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PSY 200 Chapter 14 Summary

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This is a comprehensive and detailed summary on Chapter 14; social behavior. It's all Yours!!

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Chapter 14 : social behavior
- why belonging to a group matters to us
- how the presence of other people influences our behavior
- how we perceive our social world
- how we form attitudes
- how we make friends
- These topics are the focus of social psychology, which studies the effects of the real or imagined presence of others on people’s thoughts, feelings,
and actions.
GROUP LIVING AND SOCIAL INFLUENCE
- Group living offered many advantages in human evolution, such as increased safety in the presence of danger, cooperation with others to
complete challenging tasks (such as hunting), and child rearing
- This heritage explains why people work to preserve group membership and why they modify their behavior when in the presence of others.
- Social facilitation occurs when the presence of others improves our performance.
- Social loafing is the opposite; it occurs when the presence of others causes individuals to relax their standards
Conformity
- Social facilitation is a subtle way in which the presence of others changes our actions
- More direct social factors also pressure us to act in certain ways
- Society imposes rules about acceptable behavior, called social norms
- social norms
- Rules about acceptable behavior imposed by the cultural context in which one lives.
- Most of the time we conform to the social norms of our culture.
- Conformity occurs when people adjust their behavior to what others are doing or adhere to cultural norms
- The reasons for conformity vary, depending on the situation
- Informational social influence occurs when people conform to the behavior of others because they view them as a source of knowledge about what
they are supposed to do.
normative social influence
- Conformity to the behavior of others in order to be accepted by them
- is the type of conformity that occurs when people go along with the behavior of others in order to be accepted by the group
- sometimes people go to great lengths to do what the group is doing, when it does not make sense, especially when groups are engaged in decision
making.
- This phenomenon, called groupthink, occurs when the thinking of the group takes over, so much so that group members forgo logic or critical
analysis in the service of reaching a decision
Minority Social Influence
- In social psychology, a single person or small group within a larger group is called a minority, while the larger group is referred to as the
majority. Just as the majority pushes for group unity, the minority can push for independence and uniqueness. After all, if people always
conformed, how would change occur?
- In order to change the majority view, however, the minority must present a consistent, unwavering message. 
minority social influence
- When a small number of individuals in a larger group shifts majority opinion by presenting a consistent, unwavering message

, - refers to what happens when a small number of individuals in a larger group shifts majority opinion by presenting a consistent, unwavering
message.
Obedience
- Another kind of normative social influence, called obedience, occurs when people yield to the social pressure of an authority figure, complying
with their demands.
- Social psychological research on obedience emerged in response to real-life concerns in the aftermath of World War II. The horrific events of the
Holocaust raised troubling questions: How could an entire nation endorse the extermination of millions of people? Were all Germans evil? Adolf
Hitler did not act alone—a supporting cast of thousands was necessary to annihilate so many people. Former Nazi officers who testified in war
trials after the war said they were “following orders.”
Attribution
- We often wonder why people do the things they do, and we try to explain their actions.
- Attributions are the inferences we make about the causes of other people’s behavior.
- Internal, or dispositional, attributions ascribe other people’s behavior to something within them, such as their personalities, motives, or
attitudes. Let’s say that Chris flunked a test. A dispositional attribution would be “Chris flunked the test because he is too lazy to study.”
- People make external, or situational, attributions when they think that something outside the person, such as the nature of the situation, is the
cause of his or her behavior. If Jake says that Chris failed because the exam was too hard, Jake has made a situational attribution for Chris’s grade.
- If Chris had aced the test, however, it is likely he’d attribute his success to his own skills. Making situational attributions for our failures but
dispositional attributions for our successes is known as a self-serving bias
self-serving bias
- The tendency to make situational attributions for our failures but dispositional attributions for our successes.
- People tend to explain other people’s behavior in terms of dispositional attributions rather than situational ones, a bias in judgment known as
the fundamental attribution error
- This is not to say that dispositions don’t matter but rather that, when making attributions of other people’s behavior, we tend to think that
dispositional characteristics matter the most.
Detecting Deception
- Most people think that they know when people lie to them.
- According to the research most of us are not effective lie detectors.
- Most people perform no better than the accuracy rate of chance guessing in detecting deception from people’s behavior
Schemas
- People develop models, or schemas, of the social world, which function as lenses through which we filter our perceptions.
- We first discussed schemas in the chapter “Memory” and defined them broadly as ways of knowing that we develop from our experiences with
particular objects or events.
- In the area of social perception, schemas are ways of knowing that affect how we view our social world.
Stereotypes
- Schemas of how people are likely to behave based simply on the groups to which they belong are known as stereotypes.
- When we resort to stereotypes, we form conclusions about people before we even interact with them just because they are of a certain race-ethnicity
or live in a certain place. As a result, we end up judging people not by their actions but by our notions of how they might act.
dehumanization
- A tendency to portray a group of people as unworthy of human rights and traits—intended to make them feel unworthy.

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