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Social Psychology Jeopardy

Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

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Page 1: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

Social PsychologyJeopardy

Page 2: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

GroupsAttributi

onAttracti

onPower Review

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500 500 500 500 500Final Jeopardy

Page 3: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Groups” for $100

The effect of another person’s presence on one’s

performance.  People usually perform simple or well-learned

tasks better in front of others and difficult or unfamiliar tasks worse

in front of others. What is social facilitation?

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Page 4: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Groups” for $200

The tendency for members of a cohesive group to reach decisions

without weighing all the facts, especially those contradicting the

majority opinion.

What is groupthink?

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Page 5: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Groups” for $300

The tendency for people to work less on a task the greater the

number of people are working on that task.

What is social loafing?

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Page 6: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Groups” for $400

The tendency for members of a cohesive group to make more

extreme decisions due to the lack of opposing views.

What is group polarization?

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Page 7: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Groups” for $500

 A phenomenon where individuals do not offer help in an emergency situation when other people are

present.

What is the bystander effect?

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Page 8: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attribution” for $100

The tendency to overestimate internal factors and

underestimate external factors when explaining the behaviors of

others.

What is the fundamental attribution error?

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Page 9: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attribution” for $200

This occurs when people attribute their successes to internal or personal factors but attribute

their failures to situational factors beyond their control. 

What is the self-serving bias?

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Page 10: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attribution” for $300

This theory states that a person tends to explain his own behavior

and the behavior of others by assigning attributes to these

behaviors. 

What is the attribution theory?

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Page 11: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attribution” for $400

In this type of attribution, people infer that an event or a person’s

behavior is due to personal factors such as traits, abilities, or

feelings.

What is internal attribution (or dispositional attribution)?

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Page 12: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attribution” for $500

Inferring that an event or behavior is due to temporary

factors.

What is unstable attribution?

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Page 13: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attraction” for $100

This is the most important (and most obvious) factor in

establishing attraction. We like those who are close to us.

What is proximity (or closeness)?

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Page 14: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attraction” for $200

This reason for attraction states that people tend to like others who like

them back.

What is reciprocity?

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Page 15: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attraction” for $300This reason for attraction

maintains that people tend to relate their opinions about other people with their current state.

For example, if a man meets another person while in a bad mood, he may have negative

feelings toward the new person because of his bad mood.What is association?

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Page 16: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attraction” for $400

This theory states that people tend to like novel stimuli more if they encounter them repeatedly.

What is the mere exposure effect?

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Page 17: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Attraction” for $500

This theory states that people tend to pick partners who are

about equal in level of attractiveness to themselves.

What is the matching hypothesis?

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Page 18: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Power” for $100

The power to punish.

What is coercive power?

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Page 19: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Power” for $200

This type of power results from experience and education.

What is expert power?

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Page 20: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Power” for $300

This type of power is granted by an authority figure.

What is legitimate power?

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Page 21: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Power” for $400

This type of power comes from admiration or respect.

What is referent power?

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Page 22: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Power” for $500

This type of power comes from the ability to offer

awards for behavior.

What is reward power?

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Page 23: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Review” for $100

In this type of study, both the experimenter and the participant do not know if the participant is receiving the actual treatment or

the placebo treatment.

What is a double blind study?

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Page 24: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Review” for $200

This parenting style focuses on setting reasonable rules and

expectations while encouraging communication and

independence.

What is authoritative parenting?

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Page 25: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Review” for $300

This is a condition that occurs after a period of negative

consequences where a person begins to believe he or she has no

control. 

What is learned helplessness?

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Page 26: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Review” for $400

This is another name for the sense of taste.

What is gustation?

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Page 27: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

“Review” for $500

This portion of the brain contains the visual cortex and plays a

major role in the interpretation of visual information.

What is the occipital lobe?

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Page 28: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

Final Jeopardy

She was stabbed to death while being watched by 38 people. Her

story is a vivid example of the bystander effect.

Who is Kitty Genovese?

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Page 29: Social Psychology Jeopardy. GroupsAttributionAttractionPowerReview 100 200 300 400 500 Final Jeopardy

•Most information taken from http://allpsych.com/psychology101/

•Information on the bystander effect, the self-serving bias, and Kitty Genovese taken from http://en.wikipedia.org/

•Information on internal and unstable attribution, the matching hypothesis, and the mere exposure effect taken from http://www.sparknotes.com/psychology/psych101/socialpsychology/

Sources