Social PsychologyMcGraw-Hill, 1983 - 674 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-3 of 86
Page 10
... percent confident of describing the entire population with an error margin of 3 percent or less . To visualize this , imagine a huge jar filled with beans - 50 percent red and 50 percent white . Someone who randomly samples 1200 of ...
... percent confident of describing the entire population with an error margin of 3 percent or less . To visualize this , imagine a huge jar filled with beans - 50 percent red and 50 percent white . Someone who randomly samples 1200 of ...
Page 89
... percent as below average . Sixty percent reported themselves as better than average in " athletic ability , " only 6 percent as below average . In " ability to get along with others , " zero percent of the 829,000 students who responded ...
... percent as below average . Sixty percent reported themselves as better than average in " athletic ability , " only 6 percent as below average . In " ability to get along with others , " zero percent of the 829,000 students who responded ...
Page 554
... percent . For example , in addition to their usual oil bill , Burleigh Seaver and Arthur Patterson ( 1976 ) gave some Pennsylvania residents monthly information comparing their ... percent Conserved , percent 554 APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY.
... percent . For example , in addition to their usual oil bill , Burleigh Seaver and Arthur Patterson ( 1976 ) gave some Pennsylvania residents monthly information comparing their ... percent Conserved , percent 554 APPLIED SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY.
Contents
Social psychology and the other disciplines | 5 |
Is social psychology simply sophisticated common sense? | 20 |
Resisting social pressure 253 | 30 |
Copyright | |
42 other sections not shown
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
actions actually aggression altruism American answer arousal asked attitudes attractive average behavior believe better biological Chapter conflict conformity correlation culture dissonance effect emotional evaluated everyday evidence example expectations experimenter experiments explain factors favor feel female feminine FIGURE fundamental attribution error given group polarization groupthink hindsight bias human illusion illusory correlation illusory thinking indicate individual influence judgments jurors jury laboratory later Lee Ross less male male-female differences Milgram norms observed one's ourselves overjustification effect participants Patricia Hearst people's perceive percent Perhaps persuasive phenomenon Philip Zimbardo play positive predict prejudice prison questions recall relationship responses rewards Richard Nisbett self-efficacy self-esteem self-perception theory self-serving bias sex roles shock Similarly situation Snyder social psychology someone sometimes Stanley Milgram stereotypes subjects suggest teachers television tend tendency theory thought usually vivid volts woman women