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Step Up To: Psychology Social PSI

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Step Up To: Psychology Social PSI. Psychology , Eighth Edition By David G. Myers. Chapter 18: Social Psychology. Conform. You’ve got an Attitude. It’s just natural. Social Thinking. Modules. Do the right thing. 56. 55. 57. 58. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation
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Step Up To: Psychology Social PSI Psychology, Eighth Edition By David G. Myers
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Page 1: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

Step Up To: Psychology

Social PSI

Psychology, Eighth EditionBy David G. Myers

Page 2: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

Chapter 18: Social Psychology

Social Thinking

You’ve got an Attitude

Conform

It’s just natural.

Do the right thing.

555657

58

Page 3: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

1. While watching a homeless person beg on the street corner, George thinks, “He must be lazy. If he would just get a job, he wouldn’t have to beg.” It is likely George is illustrating:

• A) good judgment.• B) fundamental attribution error.• C) political bias.• D) stereotyping.

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Page 4: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

2. Asking for a small favor to increase your chances of being successful when asking for a larger one later is called:

• A) bait-and-switch technique.• B) a con-artist strategy.• C) attitude adjustment.• D) the foot-in-the-door phenomenon.

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Page 5: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

3. Phillip Zimbardo conducted the Stanford Prison Experiment in the 70’s. His results could have predicted problems of prisoner abuse at Abu Ghraib in that:

• A) people will follow direct orders of a superior when in the military.

• B) when we play a role long enough, social norms can be as powerful as orders.

• C) we will easily scapegoat those different from ourselves.

• D) people can not resist pressure to perform evil action. 732

Page 6: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

4. When we experience _____, we feel tension when our actions do not coincide with our beliefs.

• A) cognitive dissonance.• B) actor-observer discrepancy.• C) personal perception.• D) self-serving bias.

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Page 7: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

5. When we experience cognitive dissonance, the response is most often:

• A) to change our behavior to agree with our attitudes.

• B) depression and self hatred.• C) to change our attitudes in the direction of

our behavior.• D) to feel extremely guilty for acting against

our beliefs.

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Page 8: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

6. Solomon Asch’s experiment about how perceptions may be influenced by others resulted in:

• A) more than a third of the people changing their opinions to agree with others.

• B) most people changing their opinions to agree with others.

• C) most everyone ignored what others said.• D) a small minority changed their opinions to

agree with others.

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Page 9: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

7. For teens, it is especially important to dress and act like their peers in order to be accepted by the group. This pressure to conform is called:

• A) informational social influence.• B) ethnocentrism.• C) out-group homogeneity.• D) normative social influence.

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Page 10: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

8. The results of Milgram’s experiment found:

• A) the subjects who continued knew it wasn’t real.

• B) most subjects discontinued when shock levels became extreme.

• C) most subjects continued to deliver the highest level of shock.

• D) subjects had to be threatened to deliver dangerous levels of shock.

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Page 11: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

9. Further experiments by Milgram helped to identify factors influencing the outcome of destructive obedience. These included all of the following except:

• A) they volunteered to participate.• B) being told the learners were not really being

harmed.• C) the repetitive escalation of the task.• D) the situation, or context, in which the

obedience occurred.

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Page 12: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

10. Milgram did not require his subjects to shock people at the highest level at the beginning, but to build up to it. He used the:

• A) cognitive dissonance theory.• B) foot-in-the-door phenomenon.• C) normative social influence.• D) social exchange theory.

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Page 13: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

11. According to social facilitation, if you are a professional golfer, you are likely to perform better if: • A) you are playing alone with a friendly

audience.• B) no one is watching.• C) you are playing by yourself.• D) you are playing against competition with a

friendly audience.

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Page 14: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

12. When people are working in a group on a project rather than individually, there is likely to be less effort by some, called:

• A) social loafing.• B) competition.• C) self-serving bias.• D) cognitive dissonance.

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Page 15: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

13. When a group’s goal of harmony takes precedence over rational decision-making, they become involved in the process of:

• A) social cognition.• B) group polarization.• C) group think.• D) fundamental attribution error.

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Page 16: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

14. An example of group polarization is:

• A) conservatives become more extreme after listening to conservative talk radio.

• B) people believing they were abducted become more convinced after chatting on the internet with other abductees.

• C) prejudiced individuals get together and become more prejudiced.

• D) all of the above.

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Page 17: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

15. When people lose themselves when in an angry mob, this illustrates the process of:

• A) self-serving bias.• B) deindividuation.• C) group think.• D) actor-observer discrepancy.

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Page 18: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

16. Prejudice is defined as:

• A) taking negative action toward people who belong to a different social group.

• B) speaking badly about people who belong to a different social group.

• C) an unjustifiable attitude toward a group and its members.

• D) all of the above.

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Page 19: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

17. The _____ theory offers an explanation that prejudice offers an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame.

• A) scapegoat• B) prejudice• C) underdog• D) out-group

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Page 20: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

18. Rape victims are sometimes blamed for wearing too revealing clothes and, “getting what they deserved.” This false conclusion is based on:

• A) the just-world hypothesis.• B) fundamental attribution error.• C) social categorization.• D) social exchange theory.

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Page 21: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

19. Recent experiments of men viewing violent pornography conclude:

• A) this can serve to provide an outlet for bottled-up feelings, thus reducing violent acts.

• B) this increases violent acts toward women.• C) there is no effect from viewing violent

pornography.• D) men viewing such films are quickly repulsed

by such images.

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Page 22: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

20. “By pursuing our own self-interests and not trusting others, we can end up losers.” This statement is illustrated in:

• A) the Jigsaw Classroom.• B) the in-group, out-group study.• C) Zimbardo’s prison experiment.• D) the social trap game.

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Page 23: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

21. The deep, affectionate attachment in a lasting, mature love is called:

• A) passionate love.• B) marital bliss.• C) companionate love.• D) altruism.

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Page 24: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

22. Your text mentions two key ingredients to a lasting, loving relationship. One is equity, the other is:

• A) attractiveness.• B) compassion.• C) self-disclosure.• D) acceptance.

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Page 25: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

23. Kitty Genovese was killed while others watched and listened. They knew others were watching. Their behavior is explained the:

• A) apathy theory.• B) prosocial behavior

phenomenon. • C) altruism.• D) bystander effect.

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Page 26: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

24: According to the bystander effect, if you needed help you would be more likely to get it if:

• A) many people were present.• B) few people were present.• C) someone else was also helping.• D) no one knew you.

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Page 27: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

25. According to social exchange theory:

• A) we will help if we expect something in return.

• B) we will help if the cost of helping is not too high.

• C) when we help others we expect them to help us.

• D) we help those who we feel are most deserving.

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Page 28: Step Up To:  Psychology Social PSI

Answers

1. B

2. D

3. B

4. A

5. C

6. B

7. D

8. C

9. D

10. B

11. D

12. A

13. C

14. D

15. B

16. C

17. A

18. A

19. B

20. D

21. C

22. C

23. D

24. B

25. B


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