Importance of self-efficacy and pygmalion effect, weight of expectations
● Ability vs. effort attributions - effort attributions are better
● Grit - perseverance of effort and consistency of interest over time
○ Costs: sunk cost, rumination, psychological stress
○ difficulty disengaging: future plan to return and suitable replacement help us
disengage, parents of child with cancer study
Ch. 7: Attitudes and Attitude Change
● Cognitively based, affectively based, behaviorally based attitudes
● Implicit attitudes rooted more in childhood, explicit attitudes rooted more in adulthood
● Attitudes predict spontaneous behavior only when accessible
● Theory of planned behavior
○ Specific attitudes
○ Subjective norms - view of how others will perceive certain behavior
○ Perceived behavioral control - how easy or difficult the behavior will be
● Yale attitude change approach
○ Source of communication
○ Nature of communication
○ Nature of audience
● Elaboration likelihood model - theory for when people will be persuaded by what
○ Central route if personally relevant and attention/energy level is good
○ Peripheral route
■ fear-based communication - fear factor and information on how to reduce
fear
■ Heuristic-systematic model of persuasion - if we feel good we must have
positive attitude toward something
■ Subliminal messages - not much evidence that they elicit behavioral
change when encountered in everyday life, but sometimes have effect in
laboratory
● Attitude inoculation - thinking about potential arguments against your attitude
● Reactance theory - like reverse psychology, due to personal freedom being threatened

10/1
1. Functions of attitudes
○ Instrumental: bring reward, avoid punishment
○ Ego-defense: protect sense of self
○ Expression of values
○ Knowledge function: understand reality
2. attitude/behavior link constrained by salience, situational pressure, degree of attitude
○ Chinese couple study
3. Theory of planned behavior - behavior predicted by attitude, subjective norms, perceived
behavioral control (believed ability to perform and/or affect outcome)
4. Multiattribute model of attitude measurement - sum(belief*weight)
5. Implicit attitudes measured with reaction times (RTs) - avoids social desirability but
challenging to measure and interpret
6. Reactance - responding strongly to threats to personal freedom
7. Attitude inoculation - immunizing people to attempts to change attitude by exposing them
to counterarguments
○ Smoking study
8. Who said what to whom
○ Who - liking and credibility
○ What - appropriateness/relevance and presentation, audio vs. written, emotion,
accessibility
○ Audience - initial attitude, relevance to audience, capacity to understand,
snacking or not snacking
9. Elaboration likelihood model - central vs. peripheral route persuasion, importance of
arguments vs. cues

Ch. 8: Conformity and Obedience


● Private acceptance vs. public compliance
● When people conform to informational social influence
○ Ambiguous situation
○ Crisis
○ Other people are experts
● Normative social influence
● Social impact theory: group’s influence depends on
○ Strength of importance
○ Immediacy
○ Number
● Idiosyncrasy credits - conforming earns you credits to not conform later on
● Minority influence: minority consistently expresses same view over and over to influence
majority
● Injunctive norms - should do, descriptive norms - actually do
● Boomerang effect - underperforming and over performing individuals will both conform to
be closer to the descriptive norm

10/8: social influence


● Responding to others, conforming to others, authority of others
● Mere presence effect: cyclists, cockroaches, easy vs. hard tasks, generalized
drive/arousal hypothesis
● Social loafing/ Ringelmann effect, chameleon effect
● Normative conformity: asch line study and candid camera elevator
● Informational conformity: looking up study and autokinetic (light) study
● Social impact theory - people conform normatively based on group size, group
importance, group immediacy
● Illusion of independence (bias blind spot)
● Injunctive vs. descriptive norms
● Normative focus theory: one piece of litter study, how salient desc. norm is matters
● Kelman’s typology: compliance (law), identification (close others), internalization

10/13
● Basis of social power - reward/punishment, legitimate authority, expertise/info
● Costs of resistance - group will try to bring you back, if it fails they will distance
● Conforming for cognitive closure, low self-esteem, authoritarian personality
● Resisting authority - awareness of allies, source of pressure, motivation, social standing
Chapter 9: Group Processes
● Social facilitation - cockroach study
○ Arousal caused by evaluation apprehension
● Deindividuation - makes people conform to group dorms, decreases accountability
● Process loss
○ Failing to share unique info
■ Transactive memory - some people are responsible for some memories,
combined memory is more effective
○ Groupthink - conformity when making decisions
○ Group polarization - making more extreme decisions than initial inclinations
● Leadership
○ Great person theory - key traits make a person a good leader in all situations,
does not seem to be true
○ Transactional leaders - short term, transformational leaders - long term
○ Contingency theory of leadership - effectiveness of leadership depends on
leader, followers, and situation
■ Task-oriented vs. relationship-oriented leaders
● Social dilemma: if every individual is selfish, everyone in group will suffer, ex. prisoner’s
dilemma
● Threats are not an effective way to resolve conflict:
○ Acme trucking study: Possibility of threat did not increase performance
regardless of communication

Lecture 10/20
● Group: two or more people who interact and are interdependent in the sense that their
needs and goals may cause them to influence each other
● Entitativity: feeling like coherent whole, influenced by similarity, common fate, proximity,
goodness of form, resistance to intrusion (isolation), impacts how members in and out of
the group perceive the group
● Degree and types of groups
○ Non-groups (strangers in park)
○ Groupings (people in line) - dependence and influence
○ Groups (teams) - dependence, influence, shared identity, structured relations
● Individuals brainstorm better alone than in groups, despite beliefs to contrary
○ Explanations for productivity loss: evaluation apprehension, social loafing,
production blocking
● Process loss, group polarization
● Social dilemmas
○ Commons - how much do I take, public goods - how much do I give
○ Nuts game - 65% of groups initially fail to leave any nuts for first replenishment
● What influences cooperation: communication, social norms, reward/punishment
● groupthink - A poor group decision resulting from a flawed process and strong conformity
pressures
○ High threat produces better solutions will low cohesiveness, worse solutions with
high cohesiveness
● Wise crowds: diversity and independence of thought, specialization of thought

10/22
● Characteristics of leaders: charisma, intellectual stimulation, inspiration, personal
connection
● Expectation states theory of leadership - Status is based on the value of the member for
reaching the group’s goals.
● Fundamental leadership styles
○ Authoritarian (Autocratic) - leads to more productivity when present, less when
absent
○ Participative (Democratic) - leader values group input
○ Directive - hands-on
○ Delegative - hands-off
● Transactional leaders - Leaders who offer clear short-term reward/punishment

10/27 and 10/29


● Group bias/ prejudice - negative attitude about group
● Group stereotype - generalized belief about group
● Causes - upbringing, media, limited experience, shortcuts and automaticity
● Perceptual accentuation - line study
● Even in minimal group paradigm, people favor own group
● Ingroup bias and outgroup homogeneity
● Vivid examples and overestimation
● Illusory correlation, we overestimate group differences

Chapter 13: Prejudice


● Revealing implicit biases: bogus pipeline, implicit association task (IAT), activation
● Social identity threat - threat when others evaluate you as part of a group rather than as
an individual, based on salience
● Contact effect and extended contact effect
● Interdependence - working together to achieve a common goal
● Jigsaw classroom created to promote racial integration, creates interdependence

Lecture 11/3
● Biased perceptions: race and violence/aggression
● Weapons bias
● Stereotyping behavior can rebound after suppression
● Discontinuity effect - greater competitiveness between different, interacting groups
relative to competitiveness displayed among individuals
● Competitive spiral - expect hostility/competition → act in ways that attract competition
● More likely to be prejudiced when self-esteem is low or when angry
● Stereotypes conserve cognitive resources
● Possible stereotype effects: arousal/stress, lowered expectations
● Why are stereotypes difficult to eliminate: rooted in childhood, unconscious, ingrained in
media
● What can help eliminate biases: awareness, positive interactions, cooperation, contact
hypothesis/ extended-contact hypothesis under common goal, equal status
● Framing, priming

Lecture 11/5
● Classic Frustration-Aggression Theory: frustration/ blocked goal → instigation vs.
withdrawal → outward vs. inward aggression → direct vs. displaced
● Revised Frustration-Aggression Theory: frustration → anger + aggression cues →
aggression
● Weapons cue, black clothing cue
● Broken windows theory: maintaining urban environments in a well-ordered condition may
stop further vandalism, graffiti (norms)
● Social Learning Theory of Aggression - Bandura, children learn aggressive behavior
through observation, ex. Childhood media violence
○ Ingredients: attention, retention, reproduction, motivation
● Media violence more influential when - aggressor is attractive, justified, realistic, not
shown to have consequences, negative family environment interaction

Chapter 11: Prosocial Behavior


● Social exchange theory, kin selection, group selection (as opposed to classical natural
change)
● empathy-altruism hypothesis: “Carol study”
● Altruistic personality
● Religion makes people more altruistic towards people of the same religion
● Urban overload hypothesis - people living in cities are constantly bombarded with
stimulation and that they keep to themselves to avoid being overwhelmed
● Bystander effect
○ Noticing event, interpret situation as emergency, assume responsibility, know
appropriate form of assistance, implement decision
● Increasing altruism: increasing volunteerism, prosocial video games (media influence),
awareness of barriers

Lecture 11/10
● What contributes to prosocial behavior
○ Religion, reciprocity norm, fairness, kin protection, similarity, positive mood
● Egoistic helping - to ultimately increase own welfare, altruistic helping - helping out of
empathy
● Batson’s empathy-altruism model - perceiving distress → feeling distress or empathy →
egoistic vs. altruistic helping → helping to relieve own distress vs. helping because you
feel their distress
● Challenges of helping: lack of time, not realizing need, not knowing how to help
○ bystander effect: pluralistic ignorance and diffusion of responsibility
● Increasing helping behavior: personal appeals, personal responsibility (someone they
would meet later), personal shame, role models, empathy training, reduce ambiguity and
restraints

Chapter 12: Aggression


● aggression - intentional behavior aimed at causing either physical or psychological pain
● Hostile aggression - stems from feelings of anger
● Instrumental aggression - aggression as intermediary step towards non-aggressive goal
● Challenge hypothesis - testosterone is responsible for aggression
○ Dual-hormone hypothesis - testosterone and cortisol interact, lead to aggression
when testosterone is high but cortisol is low
● culture of honor - even small disputes put a man’s reputation for toughness on the line,
requiring him to respond aggressively to restore his status
● Relational aggression - bullying, manipulation, usually more covert
● Bobo doll study
● frustration-aggression theory - people’s perception that they are being prevented from
attaining a goal will increase the probability of an aggressive response
● Weapons effect - increase in aggression from mere presence of weapon
● Sexual script
● Why media increases aggressive tendencies in some people
○ Norms, observational learning, misattribution, habituation, self-fulfilling prophecy
● Death penalty generally unrelated to homocide rates

Chapter 10: Attraction and Relationships


● What predicts attraction
○ Proximity (propinquity) effect, mere exposure effect
○ Similarity: opinions, personality, interests, experiences, appearance, genetics
○ Reciprocal liking
○ Physical attractiveness
● Halo effect - assumption that if a person has one good trait, they have many good traits
● Side that does the approaching is less picky, feel more in control
● Sternberg’s triangular theory of love: intimacy, passion, commitment
● Social exchange theory - rewards vs. costs, + beliefs about what they deserve
(comparison level) and probability of finding a better relationship with someone else
(comparison level for alternatives)
● Investment model
● Equity theory
○ Exchange vs. communal relationships

11/12
● Attraction by association, attraction in context (bridge study)
● Two-stage model of attraction - filter out those too dissimilar, then select for those who
are similar
● Good to be similarly attractive
● What is beautiful is good effect
● Beauty: symmetry, averageness
● Women want someone agreeable and dominant, prefer masculinity when ovulating,
femininity when not ovulating
● Status influenced attractiveness ratings for women rating men, did not for men rating
women
● Normative information impacts attractiveness rating for women more than men

11/17
● Exchange vs. communal relationship
● Power decreases perspective taking
● Triangular model of love:
○ Passion - Emotional state of high bodily arousal
○ Intimacy - A feeling of closeness & mutual understanding. Mutual concern for
each other’s welfare and happiness
○ Commitment - A conscious decision that remains constant
● Marriage shift - As relationship progresses, so does your desire for your partner to see
you as you actually are ( not simply in the most favorable light)
● The Michelangelo Effect - close partners can “sculpt” each other in ways that help each
of them attain valued goals/ ideal self
● Equity theory
● What causes relationships to end
○ Inequity
○ Jealousy
○ Social allergies - hypersensitive reactions of annoyance or disgust to a repeated
behavior of a partner, increase over time
○ Contempt
○ Boredom
● Maintaining relationships:
○ Expect change and react constructively to conflicts
○ Don’t undermine your partner: Interact in positive ways, don’t make your partner
jealous. Focus on each other and not on other potential mates
○ Be partners in success. React well to positive events
○ Work to keep having fun
● Relationship commitment depends on... SATISFACTION in terms of rewards, costs, and
comparisons, ALTERNATIVES that compare favorably, INVESTMENT in the relationship
that would be lost by ending it
● Process of breaking up:
○ Interpersonal Phase - Evaluate/criticize partner’s behavior
○ Dyadic Phase - Discuss/negotiate “the relationship”
○ Social Phase - Negotiate breakup w/partner; present breakup to others
○ Interpersonal Phase - “get over it”; analyze what went wrong
● Loneliness cycle
Chapter 15: Health
● Importance of perceived control
● Flight or flight vs. tend and befriend response (seeking social support)
● Social support - perceiving that others are responsive and receptive to one’s needs
○ Visible vs. invisible support
● Reframing through writing helps give traumatic events meaning

11/19
● Resilience based on: How individuals evaluate/appraise events, Their sense of control
over them, Their capacity to avoid them, The support they have in dealing with them,
(evaluation, attribution, sense of support)
● negative mood who failed set a minimal standard far above their expectations
● The Challenge of Happiness - Knowing what makes us happy, what will make us happy,
Knowing others’ happiness (and struggle), Knowing how to regain happiness,
Understanding the limits of happiness and benefits of unhappiness
● Extraversion most correlated with happiness
● Hedonic treadmill (adaptation), immune neglect, affective forecasts
● Being grateful leads to higher patience, may not undermine motivation or lessen desire
for more

12/1
● Expressing emotion
○ Paralinguistic - nonverbal qualities of speech, ex. Tone
○ Visible - actions, behavior, ex. Gestures
● Deception - can be spotted from things we don’t try to control
○ Voice pitch, blinking, hesitancy, inconsistent signals (inter channel discrepancy)
● Emotion regulation
○ The selection/modification of the situation (Avoiding or changing situations that
trigger affect)
○ The deployment of attention and cognition (Ignoring or reappraising emotion
cues)
○ Modulating response (Suppressing emotional responses to triggers)
● Arousal makes us share more with others
● Negativity bias can motivate change, highlight learning opportunities
● Positive mood increases self-handicapping and stereotyping, (maybe due to
contentment?)
● Broaden-and-Build Theory - Positive emotions broaden one's awareness and encourage
novel, varied, and exploratory thoughts and actions, positive emotions as resource
● Threats to health: health belief model: self-efficacy
● The Transtheoretical Model: Change Over Time
○ Motivational stages (wanting to change), volitional stages (making change),
continual stages (maintaining change)
Chapter 14: Sustainability
● Keeping track of consumption, giving concrete feedback on savings
● Introducing competition (office lights study), inducing hypocrisy (shower study)
● What makes people happy: satisfying relationships, flow, experiences not things, helping
others
● Affective forecasting: how you will feel about a future event

12/3
● POSSIBLE APPLICATION SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY AND SUSTAINABILITY
○ Conveying Information: Persuasion, Resistance and Reactance, The
Importance of social norms, The importance of considering social networks
○ Recognizing conflicts: Group behavior, loafing and de-individuation, The
conflicts of social dilemmas, Compliance with authority, Perspective-taking and
prosocial behavior
○ Changing and maintaining behavior: The automaticity of behavior, Challenge
of self-control, Importance of feedback, Challenge of maintenance over time

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