Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1996 - 712 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 80
Page 198
... emotions . In her analysis of 125 studies of men's and women's sensitivity to nonverbal cues , Judith Hall ( 1984 ) discerned that women are generally superior at decoding others ' emotional messages . For ex- ample , shown a two ...
... emotions . In her analysis of 125 studies of men's and women's sensitivity to nonverbal cues , Judith Hall ( 1984 ) discerned that women are generally superior at decoding others ' emotional messages . For ex- ample , shown a two ...
Page 281
... emotional approach — say , the com- pelling story of one starving child ? Of course , an argument can be both rea- sonable and emotional . Still , which is more influential - reason or emotion ? Was Shakespeare's Lysander right : " The ...
... emotional approach — say , the com- pelling story of one starving child ? Of course , an argument can be both rea- sonable and emotional . Still , which is more influential - reason or emotion ? Was Shakespeare's Lysander right : " The ...
Page 469
... emotion - arousing stimulus , like an obscene word , and repeat it over and over . What happens ? From introductory ... emotional numbing . The most common response might well become , " Doesn't bother me at all . " Such a response is ...
... emotion - arousing stimulus , like an obscene word , and repeat it over and over . What happens ? From introductory ... emotional numbing . The most common response might well become , " Doesn't bother me at all . " Such a response is ...
Contents
INTRODUCING SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 1 |
Obvious ways in which Values Enter | 8 |
HOW WE DO SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 18 |
Copyright | |
78 other sections not shown
Common terms and phrases
actions aggression Alice Eagly altruism American arousal asked attitudes attractive attribution error believe Chapter cial cognitive colleagues communicator conformity correlation culture depressed dissonance Eagly effect emotional evaluate evolutionary psychologists example expectations experimenter experiments explain explanatory style factors favor feel Figure friends fundamental attribution error gender group polarization groupthink havior human Illusory correlation individual influence Journal of Personality judgments jurors jury laboratory later less males ment Milgram mood motivated negative norms observed one's ourselves people's perceive percent Personality and Social persuasion positive predict prejudice primacy effect questions recall relationships responses rewards role self-efficacy self-esteem Self-perception theory self-serving bias sexual shock situations social loafing social psy Social Psychology someone sometimes stereotypes teacher television theory things tion traits Universal Press Syndicate University women Yorker Magazine