Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1993 - 682 pages |
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Page 307
... Arousal en- hances whatever response tendency is dominant . Increased arousal enhances performance on easy tasks for which the most likely- " dominant " -response is the correct one . People solve easy anagrams , such as akec , fastest ...
... Arousal en- hances whatever response tendency is dominant . Increased arousal enhances performance on easy tasks for which the most likely- " dominant " -response is the correct one . People solve easy anagrams , such as akec , fastest ...
Page 441
... arousal feeds emotions . If you understand this principle — that a given state of bodily arousal feeds one emotion or another , depending on how the person interprets and labels the arousal - then you will anticipate the following ...
... arousal feeds emotions . If you understand this principle — that a given state of bodily arousal feeds one emotion or another , depending on how the person interprets and labels the arousal - then you will anticipate the following ...
Page 490
... arousal can be steered into any of several emotions , depending on how we attribute the arousal . An emotion involves both body and mind , both arousal and how we interpret and label the arousal . Imagine yourself with pounding heart ...
... arousal can be steered into any of several emotions , depending on how we attribute the arousal . An emotion involves both body and mind , both arousal and how we interpret and label the arousal . Imagine yourself with pounding heart ...
Contents
INTRODUCING SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 3 |
HOW WE DO SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 12 |
Searching for Cause and Effect | 20 |
Copyright | |
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actions aggression altruism American arousal asked attitudes attractive availability heuristic believe biases Chapter chology cognitive common confirm conflict correlation cultures decision depressed dissonance effect emotional evaluation everyday example expectations Experimental Social experiments explain eyewitness factors favor feel Figure fundamental attribution error gender group polarization groupthink human illusion illusion of control Illusory correlation individual Journal of Personality Journal of Social judgments jurors jury laboratory Lee Ross less males ment mood motivation negative norms observed one's ourselves people's perceive percent Personality and Social persuasion positive predict prejudice questions recall relationship responses rewards Richard Nisbett Robert Cialdini role self-efficacy self-esteem Self-handicapping Self-perception theory self-serving bias sexual situation Snyder social loafing Social Psy Social Psychol Social Psychology someone sometimes stereotypes teacher television tendency theory things tion tive traits University women York