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Questions and Answers
According to the passage, which of the following is NOT one of the big ideas in social psychology?
The tendency to exaggerate one's ability to have foreseen the outcome of an event after learning the outcome is known as:
Which of the following is an integrated set of principles that explain and predict observed events?
The process of assigning participants to the conditions of an experiment such that all persons have the same chance of being in a given condition is called:
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Which of the following is the variable being measured in an experiment?
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Which of the following is a survey procedure in which every person in the population being studied has an equal chance of inclusion?
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Which of the following is the definition of collectivism?
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What is the main idea behind the self-knowledge concept?
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What is the main idea behind the planning fallacy?
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What is the main idea behind the impact bias?
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What is the main idea behind the dual attitude system?
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What is the main idea behind the terror management theory?
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What is the term used to describe the belief that others are paying more attention to our appearance and behavior than they really are?
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Which of the following is the term used to describe the concept of giving priority to one's own goals over group goals and defining one's identity in terms of personal attributes rather than group identification?
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What is the term used to describe the pleasure or joy that one may feel at the misfortune of others?
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Which of the following terms refers to the study of studies?
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What is the term used to describe the degree to which an experiment absorbs and involves its participants?
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Which of the following refers to the beliefs about oneself that organize and guide the processing of self-relevant information?
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What is the term used to describe the tendency to perceive a relationship between two variables when none actually exists?
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What is the term used to describe the persistence of one's initial beliefs even after the basis for those beliefs has been discredited?
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What is the term used to describe the tendency to incorporate misleading information into one's memory of an event?
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Which of the following is a theory that explains how people attribute the causes of others' behavior?
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What is the term used to describe the tendency to attribute someone's behavior to their personality traits rather than situational factors?
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What is the term used to describe a belief that leads to its own fulfillment?
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Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of self-handicapping behavior?
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Which of the following best describes the concept of embodied cognition?
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Which of the following is a characteristic of automatic or implicit thinking?
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The tendency to presume that someone or something belongs to a particular group if it resembles a typical member is known as the:
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Which of the following is NOT a characteristic of self-presentation?
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Which of the following cognitive processes is associated with the tendency to be more confident than correct and to overestimate the accuracy of one's beliefs?
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Study Notes
Social Psychology
- Social Psychology is the scientific study of how people think about, influence, and relate to one another.
- Big Ideas in Social Psychology include:
- Social Thinking: constructing our social reality
- Social Influence: shaping behavior
- Social Relations: biological behavior
Biases and Errors
- Planning Fallacy: tendency to underestimate how long it will take to complete a task
- Impact Bias: overestimating the enduring impact of emotion-causing events
- Self-serving Bias: tendency to perceive oneself favorably
- Unrealistic Optimism: expecting a personal future outcome to be more favorable than suggested by an objective standard
- False Consensus Effect: overestimating the commonality of one's opinions
- False Uniqueness Effect: underestimating the commonality of one's abilities
- Illusory Correlation: perception of a relationship where none exists
- Belief Perseverance: persistence of initial conceptions despite discrediting evidence
Attribution Theory
- Attribution Theory: explaining how people explain others' behavior
- Dispositional Attribution: attributing behavior to the person's disposition and traits
- Situational Attribution: attributing behavior to the environment
- Misattribution: mistakenly attributing behavior to the environment
- Fundamental Attribution Error: underestimating situational influences and overestimating dispositional influences on others' behavior
Self and Social Identity
- Collectivism: giving priority to group goals and defining one's identity accordingly
- Individualism: giving priority to personal goals and defining one's identity in terms of personal attributes
- Self-esteem: person's overall self-evaluation or sense of self-worth
- Self-efficacy: sense of being competent and effective
- Narcissism: inflated sense of self
- Self-Concept: what we know and believe about ourselves
- Self-Schema: beliefs about self that organize and guide the process of self-relevant information
Research Methods
- Theory: integrated set of principles that explain and predict observed events
- Hypothesis: testable proposition that describes a relationship between events
- Random Sampling: survey procedure in which every person in the population being studied has an equal chance of inclusion
- Sample Size: number of participants in a study
- Framing: the way a question or issue is posed, influencing people's decisions and expressed opinions
- Correlational Research: studying naturally occurring relationships among variables
- Experimental Research: studying cause-effect relationships by manipulating one or more factors while controlling others
- Random Assignment: process of assigning participants to experiment conditions
- Independent Variable: experimental factor being manipulated
- Dependent Variable: variable being measured
- Replication: repeating a research study
- Meta-analysis: study of studies
Self in a Social World
- Spotlight Effect: believing others are paying more attention to our appearance and behavior than they really are
- Illusion of Transparency: believing our concealed emotions are easily readable by others
- Self-presentation: expressing oneself to create a favorable impression
- Self-monitoring: being attuned to the way one presents oneself in social situations
- Self-handicapping: protecting one's self-image with behaviors that create a handy excuse for later failure
Social Beliefs and Judgments
- Automatic Processing: effortless, habitual thinking without awareness
- Controlled Processing: deliberate, reflective, and conscious thinking
- Priming: activating particular associations in memory
- Embodied Cognition: mutual influence of bodily sensations on cognitive preferences and social judgments
- Overconfidence Phenomenon: overestimating the accuracy of one's beliefs
- Confirmation Bias: searching for information that confirms one's preconceptions
- Heuristics: thinking strategies that enable quick, efficient judgments
- Representativeness Heuristic: presuming someone or something belongs to a particular group based on resemblance
- Availability Heuristic: judging likelihood based on availability in memory
- Counterfactual Thinking: imagining alternative scenarios and outcomes that might have happened but didn't
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Description
Test your knowledge on the basic concepts of social psychology including social thinking, social influence, social relations, research methods, and theories. Explore key ideas in social psychology such as how people construct social reality, shape behavior, and interact with one another.