Swimming against the mainstream: the early years from chilly
... In the proponents’ view, the theory could be tested only through clinical validation. In a letter to Freud, Rosensweing asked whether the interview content could be tainted by the therapists’ influences. Freud replied that the therapist is a blank screen that does not contaminate the interview conten ...
... In the proponents’ view, the theory could be tested only through clinical validation. In a letter to Freud, Rosensweing asked whether the interview content could be tainted by the therapists’ influences. Freud replied that the therapist is a blank screen that does not contaminate the interview conten ...
A social cognitive perspective in cyberbullying prevention
... by Bandura in his social-cognitive theory of the moral self (Bandura, 1986, 1991). Bandura argued that moral reasoning guides behaviour through specific self-regulatory processes, such as moral disengagement. This process can be described in several stages whereby the individual cognitively ‘moraliz ...
... by Bandura in his social-cognitive theory of the moral self (Bandura, 1986, 1991). Bandura argued that moral reasoning guides behaviour through specific self-regulatory processes, such as moral disengagement. This process can be described in several stages whereby the individual cognitively ‘moraliz ...
Word of mouth communication within online communities
... 1963; Brown & Reingen, 1987; Money, Gilly, & Graham, 1998; G. Silverman, 2001). It provides information concerning product performance and the social and psychological consequences of the purchase decision (Cox, 1963). Offline, WOM can convert lower order cognition and affect into higher order cogni ...
... 1963; Brown & Reingen, 1987; Money, Gilly, & Graham, 1998; G. Silverman, 2001). It provides information concerning product performance and the social and psychological consequences of the purchase decision (Cox, 1963). Offline, WOM can convert lower order cognition and affect into higher order cogni ...
Social Cognitive Neuroscience: A Review of Core Processes
... 2004), no comprehensive review has captured the breadth of the area. Thus, first and foremost, this review covers the broad themes and main findings across numerous areas of social cognitive neuroscience research. The review is divided into four subsections focusing on (a) understanding others, (b) un ...
... 2004), no comprehensive review has captured the breadth of the area. Thus, first and foremost, this review covers the broad themes and main findings across numerous areas of social cognitive neuroscience research. The review is divided into four subsections focusing on (a) understanding others, (b) un ...
Living Stigma: The Impact of Labeling
... the one the professionals like. Secretly, I’m cringing . . . it’s poetic justice for all those years I sat in case conferences, secretly judging, believing I could have done better than another mother. (Weinstein 2003:15) ...
... the one the professionals like. Secretly, I’m cringing . . . it’s poetic justice for all those years I sat in case conferences, secretly judging, believing I could have done better than another mother. (Weinstein 2003:15) ...
ANTH 2346 - HCC Learning Web
... Who are the “Nacirema”? What is the lesson for anthropologists of the Nacirema story? What is the process of the scientific method and what are the main parts employed? Understand the difference between a hypothesis and a theory. How is data used in relation to hypotheses and theories? How does the ...
... Who are the “Nacirema”? What is the lesson for anthropologists of the Nacirema story? What is the process of the scientific method and what are the main parts employed? Understand the difference between a hypothesis and a theory. How is data used in relation to hypotheses and theories? How does the ...
Rethinking theoretical approaches to stigma A Framework Integrating
... areas of investigation. The micro level Social and illness characteristics The left side of Fig. 1 contains concepts related to characteristics of persons with mental illness and how they might combine to predict stigmatizing responses. The inside section displays the most traditional understandings ...
... areas of investigation. The micro level Social and illness characteristics The left side of Fig. 1 contains concepts related to characteristics of persons with mental illness and how they might combine to predict stigmatizing responses. The inside section displays the most traditional understandings ...
Multicultural Minds
... culture. These methods offer greater internal validity than do the quasi-experimental comparisons typically relied on in cross-cultural research. After reviewing studies of cultural frame switching, we then discuss how this approach elucidates other topics, such as the relation between cultural beli ...
... culture. These methods offer greater internal validity than do the quasi-experimental comparisons typically relied on in cross-cultural research. After reviewing studies of cultural frame switching, we then discuss how this approach elucidates other topics, such as the relation between cultural beli ...
Stereotype, Prejudice, etc.
... an outgroup will fare better than we will Could this be why affirmative action has so many opponents? Minimum ingroup paradigm - People who are put together randomly will still form an "ingroup" mentality ...
... an outgroup will fare better than we will Could this be why affirmative action has so many opponents? Minimum ingroup paradigm - People who are put together randomly will still form an "ingroup" mentality ...
Developing a Sociological Consciousness
... values and their attitudes toward the future as in the different futures they saw ahead of them. Middle-class men have incomes high enough to justify long-term investments, and they hold jobs that offer the promise of career advancement. Like middle-class men, the men on the corner wanted stable job ...
... values and their attitudes toward the future as in the different futures they saw ahead of them. Middle-class men have incomes high enough to justify long-term investments, and they hold jobs that offer the promise of career advancement. Like middle-class men, the men on the corner wanted stable job ...
Rhythmic music education as aesthetic practice
... inconsistencies, the more efficient is the production of doxic experiences; doxa denoting basic beliefs that are taken for granted, and therefore not questioned. It is “that which is beyond question and which each agent tacitly accords by the mere fact of acting in accord with social convention” (Bo ...
... inconsistencies, the more efficient is the production of doxic experiences; doxa denoting basic beliefs that are taken for granted, and therefore not questioned. It is “that which is beyond question and which each agent tacitly accords by the mere fact of acting in accord with social convention” (Bo ...
This is Where You Type the Slide Title
... – Prejudice and discrimination often go together, but this is not always the case (see Figure 7.6). – Sometimes, we are not even aware of our prejudices as demonstrated by the Implicit Association Test. ©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. ...
... – Prejudice and discrimination often go together, but this is not always the case (see Figure 7.6). – Sometimes, we are not even aware of our prejudices as demonstrated by the Implicit Association Test. ©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. ...
MANAGERIAL DECISION BIASES The theory`s central management
... Using similarity or representativeness to judge the probability of an event can also lead to the conjunction fallacy, which occurs when individuals believe the subset is more likely than the larger set. This fallacy typically arises when the conjunction of multiple events or qualities is more vivid ...
... Using similarity or representativeness to judge the probability of an event can also lead to the conjunction fallacy, which occurs when individuals believe the subset is more likely than the larger set. This fallacy typically arises when the conjunction of multiple events or qualities is more vivid ...
Chapter 7
... 68. Which of the following illustrates media influence through a two-step flow of communication? A. A teenager buys a video game she saw advertised both on television and in her favorite magazine. B. A domestic car manufacturer sponsors a television program about the defectiveness of many foreign im ...
... 68. Which of the following illustrates media influence through a two-step flow of communication? A. A teenager buys a video game she saw advertised both on television and in her favorite magazine. B. A domestic car manufacturer sponsors a television program about the defectiveness of many foreign im ...
Social Cognition and Crime
... offenders tend to external control, that is they explain their behaviour as being controlled by influences beyond their personal control (Beck and Ollendick 1976; Kumchy and Sayer 1980). other studies have failed to show any difference in locus of control between offender and non-offender samples ...
... offenders tend to external control, that is they explain their behaviour as being controlled by influences beyond their personal control (Beck and Ollendick 1976; Kumchy and Sayer 1980). other studies have failed to show any difference in locus of control between offender and non-offender samples ...
impact of organizational socialization towards employees
... influence, IT and computer literacy, serviceminded, analytical thinking, integrity, concern for order, quality, and accuracy, information seeking, self -control, conceptual thinking, and English skills respectively. According to Carneveale et al. (1989), desirable social skills of employees include ...
... influence, IT and computer literacy, serviceminded, analytical thinking, integrity, concern for order, quality, and accuracy, information seeking, self -control, conceptual thinking, and English skills respectively. According to Carneveale et al. (1989), desirable social skills of employees include ...
Introduction: - Hodder Education
... Milgram studied obedience to authority and when the context in which the order was given was one of high social status, 26 of the 40 participants (65%) followed orders and administered 450 volt electric shocks. Only 9 of the 40 participants (22.5%) stopped at 315 volts. The participants showed signs ...
... Milgram studied obedience to authority and when the context in which the order was given was one of high social status, 26 of the 40 participants (65%) followed orders and administered 450 volt electric shocks. Only 9 of the 40 participants (22.5%) stopped at 315 volts. The participants showed signs ...
Crime and deviance 04
... conformity to norms. This may be done by reference to examples of forms of social control, what this means is peer groups might pressure you to do what they do in either a positive or negative way. So you could be in an anti-school subculture so you mess around in school, but also you could be in a ...
... conformity to norms. This may be done by reference to examples of forms of social control, what this means is peer groups might pressure you to do what they do in either a positive or negative way. So you could be in an anti-school subculture so you mess around in school, but also you could be in a ...
Social Psychology 1
... variations were exactly the same, except at the very end the man raped the woman in one and in the other he proposed marriage. In both conditions, both female and male subjects viewed the woman's (identical) actions as inevitably leading to the (very different) results. ...
... variations were exactly the same, except at the very end the man raped the woman in one and in the other he proposed marriage. In both conditions, both female and male subjects viewed the woman's (identical) actions as inevitably leading to the (very different) results. ...
Cultural and social psychologists recognize the importance of social
... respectively emphasize symbiotic harmony or generative tension between individual and relationship (Rothbaum et al., 2000). But in many settings, people perceive their own relationships as better than other people’s (Endo et al., 2000). Broadly, though, the theme of wide versus secure belonging capt ...
... respectively emphasize symbiotic harmony or generative tension between individual and relationship (Rothbaum et al., 2000). But in many settings, people perceive their own relationships as better than other people’s (Endo et al., 2000). Broadly, though, the theme of wide versus secure belonging capt ...
What has Neoclassical Economics Contributed to
... other to act in ways he would not otherwise act. Doing so may also have the effect of inducing the individual to change the habits with which he approaches certain kinds of decisions. Habits are, of course, "short-cuts" or "time- or energy-cost-reducing" ways of arriving at decisions in similar situ ...
... other to act in ways he would not otherwise act. Doing so may also have the effect of inducing the individual to change the habits with which he approaches certain kinds of decisions. Habits are, of course, "short-cuts" or "time- or energy-cost-reducing" ways of arriving at decisions in similar situ ...
Attitudes and Job Satisfaction
... Over the years, one of the most strongly held beliefs among managers and I/O psychologists is that there is a relationship between a worker’s job satisfaction and his/her job performance. In 60 year’s worth of research I/O psychologists have found highly variable linkages between job satisfactio ...
... Over the years, one of the most strongly held beliefs among managers and I/O psychologists is that there is a relationship between a worker’s job satisfaction and his/her job performance. In 60 year’s worth of research I/O psychologists have found highly variable linkages between job satisfactio ...
Social - Sydney Symposium of Social Psychology
... Third, social categorization is malleable. Factors that originate in both the perceiver and in the target of perception have been shown to impact the perceptual judgments that people make. For example, social categorization is modulated by factors inherent in the perceiver, such as implicit levels o ...
... Third, social categorization is malleable. Factors that originate in both the perceiver and in the target of perception have been shown to impact the perceptual judgments that people make. For example, social categorization is modulated by factors inherent in the perceiver, such as implicit levels o ...
Social Structure and Personality
... Drawing on Inkeles's work. House advanced three theoretical and methodological principles that guide SSP research. The first, the components principles, stipulates that researchers identify the specific components of the social system that are most relevant to understanding the phenomenon of interes ...
... Drawing on Inkeles's work. House advanced three theoretical and methodological principles that guide SSP research. The first, the components principles, stipulates that researchers identify the specific components of the social system that are most relevant to understanding the phenomenon of interes ...