Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1983 - 674 pages |
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Page 201
... culture contribute to or just mirror male - female differences ? The evidence here is clear : The impact of culture is enormous . This evidence comes from known cultural variations in sex roles , from some cases in which children have ...
... culture contribute to or just mirror male - female differences ? The evidence here is clear : The impact of culture is enormous . This evidence comes from known cultural variations in sex roles , from some cases in which children have ...
Page 208
... cultural ? Obviously it would be both : Biology initiates it and culture develops it . As illustrated in the last example , biological and cultural influences are interdependent : Biological variables operate within a cultural context ...
... cultural ? Obviously it would be both : Biology initiates it and culture develops it . As illustrated in the last example , biological and cultural influences are interdependent : Biological variables operate within a cultural context ...
Page 219
... culture to culture . Yet some cultural norms are universal ( for example , men are warriors ; women care for the young children ) . The assimilation of particular sex roles help create male - female differences : Men commonly behave ...
... culture to culture . Yet some cultural norms are universal ( for example , men are warriors ; women care for the young children ) . The assimilation of particular sex roles help create male - female differences : Men commonly behave ...
Contents
How we do social psychology | 8 |
Social psychology and human values | 24 |
Resisting social pressure 253 | 30 |
Copyright | |
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actions actually aggression altruism American answer arousal asked attitudes attractive average behavior believe biases Chapter cognitive conflict conformity correlation culture dissonance effect emotional evaluation everyday evidence example expectations experiments explain factors favor feel female fundamental attribution error group polarization groupthink hindsight bias human illusion illusory correlation illusory thinking indicate individual influence interaction Journal of Personality judgments jurors jury laboratory Lee Ross less male Milgram norms observed one's overjustification effect participants Patricia Hearst people's perceived percent Perhaps Personality and Social persuasive play positive predict prejudice prison questions racial recall relationship responses rewards Richard Nisbett self-efficacy self-esteem self-perception self-perception theory self-serving bias sex roles shock Similarly situation Snyder social loafing Social Psychology someone sometimes Stanley Milgram stereotypes subjects suggest teachers television tend tendency theory thought University vivid woman women