Psych) CORRECT 100%
Norman Triplett - ANSWERfirst study of social psychology; people perform better on
familiar tasks when in the presence of others than alone.
William McDougall and E.H. Ross - ANSWERBoth published the first textbooks in
social psychology.
Verplank - ANSWERsocial approval influences behavior; found that the course of a
conversation changes dramatically based on feedback (approval) from others.
Reinforcement Theory - ANSWERbehavior is motivated by anticipated rewards
free-choice dissonance - ANSWERoccurs in a situation where a person makes a
choice between several desirable alternatives
forced-compliance dissonance - ANSWERoccurs when an individual is forced into
behaving in a manner that is inconsistent with his or her beliefs or attitudes
post-decisional dissonance - ANSWERstate of psychological dissonance that often
occurs after making an important decision
Albert Bandura - ANSWERbehavior is learned through imitation (Bobo doll
experiment)
Role Theory - ANSWERthe perspective that people are aware of the social roles
they are expected to fill, and much of their observable behavior can be attributed to
adopting those roles
Attitudes - ANSWERlikes and dislikes; affinities for and aversions to things, people,
ideas, etc.
Consistency Theories - ANSWERpeople prefer consistency and will change or resist
changing attitudes based upon this preference
Fritz Heider's Balance Theory - ANSWERbalance exists when the person we're
talking about (P), some other person (O), and a thing, idea or some other person (X)
fit together harmoniously. When imbalance occurs, there will be stress, and a
tendency to remove the stress by achieving balance.
Leon Festinger's Cognitive Dissonance Theory - ANSWERThe conflict that you feel
when your attitudes are not in sync with your behaviors. It can be reduced by
changing dissonant elements or by adding consonant elements.