Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1983 - 674 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 83
Page 22
... seems to be wisdom in the old saying , " Opposites attract . " Social psychologists have found that , whether choosing friends or falling in love , we are most attracted to people whose traits are similar to our own . There seems to be ...
... seems to be wisdom in the old saying , " Opposites attract . " Social psychologists have found that , whether choosing friends or falling in love , we are most attracted to people whose traits are similar to our own . There seems to be ...
Page 133
... seems effective , whether it actually had an effect or not . Sometimes we do recognize that events can seldom continue at an unusually good or bad extreme . Experience has taught us that when everything is going great , something will ...
... seems effective , whether it actually had an effect or not . Sometimes we do recognize that events can seldom continue at an unusually good or bad extreme . Experience has taught us that when everything is going great , something will ...
Page 200
... seems to produce fewer specific impairments in women , suggesting that their verbal and nonverbal skills are not so localized as men's . Among normal individuals , the average man recognizes pictures flashed in the left half of his ...
... seems to produce fewer specific impairments in women , suggesting that their verbal and nonverbal skills are not so localized as men's . Among normal individuals , the average man recognizes pictures flashed in the left half of his ...
Contents
How we do social psychology | 8 |
Social psychology and human values | 24 |
Does our behavior determine our attitudes? | 44 |
Copyright | |
30 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actions actually aggression altruism American answer arousal asked attitudes attractive attribution error behavior believe Berkowitz biases Bibb Latané Chapter communication conflict conformity correlation culture decision deindividuation desegregation differences dissonance effect emotional evaluated example expectations experimenter experiments explain factors favor feel female FIGURE frustration fundamental attribution error group polarization groupthink hindsight bias hostility human illusory correlation indicate individual influence ingroup bias interaction Journal of Personality judgments jurors jury laboratory Lee Ross less male norms observed one's overjustification effect participants people's perceived percent Perhaps Personality and Social persuasive phenomenon positive predict prejudice questions racial recall relationship responses rewards self-esteem self-perception theory self-serving bias sex roles shock similar Similarly situation social facilitation social loafing Social Psychology someone sometimes stereotypes suggest teachers television tend tendency theory thinking University victim vivid woman women