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Summary Social Psychology Chapter 7

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Summarized whole book?
No
Which chapters are summarized?
Chapter 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9, 10
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Social Psychology – Chapter 7

Sources of Liking Based on Social Interacton

Similarity

 Aristoteles: similarity hypothesis – the more similar two people are to each other, the
more they tend to like each other
 Sir Francis Galton: correlatonal data on married couples  spouses resembled one
another in many respects
 Newcomb: similarity produces/predicts atracton
 Complementarites – atracton of opposites  mutually reinforcing characteristcs:
not good basis for atracton (revealed by research)
o Excepton: male-female interacton  one is submissive the other one
dominant

Similarity-Dissimilarity Efeett A eonsistent Predietor of Atraeton
 Similarity-dissimilarity efeet – similarity tends to arouse positve feelings /
dissimilarity tends to arouse negatve feelings
 Attitude similarity – the extent to which individuals share the same ways of thinking/
feeling toward something/another person
Experiments on attude similarity:
1. Assessment of attudes
2. Exposure to attudes, such as beliefs, values, interest of a stranger
 outcome confirms similarity-dissimilarity efect
 Atracton is determined by proportoon of similarity – the number of topics on which
people express similar views is divided by the total number of topics on which they
have communicated  the higher the proportons of similarity the greater the liking
 Efect of attude similarity is strong

Do We Seek Similarity Even with Respeet to Physieal Atraetvenesss
 Matehiong hypothesis – choosing partners similar to ourselves in physical
atractveness, even though we´dd prefer very atractve ones
o true for men  efort in building a relatonship with stranger similar to them
o untrue for women  no strong efort to impress partners regardless of
whether they were similar or not

Do Trivial Similarites enerate Atraetons
 Implieit egotsm (geltungsbedürfnis) – positve associaton with something about
ourselves does increase atracton towards others sharing whatever these are

Why Do We Like Others Who Are Similar to Ourselves but Dislike Those Who Are Diferents
 Balaonee theory – people naturally organize their likes and dislikes in a symmetrical
way
o Balaneet when two people like each other and discover they´dre similar
(pleasant)

, o Imbalaneet when two people like each other but discover they´dre dissimilar
(unpleasant)
 Atempt to restore balance by inducing one of them to change and
thereby inducing similarity (maintained by underestmatng/ignoring
dissimilarity)
o Nonbalaneet two people disliking each other (neither pleasant nor
unpleasant)
 Soeial eomparisoon theory (Festnger) – one compares oness attudes and beliefs with
those of others
o obtaining eonsensual validaton – evidence that people share our views

Reciprocal Liking or Disliking: Liking Those Who Like Us

Rule of reciprocity – actng towards other in the way they have acted towards us – operates
with respect to atracton
 we like those who express liking towards us and vice versa

Social Skills: Liking People Who Are Good at Interactng with Others

Soeial skills – a combinaton of apttudes that help individuals who possesses them to
interact efectvely with others

Valuable social skills:
 soeial astuteness (soeial pereepton)t capacity to perceive & understand others
accurately  efectve, positve relatonships
 interpersonal infueneet ability to change others attudes or behavior by using a
variety of techniques (persuasion, “foot-in-the-door” technique)
 soeial adaptabilityt capacity to adapt to a wide range of social situatons and interact
efectvely with a wide range of people
 expressivenesst ability to show emotons openly, in a form others can readily perceive

Personality and Liking: Why People with Certain Traits are More Atractve than Others

 “Big Five” personality traits: openness to experience, conscientousness,
extraversion, agreeableness, emotonal stability (neurotcism)
 onareissism – extreme and unjustfied high self-esteem
o initally liked because they seem charming, extraverted, more open, more
competent

What Do We Desire in Others? Gender Diferences and Changes over Stages of a
Relatonship

 several traits that are valued in everyone – no mater what kind of relatonship:
trustworthiness and cooperatveness (seen as most important traits) followed by
agreeableness and extraversion
 other traits are valued diferently – to a greater/lesser degree – depending on the
kind of relatonship having with the other person

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