Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1993 - 682 pages |
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Page 19
... percent named the schools . So remember : The form of the question may guide the answer . Wording The precise wording of questions may also influence answers . One poll found that only 7 percent of Americans thought government programs ...
... percent named the schools . So remember : The form of the question may guide the answer . Wording The precise wording of questions may also influence answers . One poll found that only 7 percent of Americans thought government programs ...
Page 50
... percent of the time , beating chance by 13 percent . But , on average , they felt 75 percent sure of their predictions . When guessing their own roommates ' responses , they were 68 percent correct and 78 percent confident . Moreover ...
... percent of the time , beating chance by 13 percent . But , on average , they felt 75 percent sure of their predictions . When guessing their own roommates ' responses , they were 68 percent correct and 78 percent confident . Moreover ...
Page 262
... percent ( Astin & others , 1987 , 1991 ) . Behavior changed too . Marijuana use within the month preceding the survey dropped from 37 percent of high school seniors to 14 percent . Canadian teens underwent similar attitude and marijuana ...
... percent ( Astin & others , 1987 , 1991 ) . Behavior changed too . Marijuana use within the month preceding the survey dropped from 37 percent of high school seniors to 14 percent . Canadian teens underwent similar attitude and marijuana ...
Contents
SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY AND RELATED DISCIPLINES | 1 |
INTRODUCING SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY | 3 |
NotSoObvious Ways in Which Values Enter | 8 |
Copyright | |
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actions aggression altruism American arousal asked attitudes attractive availability heuristic believe biases Chapter chology cial cognitive confirm conflict correlation cultures decision depressed dissonance effect emotional example expectations Experimental Social Psychology experiments explain eyewitness factors favor feel fundamental attribution error gender group polarization groupthink human illusion illusion of control Illusory correlation individual influence Journal of Experimental Journal of Personality Journal of Social judgments jurors jury Lee Ross less ment mood motivation negative norm observed one's ourselves people's perceive percent Personality and Social persuasion positive predict prejudice Press questions recall relationship responsibility 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 teachers television tendency theory tion tive University women York