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What is social psychology?
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What do social psychologists study (main impact directions)?
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How do sociology and psychology differ in relation to social psychology?
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Name the three 'faces' of sociological social psychology.
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Name the two 'faces' of psychological social psychology.
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What are the two broad research method types in social psychology?
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What is reliability in measurement?
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What is validity in measurement?
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What is sampling in research?
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What are common types of sampling mentioned?
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What is internal validity?
Extent to which the relationship between variables is true; a relationship between two well-measured variables.
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What does external validity refer to?
Extent to which results are generalizable to the population, other settings, or other time periods.
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Name four types of cultural content individuals learn through socialization.
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What are institutions in the context of socialization?
Patterns of organizations within society.
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List the major theoretical perspectives on social development mentioned.
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What is the key idea of the social learning perspective?
Development alone is not sufficient; complex social behavior requires learning.
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Who are the primary agents of socialization listed?
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Name two behavioral mechanisms agents use to socialize individuals.
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What does internalization mean in socialization?
The process through which external behavioral standards become internal.
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What does the life course perspective examine?
How age, period, and cohort effects combine to shape life outcomes.
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Define an age effect in the life course perspective.
Changes people go through as a function of biological or social processes.
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Define a period effect in the life course perspective.
External changes that affect all age groups at the same time.
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Define a cohort effect in the life course perspective.
Variations due to unique experiences of a group when they hit major life milestones.
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What are life course careers?
Sequences of roles that people enact through their lives.
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What is primary socialization?
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What is secondary socialization?
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Do agents of socialization engage in primary or secondary socialization?
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Which agent is noted as more prominent for secondary socialization?
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What is a self-schema?
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According to Mead, what two components make up the self?
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What does the 'I' represent in Mead's theory?
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What does the 'Me' represent in Mead's theory?
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Name one source of the self listed in the notes.
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What is the looking-glass self?
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What is self-differentiation in development of the self?
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What is role taking?
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What are role identities?
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What are social identities?
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What are personal identities?
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What function do identities serve?
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What are identity standards?
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What are reflected appraisals?
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How do reflected appraisals affect behavior?
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What is the consistency motive in identity verification?
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What is the enhancement motive in identity verification?
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What determines which identity you enact in a situation?
The identity that is most relevant to the situation and organized hierarchically within the self (e.g., 'son' may be enacted before other identities).
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What is identity salience?
Identity salience is the relative likelihood that a particular identity will be enacted in social situations.
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How does identity salience affect behavior?
We seek more opportunities to perform more salient identities and conform more strongly to their standards.
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Does subjective importance always equal identity salience?
No; subjective importance does not equal salience (e.g., valuing athleticism doesn't mean one frequently enacts an athletic identity).
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What major factor predicts identity salience?
Social networks and social opportunities to enact an identity are major predictors of identity salience.
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What are the components of the self-schema?
The self-schema includes the actual self (how you are), the ideal self (how you'd like to be), and the normative self (how you should be).
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What are the main sources of self-esteem listed?
Family, performance feedback, and social comparison.
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What is the front stage/region in the dramaturgical approach?
Front stage/region are settings where people perform interactions and try to maintain a desired self-image.
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What is the back stage/region in the dramaturgical approach?
Back stage/region are settings inaccessible to outsiders where people knowingly violate the appearances they present front stage.
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Why do people use dramaturgical presentation strategies?
To establish a working definition of the situation, disclose information about the self, first establish a frame, then establish a situated identity.
Revisa tus tarjetas aquí, o sign up to study with spaced repetition.
What is social psychology?
What do social psychologists study (main impact directions)?
How do sociology and psychology differ in relation to social psychology?
Name the three 'faces' of sociological social psychology.
Name the two 'faces' of psychological social psychology.
What are the two broad research method types in social psychology?
What is reliability in measurement?
What is validity in measurement?
What is sampling in research?
What are common types of sampling mentioned?
What is internal validity?
Extent to which the relationship between variables is true; a relationship between two well-measured variables.
What does external validity refer to?
Extent to which results are generalizable to the population, other settings, or other time periods.
Name four types of cultural content individuals learn through socialization.
What are institutions in the context of socialization?
Patterns of organizations within society.
List the major theoretical perspectives on social development mentioned.
What is the key idea of the social learning perspective?
Development alone is not sufficient; complex social behavior requires learning.
Who are the primary agents of socialization listed?
Name two behavioral mechanisms agents use to socialize individuals.
What does internalization mean in socialization?
The process through which external behavioral standards become internal.
What does the life course perspective examine?
How age, period, and cohort effects combine to shape life outcomes.
Define an age effect in the life course perspective.
Changes people go through as a function of biological or social processes.
Define a period effect in the life course perspective.
External changes that affect all age groups at the same time.
Define a cohort effect in the life course perspective.
Variations due to unique experiences of a group when they hit major life milestones.
What are life course careers?
Sequences of roles that people enact through their lives.
What is primary socialization?
What is secondary socialization?
Do agents of socialization engage in primary or secondary socialization?
Which agent is noted as more prominent for secondary socialization?
What is a self-schema?
According to Mead, what two components make up the self?
What does the 'I' represent in Mead's theory?
What does the 'Me' represent in Mead's theory?
Name one source of the self listed in the notes.
What is the looking-glass self?
What is self-differentiation in development of the self?
What is role taking?
What are role identities?
What are social identities?
What are personal identities?
What function do identities serve?
What are identity standards?
What are reflected appraisals?
How do reflected appraisals affect behavior?
What is the consistency motive in identity verification?
What is the enhancement motive in identity verification?
What determines which identity you enact in a situation?
The identity that is most relevant to the situation and organized hierarchically within the self (e.g., 'son' may be enacted before other identities).
What is identity salience?
Identity salience is the relative likelihood that a particular identity will be enacted in social situations.
How does identity salience affect behavior?
We seek more opportunities to perform more salient identities and conform more strongly to their standards.
Does subjective importance always equal identity salience?
No; subjective importance does not equal salience (e.g., valuing athleticism doesn't mean one frequently enacts an athletic identity).
What major factor predicts identity salience?
Social networks and social opportunities to enact an identity are major predictors of identity salience.
What are the components of the self-schema?
The self-schema includes the actual self (how you are), the ideal self (how you'd like to be), and the normative self (how you should be).
What are the main sources of self-esteem listed?
Family, performance feedback, and social comparison.
What is the front stage/region in the dramaturgical approach?
Front stage/region are settings where people perform interactions and try to maintain a desired self-image.
What is the back stage/region in the dramaturgical approach?
Back stage/region are settings inaccessible to outsiders where people knowingly violate the appearances they present front stage.
Why do people use dramaturgical presentation strategies?
To establish a working definition of the situation, disclose information about the self, first establish a frame, then establish a situated identity.
Personal identities: Individual descriptors (e.g., creative, shy).
Functions of identities: Guide behavior by providing standards and expectations.
Purpose of performance: Establish a shared definition of the situation, disclose selective information, and create situated identities.
Interaction steps: First frame the situation (rules and expectations); then enact a situated identity consistent with that frame.
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