PSYC

 At least two original thinking problem clues will be published according to the specified reading materials, and at least four posts from other students will be answered. Two original posts must not be on the same topic (although they may come from the same chapter). Posts must be well thought out, well developed, and relevant to chapter reading that week. Simply saying “I agree” or “Wow, that’s interesting” is not a post. Your post must show your thoughts on the topics and issues we are discussing. It’s all right for your posts to reflect your real life experiences, but you must know how your shared experiences are related to classroom materials and textbook reading.

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In short, you need to write two original thinking problem clues and reply to four posts (please clearly divide the original thinking problem clues into two paragraphs, and the contents of the reply to four posts also need to be clearly divided into four paragraphs)

  • Therapy
  • PSYCHOLOGY David G. Myers C. Nathan DeWall Twelfth Edition

    Chapter 16

  • Chapter Overview
  •  Introduction to Therapy and the Psychological
    Therapi

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    es

     Evaluating Psychotherapies

  • The Biomedical Therapies
  • and Preventing

    Psychological Disorders

  • The History of Treatment
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Visitors to eighteenth-century mental hospitals paid to gawk at patients, as though they were viewing zoo animals. William Hogarth’s (1697–1764) painting captured one of these visits to London’s St. Mary of Bethlehem hospital (commonly called Bedlam).

  • Approach Differences
  •  Psychotherapy
     Psychological techniques derived from psychological

    perspectives
     Trained therapist uses psychological techniques to assist

    someone overcome difficulties or achieve personal growth
     Biomedical therapy
     Treatment with medical procedures
     Trained therapist, most often a medical doctor, offers

    medications and other biological treatments
     Eclectic approach
     Uses techniques from various forms of therapy

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    Psychoanalysis

     Goals: To bring patients’ repressed feelings into
    conscious awareness; to help patients release energy
    devoted to internal conflicts so they may achieve
    healthier, less anxious lives.

     Techniques: Historical reconstruction, initially
    through hypnosis and later through free association;
    interpretation of resistance, transference

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Psychoanalysis
    Sigmund Freud’s therapeutic technique. Freud believed the patient’s free associations, resistances, dreams, and transferences—and the therapist’s interpretations of them—released previously repressed feelings, allowing the patient to gain self – insight.
    Resistance
    In psychoanalysis, the blocking from consciousness of anxiety- laden material.
    Interpretation
    In psychoanalysis, the analyst’s noting supposed dream meanings, resistances, and other significant behaviors and events in order to promote insight.
    Transference
    In psychoanalysis, the patient’s transfer to the analyst of emotions linked with other relationships (such as love or hatred for a parent).

  • Psychodynamic Therapy
  •  Goals: Help people
    understand current symptoms;
    explore and gain perspective
    on defended-against thoughts
    and feelings

     Techniques: Client-centered
    face-to-face meetings;
    exploration of past relationship
    troubles to understand origins
    of current difficulties

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Psychodynamic therapy
    Therapy derived from the psychoanalytic tradition
    Views individuals as responding to unconscious forces and childhood experiences, and seeks to enhance self-insight

    Psychoanalysis and Psychodynamic
    Therapies
     Psychodynamic therapy

     Influenced by traditional psychoanalysis but differs from it in
    many ways

     Differences
     Lack of belief in id, ego, and superego
     Briefer, less expensive, and more focused on helping clients find

    relief from their current symptoms
     Helps clients understand how past relationships create themes

    that may be acted out in present relationships

     Interpersonal therapy
     Brief 12- to 16-session form of psychodynamic therapy that has

    been effective in treating depression

  • Humanistic Therapies (part 1)
  •  Humanistic perspective
     Theme: Emphasis on people’s potential for self-

    fulfillment; to give people new insights
     Goals: Reduce inner conflicts that interfere with

    natural development and growth; help clients grow in
    self-awareness and self-acceptance promoting
    personal growth

     Techniques: Client-centered therapy; focus on taking
    responsibility for feelings and actions, and on present
    and future rather than past

  • Understanding Differences
  •  Both psychodynamic and humanistic therapies
    are insight therapies.
     They attempt to improve functioning by increasing

    clients’ awareness of motives and defenses.

     Behavior therapies are not insight therapies.
     Their goal is to apply learning principles to modify

    problem behaviors.

  • Humanistic Therapies (part 2)
  •  Rogers
     Person-centered therapy

    that focuses on person’s
    conscious self-
    perceptions; non-directive;
    active listening;
    unconditional positive
    regard

     Most people possess
    resources for growth.

     Therapists foster growth
    by exhibiting genuineness,
    acceptance, and empathy.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Strengthening communication (Rogers):
    Paraphrase
    Invite clarification
    Reflect feelings

  • Behavior Therapies (part 1)
  •  Classical conditioning techniques
     Counterconditioning: Uses classical conditioning to

    evoke new responses to stimuli that are triggering
    unwanted behaviors

     Exposure therapies: Treat anxieties by exposing
    people (in imaginary or actual situations) to the things
    they fear and avoid

     Systematic desensitization: Associates a pleasant,
    relaxed state with gradually increasing, anxiety-
    triggering stimuli

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Exposure therapies: Behavioral techniques, such as systematic desensitization and virtual reality exposure therapy, that treat anxieties by exposing people (in imaginary or actual situations) to the things they fear and avoid.
    Systematic desensitization: Type of exposure therapy that associates a pleasant, relaxed state with gradually increasing anxiety-triggering stimuli. Commonly used to treat phobias.

  • Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy
  •  Treats anxiety by creative electronic simulations
    in which people can safely face their greatest
    fears, such as airplane flying, spiders, or public
    speaking

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Within the confines of a room, virtual reality technology exposes people to vivid simulations of feared stimuli, such as walking across a rickety bridge high off the ground.

  • Behavior Therapies (part 2)
  •  Aversive conditioning
     Goals:

     Substitute a negative response for a positive response to a
    harmful stimulus

     Condition an aversion to something the person should avoid

     Techniques:
     Unwanted behavior is associated with unpleasant feelings

     Ability to discriminate between aversive conditioning situation
    in therapy and other situations can limit treatment
    effectiveness

  • Aversion Therapy for Alcohol Abuse
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Therapists gave people with a history of alcohol abuse a mixed drink containing alcohol and a drug that produces severe nausea. After repeated treatments, some people developed at least a temporary conditioned aversion to alcohol. (Classical conditioning terms: US is unconditioned stimulus, UR is unconditioned response, NS is neutral stimulus, CS is conditioned stimulus, and CR is conditioned response.)
    Problem: Thoughts can override conditioning processes.

  • Behavior Therapies (part 3)
  •  Operant conditioning therapy: Consequences
    drive behavior; voluntary behaviors are strongly
    influenced by their consequences.

     Behavior modification: Desired behavior is
    reinforced; undesired behavior is not reinforced,
    and sometimes punished.

     Token economy: People earn a token for
    exhibiting a desired behavior and can later
    exchange the tokens for privileges or treats.

  • Behavior Therapies (part 4)
  •  Critics:
     How durable are the behaviors? Will people become

    so dependent on extrinsic rewards that the desired
    behaviors will stop when reinforcers stop?

     Is it right for one human to control another’s
    behavior?

     Proponents:
     Treatment with positive rewards is more humane than

    punishing people or institutionalizing them for
    undesired behaviors.

     Teaches people new, more adaptive ways of thinking; based
    on the assumption that thoughts intervene between events
    and our emotional reactions

     Beck’s therapy for depression
     Gentle questioning seeks to reveal irrational thinking and

    then to persuade people to change their perceptions of their
    own and others’ actions as dark, negative, and pessimistic

     People trained to recognize and modify negative self-talk

    Cognitive Therapies

    The person’s emotional
    reactions are produced not
    directly by the event but by the
    person’s thoughts in response
    to the event.

  • A COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS
  • Cognitive Therapies

     Integrative therapy that
    combines cognitive therapy
    (changing self-defeating
    thinking) with behavior
    therapy (changing
    behavior)

     Aims to alter the way one
    acts AND they way one
    thinks

     Helps people learn to make
    more realistic appraisals

    Cognitive Therapies

    Cognitive-behavioral therapy (CBT)

     Conducted with groups,
    rather than individuals

     Benefits:
     Saves therapists’ time and clients’

    money
     Offers a social laboratory for

    exploring social behaviors and
    developing social skills

     Enables clients to see that others
    share their problems

     Provides feedback as clients try
    out new ways of behaving

    Group Therapy

     Treats the family as a
    system

     Views an individual’s
    unwanted behaviors as
    influenced by, or
    directed at, other family
    members

     Acts as a preventive
    mental health strategy

    Family Therapy

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Therapist helps family members understand how their ways of relating to one another create problems.

     Changes the brain’s
    chemistry with drugs

     Affects the brain’s
    circuitry with electrical
    stimulation, magnetic
    impulses, or
    psychosurgery

     Influences the brain’s
    responses with lifestyle
    changes

    Myers/DeWall, Psychology in Everyday Life, 4e, © 2017 Worth Publishers

    Biomedical Therapy

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Every thought and feeling depends on the functioning of the brain.
    Every creative idea, every moment of joy or anger, every period of depression emerges from the electrochemical activity of the living brain.

  • Comparing Modern Psychotherapies
  • Therapy Presumed Problem Therapy Aim Therapy Technique

    Psychodynamic Unconscious conflicts from
    childhood experiences

    Reduce anxiety through self-
    insight.

    Interpret patients’ memories and
    feelings.

    Client-centered Barriers to self-
    understanding and self-
    acceptance

    Enable growth via unconditional
    positive regard, acceptance,
    genuineness, and empathy.

    Listen actively and reflect clients’
    feelings.

    Behavior Dysfunctional behaviors Learn adaptive behaviors;
    extinguish problem ones.

    Use classical conditioning (via
    exposure or aversion therapy) or
    operant conditioning (as in token
    economies).

    Cognitive Negative, self-defeating
    thinking

    Promote healthier thinking and
    self-talk.

    Train people to dispute negative
    thoughts and attributions.

    Cognitive-
    behavioral

    Self-harmful thoughts and
    behaviors

    Promote healthier thinking and
    adaptive behaviors.

    Train people to counter self-harmful
    thoughts and to act out their new ways
    of thinking.

    Group and family Stressful relationships Heal relationships. Develop an understanding of family and
    other social systems, explore roles, and
    improve communication.

  • Is Psychotherapy Effective?
  •  Clients’ and therapists’ positive testimonials cannot
    prove that psychotherapy is actually effective.

     The placebo effect makes it difficult to judge
    whether improvement occurred because of the
    treatment.

     Research indicates that those persons who do not
    undergo treatment often improve, but those
    undergoing psychotherapy are more likely to
    improve more quickly, and with less chance of
    relapse.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Using meta-analyses to statistically combine the results of hundreds of randomized psychotherapy outcome studies, researchers have found that those individuals who do not undergo treatment often improve, but those who participate in psychotherapy are more likely to improve more quickly, and with less chance of relapse.

  • Treatment Versus No Treatment
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    These two normal distribution curves, which are based on data from 475 studies, show the improvement of untreated people and psychotherapy clients. The outcome for the average therapy client surpassed the outcome for 80 percent of the untreated people. (Data from Smith et al., 1980.)

  • Which Psychotherapies Work Best?
  •  Some forms of psychotherapy work best for
    particular problems.
     Cognitive and cognitive-behavioral therapies:

    anxiety, depression, and posttraumatic stress

    disorder

     Behavioral conditioning therapies: bed-wetting,
    phobias, compulsions, marital problems, and sexual
    dysfunctions

     Psychodynamic therapy: depression and anxiety
     Nondirective (client-centered) counseling: mild to

    moderate depression

  • Culture and Values in Psychotherapy
  •  Psychotherapists’
    personal beliefs and
    values influence their
    practice.

     Differences in cultural and
    moral diversity and
    religious values can
    create a mismatch.

  • Finding a Mental Health Professional
  •  A person seeking therapy is encouraged to ask
    about
     Treatment approach
     Values
     Credentials
     Fees

     An important consideration is whether the
    potential client feels comfortable and able to
    establish a bond with the therapist.

  • Therapists and Their Training
  • Type Therapy Description

    Clinical psychologists Most are psychologists with a Ph.D. (includes research training) or Psy.D. (focuses on
    therapy) supplemented by a supervised internship and, often, post-doctoral training.
    About half work in agencies and institutions, half in private practice.

    Psychiatrists Psychiatrists are physicians who specialize in the treatment of psychological disorders.
    Not all psychiatrists have had extensive training in psychotherapy, but as M.D.s or D.O.s
    they can prescribe medications. Thus, they tend to see those with the most serious
    problems. Many have their own private practice.

    Clinical or psychiatric
    social workers

    A two-year master of social work graduate program plus postgraduate supervision
    prepares some social workers to offer psychotherapy, mostly to people with everyday
    personal and family problems. About half have earned the National Association of Social
    Workers’ designation of clinical social worker.

    Counselors Marriage and family counselors specialize in problems arising from family relations. Clergy
    provide counseling to countless people. Abuse counselors work with substance abusers
    and with spouse and child abusers and their victims. Mental health and other counselors
    may be required to have a two-year master’s degree.

    The Biomedical Therapies and Preventing
    Psychological Disorders

     Psychopharmacology
     Study of drug effects on mind and behavior
     Has helped make drug therapy the most widely used

    biomedical therapy

     Drug therapies
     The most widely used biomedical treatments
     27 million Americans take prescribed antidepressants
     Placebo and double-blind techniques are used to

    evaluate drug effectiveness

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Biomedical therapy: Prescribed medications or procedures that act directly on the person’s physiology

    The Biomedical Therapies

     Most common drug treatments for
    psychological disorders
     Antipsychotic drugs
     Antianxiety drugs
     Antidepressant drugs
     Mood-stabilizing medications

    Let’s take a closer look at each of these.

  • Drug Therapies (part 1)
  •  Antipsychotic drugs
     Mimic certain neurotransmitters (e.g., block or increase activity of

    dopamine); reduce overreaction to irrelevant stimuli
     May produce sluggishness, tremors, twitches, and tardive

    dyskinesia; Thorazine
     Successfully used with life-skills programs and family support to

    treat schizophrenia

     Antianxiety drugs
     Depress CNS activity; Xanax, Ativan
     Used in combination with psychological therapy
     May reduce symptoms without resolving underlying problems;

    withdrawal linked to increased anxiety and insomnia

  • Drug Therapies (part 2)
  •  Antidepressant drugs
     Increase availability of norepinephrine or serotonin;

    promote birth of new brain cells
     Slow synaptic vacuuming up of serotonin (SSRIs)
     Effectiveness sometimes questioned due to spontaneous

    recovery and placebo effect

     Mood-stabilizing medications
     Depakote: Controls manic episodes
     Lithium: Levels out the emotional highs and lows of bipolar

    disorder

  • Biology of Antidepressants
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Shown here is the action of Prozac, which partially blocks the reuptake of serotonin.

     Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT)
     Manipulates brain by shocking it
     Involves administration of general

    anesthetic and muscle relaxation
    to prevent convulsions

     Causes less memory disruption
    than earlier versions

     AMA concluded that ECT
    methods among most positive
    treatment effects; reduces
    suicidal thoughts

     Involves several theories about
    reason for effectiveness

     Deep

    Brain Stimulation

    Brain Stimulation

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    14-14 How are brain stimulation and psychosurgery used in treating specific disorders?

    Preventing Psychological Disorders and
    Building Resilience
     Preventive mental health programs work to build

    resilience.
     Based on the idea that many psychological disorders could

    be prevented by changing oppressive, esteem-destroying
    environments into more benevolent, nurturing
    environments that foster growth and self-confidence

     Resilience
     Personal strength that helps most people cope with stress

    and recover from adversity and trauma
     Can be seen in New Yorkers after 9/11, patients who

    experience spinal cord injury, and Holocaust survivors,
    among others

      Therapy
      Chapter Overview
      The History of Treatment
      Approach Differences

    • �Psychoanalysis �
    • Psychodynamic Therapy

    • Psychoanalysis and Psychodynamic Therapies
    • Humanistic Therapies (part 1)
      Understanding Differences
      Humanistic Therapies (part 2)
      Behavior Therapies (part 1)
      Virtual Reality Exposure Therapy
      Behavior Therapies (part 2)
      Aversion Therapy for Alcohol Abuse
      Behavior Therapies (part 3)
      Behavior Therapies (part 4)

    • Slide Number 17
    • A COGNITIVE PERSPECTIVE ON PSYCHOLOGICAL DISORDERS

    • Slide Number 19
    • Slide Number 20
    • Slide Number 21
    • Slide Number 22
    • Comparing Modern Psychotherapies
      Is Psychotherapy Effective?
      Treatment Versus No Treatment
      Which Psychotherapies Work Best?
      Culture and Values in Psychotherapy
      Finding a Mental Health Professional
      Therapists and Their Training

    • The Biomedical Therapies and Preventing�Psychological Disorders
    • The Biomedical Therapies
      Drug Therapies (part 1)
      Drug Therapies (part 2)
      Biology of Antidepressants

    • Slide Number 35
    • Preventing Psychological Disorders and Building Resilience
  • Psychological Disorders
  • PSYCHOLOGY David G. Myers C. Nathan DeWall Twelfth Edition

    Chapter 15

  • Chapter Overview
  •  Introduction to Psychological Disorders

  • Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and PTSD
  •  Depressive Disorders,

  • Bipolar Disorder
  • , Suicide,

    and Self-Injury

  • Schizophrenia
  • Dissociative, Personality, and
  • Eating Disorders
  • Introduction to Psychological Disorders
    (part 1)

     According to psychologists and psychiatrists,
    psychological disorders are marked by a
    clinically significant disturbance in an
    individual’s cognition, emotion regulation, or
    behavior (APA, 2013).

     Disturbed or dysfunctional thoughts, emotions,
    or behaviors are maladaptive.

  • Yesterday’s “Therapy”
  • Through the ages,
    psychologically disordered
    people have received brutal
    treatments, including the
    trephination evident in this
    Stone Age skull.
    Drilling skull holes like these
    may have been an attempt to
    release evil spirits and cure
    those with mental disorders.
    Did this patient survive the
    “cure”?

    Introduction to Psychological Disorders
    (part 2)
     The medical model

     1800s: Search for physical cause of mental disorders and for
    curative treatments

     Mental illness diagnosed on basis of symptoms and treated
    through therapy

     Credibility gained from recent research in genetically influenced
    brain abnormalities in brain structure and biochemistry

     The biopsychosocial approach
     General approach positing that biological, psychological, and

    social-cultural factors play significant roles in human functioning
    in the context of disease or illness

     Epigenetics also informs our understanding of disorders

    Presenter
    Presentation Not

    es

    Medical model: The concept that diseases (in this case, psychological disorders) have physical

    causes

    that can be diagnosed, treated, and, in most cases, cured, often through treatment in a hospital.

    Biopsychosocial Approach to Psychological
    Disorders

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Today’s psychology studies how biological, psychological, and social-cultural factors interact to produce specific psychological disorders.

    Introduction to Psychological Disorders
    (part 3)

     Diagnostic
    classification in
    psychiatry and
    psychology
     Predicts the disorder’s

    future course
     Suggests appropriate

    treatment
     Prompts research into its

    causes

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    Diagnostic and Statistical Manual
    of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)
     DSM-5
     American Psychiatric Association-Fifth edition
     Describes disorders and estimates their occurrence

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    DSM has all the criteria needed to diagnose a disorder. Doctors and psychologists use it to do so.
    Some diagnosis have changed – autism and Asperger – now ASD; mental retardation – intellectual disability; hoarding disorder and binge eating disorder
    The danger of labeling – once we label someone as having disorder we look at them differently – bipolar patient example;
    Labels can be self fulfilling as well – watching people labeled JOB applicants or Psychiatric patients – made observer report different things

    Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental
    Disorders (DSM-5) (part 2)

     DSM-5 criticism
     Antisocial personality disorder and generalized

    anxiety disorder did poorly on field trials.
     DSM-5 contributes to pathologizing of everyday life.
     System labels are society’s value judgments.

     DSM-5 benefits
     System helps mental health professionals

    communicate and is useful in research

  • Does Disorder Equal Danger?
  •  Mental disorders seldom lead to violence and
    clinical prediction of violence is unreliable.
     When they do, moral and ethical questions are raised

    about whether society should hold people with
    disorders responsible for their violent actions?

     Most people with disorders are nonviolent and are
    more likely to be victims than attackers.

  • Rates of Psychological Disorders
  •  Psychological disorder rates
    vary, depending on the time
    and place of the survey.

     Poverty is a risk factor.
     Conditions and experiences

    associated with poverty contribute to
    the development of psychological
    disorders.

     Some disorders, such as
    schizophrenia, can drive people into
    poverty.

    Percentage of Americans Reporting Selected
    Psychological Disorders in the Past Year

    Psychological Disorder Percentage

    Depressive disorders or bipolar disorder 9.3

    Phobia of specific object or situation 8.7

    Social anxiety disorder 6.8

    Attention-deficit/hyperactivity disorder
    (ADHD)

    4.1

    Posttraumatic stress disorder (PTSD) 3.5

    Generalized anxiety disorder 3.1

    Schizophrenia 1.1

    Obsessive-compulsive disorder 1.0

    What
    Increases
    Vulnerability
    to Mental
    Disorders?

    Risk Factors Protective Factors

    Academic failure
    Birth complications
    Caring for those who are
    chronically ill or who have a
    neurocognitive disorder
    Child abuse and neglect
    Chronic insomnia
    Chronic pain
    Family disorganization or
    conflict
    Low birth weight
    Low socioeconomic status
    Medical illness
    Neurochemical imbalance
    Parental mental illness
    Parental substance abuse
    Personal loss and bereavement
    Poor work skills and habits
    Reading disabilities
    Sensory disabilities
    Social incompetence
    Stressful life events
    Substance abuse
    Trauma experiences

    Aerobic exercise
    Community offering
    empowerment, opportunity, and
    security
    Economic independence
    Effective parenting
    Feelings of mastery and control
    Feelings of security
    High self-esteem
    Literacy
    Positive attachment and early
    bonding
    Positive parent-child
    relationships
    Problem-solving skills
    Resilient coping with stress and
    adversity
    Social and work skills
    Social support from family and
    friends

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    es Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and PTSD

     Phobias
    Persistent,
    irrational fear and
    avoidance of a
    specific object,
    activity, or
    situation

     Anxiety disorders are marked by distressing, persistent
    anxiety or maladaptive behaviors that reduce anxiety.

     Panic disorder
    Sudden episodes
    of intense dread
    and often lives in
    fear of when the
    next attack might
    strike

     GAD (General
    Anxiety Disorder)
    Excessive Anxiety
    and pervasive
    worry about
    everyday life
    events

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Anxiety is part of life, right? Talking in front of strangers, climbing a high ladder – we experience a sense of fear or anxiety but it doesn’t interfere w our lives, we don’t feel it all the time.
    GAD – excessive and uncontrolled worry; cant concentrate, hard time sleeping, high blood pressure; women more susceptible – 9/11 example; emotions tend to mellow as we age– rare after 50
    Panic – anxiety suddenly escalates – symptoms; they come and go but they are not forgotten; avoidance behavior; agoraphobia
    Phobias – we all have some fears but people wit phobias are consumed – irrational fear and avoidance – specific phobias or social anxiety disorder – speaking, eating out – potentially embarrassed

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    Specific Phobias
    irrational fear toward something specific

    Social Anxiety Disorder
    Fear & anxiety of being judged or evaluated by others

    Eating or drinking in front of others

    Writing or working in front of others

    Being the center of attention

    Dating or going to parties

    Some Common and Uncommon Specific
    Fears

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Researchers surveyed Dutch people to identify the most common events or objects they feared. A strong fear becomes a phobia if it provokes a compelling but irrational desire to avoid the dreaded object or situation. (Data from Depla et al., 2008.)

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  • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
  •  Characterized by unwanted repetitive thoughts
    (obsessions), actions (compulsions), or both

     Compulsive behaviors are responses to obsessive
    thoughts.
     Become a disorder when obsessive thoughts:

     Persistently interfere with everyday life
     Cause distress

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    Obsessive-Compulsive
    Disorder (OCD)

     Characterized by persistent
    and repetitive thoughts
    (obsessions), actions
    (compulsions), or both

    Thought or Behavior

    Percentag
    e
    Reporting
    Symptom

    Obsessions (repetitive
    thoughts)

    Concern with dirt,
    germs, or toxins
    Something terrible
    happening (fire, death,
    illness)
    Symmetry, order, or
    exactness

    40
    24
    17

    Compulsions (repetitive
    behaviors)

    Excessive hand
    washing, bathing,
    toothbrushing, or
    grooming
    Repeating rituals
    (in/out of a door,
    up/down from a chair)
    Checking doors, locks,
    appliances, car
    brakes, homework

    85
    51
    46

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    We all can have some of this – obsess over something – somebody is away and you obsess something bad happened to them; compulsive – alphabetize books or CDs for example; peel potato or cut exact same size cubes – at some point they cross the line and interfere with one’s life – wash hands, check,
    People realize their obsessions are irrational but they cause anxiety and the compulsion is the only relief.
    – OCD check turn off stuff, check for dead body on road, OCD – germs – wash wash raw hands hours of the same OCD praying – OCD –

  • Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)
  •  Posttraumatic stress disorder
     Characterized by haunting memories, nightmares,

    social withdrawal, jumpy anxiety, numbness of
    feeling, and/or insomnia lingering for four weeks or
    more after a traumatic experience

     Often affects battle-scarred veterans (7.6 percent of
    combatants; 1.4 percent of noncombatants) and
    survivors of accidents, disasters, and violent and
    sexual assaults (two-thirds of prostitutes)

     Women are at higher risk

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Typical symptoms include recurring haunting memories and nightmares, laser-focused attention to possible threats, social withdrawal, jumpy anxiety, and trouble sleeping (Germain, 2013; Hoge et al., 2007; Yuval et al., 2017).

    Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and
    PTSD (part 1)

     Conditioning
     Classical conditioning research helps explain how

    panic-prone people associate anxiety with certain
    cues.

     Stimulus generalization research demonstrates how
    a fearful event can later become a fear of similar
    events.

     Reinforcement (operant conditioning) can help
    maintain a developed and generalized phobia.

    Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and
    PTSD (part 2)

     Cognition
     Observing others can contribute to

    development of some fears.
     Olsson and colleagues: Wild monkey research

    findings

     Interpretations and expectations shape
    reactions.
     Hypervigilance

    Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and
    PTSD (part 3)

     Biology
     Genes: Genetic predisposition to anxiety, OCD, and

    PTSD
     The brain: Trauma linked to new fear pathways,

    hyperactive danger detection, impulse control, and
    habitual behavior areas of brain

     Natural selection: Biological preparedness to fear
    threats; easily conditioned and difficult to extinguish

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    The biological perspective considers the role that fears of life-threatening animals, objects, or situations played in natural selection and evolution; genetic predispositions for high levels of emotional reactivity and neurotransmitter production; and abnormal responses in the brain’s fear circuits.
    Researchers have found genes associated with OCD (Dodman et al., 2010; Hu et al., 2006) and with typical anxiety disorder symptoms (Hovatta et al., 2005).

  • An Obsessive-Compulsive Brain
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    In research in which people engaged in a challenging cognitive task, those with OCD showed the most activity in the anterior cingulate cortex in the brain’s frontal area (Maltby et al., 2005).

  • Depressive Disorders
  •  Major depressive disorder
     Person experiences, in the absence of drugs or another

    medical condition, two or more weeks with five or more
    symptoms, at least one of which must be either (1)
    depressed mood or (2) loss of interest or pleasure

     Persistent depressive disorder
     Person experiences mildly depressed mood more often

    than not for at least two years, along with at least two other
    symptoms.

     For some people, depressive symptoms may have a
    seasonal pattern.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Adults diagnosed with persistent depressive disorder (also called dysthymia) have experienced a mildly depressed mood more often than not for two years or more (American Psychiatric Association, 2013). They also display at least two of the following symptoms:
    Difficulty with decision making and concentration
    Feeling hopeless
    Poor self-esteem
    Reduced energy levels
    Problems regulating sleep
    Problems regulating appetite

    Bipolar Disorder

     Bipolar disorder
     Disorder in which a person alternates between the

    hopelessness and lethargy of depression and the
    overexcited state of mania; formerly called manic-
    depressive disorder

     Mania
     A hyperactive, wildly optimistic state in which dangerously

    poor judgment is common

     Bipolar disorder is much less common than major
    depressive disorder, but is often more dysfunctional

     Potent predictor of suicide

    Understanding Depressive Disorders and
    Bipolar Disorder (part 1)
     Findings that any theory of depression must

    explain:
     Behavioral and cognitive changes accompany depression.
     Depression is widespread.
     Women’s risk of major depression is nearly double men’s.
     Most major depressive episodes end on their own.
     Stressful events related to work, marriage, and close

    relationships often precede depression.
     With each new generation, depression is striking earlier in

    life and affecting more people.

  • Gender and Major Depressive Disorder
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Interviews with 89,037 adults in 18 countries (10 of which are shown here) confirm what many smaller studies have found: Women’s risk of major depressive disorder is nearly double men’s risk. (Data from Bromet et al., 2011.)

  • Genetic Influences
  •  Risk increases if family
    member has disorder

     Twin studies: Estimated
    heritability of major
    depression as 37 percent

     Linkage analysis points to
    “chromosome
    neighborhood”

     Many genes work together
    and produce interacting
    small effects that increase
    risk for depression

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Using aggregated data from studies of identical and fraternal twins, researchers estimated the heritability of bipolar disorder, schizophrenia, anorexia nervosa, major depressive disorder, and generalized anxiety disorder (Bienvenu et al., 2011). Heritability was calculated by a formula that compares the extent of similarity among identical versus fraternal twins.

    Understanding Depressive Disorders and
    Bipolar Disorder (part 2)

     The depressed brain
     Brain activity slows during depression
     Left frontal lobe is less active
     Norepinephrine and serotonin levels decline

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Diminished brain activity occurs during depression and is more active during manic periods; other brain differences have been found.
    Neurotransmitter systems influence depressive and bipolar disorder, perhaps through a norepinephrine and serotonin gene.
    Diets associated with inflammation and excessive alcohol use are correlated with depression risk.

    The Ups and Downs of Bipolar Disorder
    (part 1)

     PET scans show that brain energy consumption
    rises and falls with the patient’s emotional
    switches. Red areas show where the brain is
    using energy most rapidly.

     During depression:
     Slowed brain activity
     Less active left frontal lobe
     Scarcity of norepinephrine and serotonin

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  • Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder
  •  The depressed brain
     Brain activity slows during depression
     Left frontal lobe less active
     Scarcity of norepinephrine and serotonin

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Depressive disorders and bipolar disorder run in families. Heritability estimated at 37 percent; linkage analysis suggests many genes work together to produce a mosaic of small effect which interact with other factors and increase risk.
    Diminished brain activity occurs during depression and is more active during manic periods; other brain differences have been found.
    Neurotransmitter systems influence depressive and biopolar disorder: norepinephrine and serotonin gene
    Diets associated with inflammation and excessive alcohol use correlates with depression.

    Understanding Depressive Disorders and
    Bipolar Disorder (part 3)

     Nutritional effects
     People who eat a heart-healthy “Mediterranean diet”

    (heavy on vegetables, fish, and olive oil) have a
    comparatively low risk of developing heart disease,
    stroke, late-life cognitive decline, and depression—all
    of which are associated with inflammation (Kaplan et
    al., 2015; Psaltopoulou et al., 2013; Rechenberg,
    2016).

     Excessive alcohol use is correlated with depression
    risk.

    Understanding Depressive Disorders and
    Bipolar Disorder (part 4)

     Psychological and social
    influences: social-
    cognitive perspective
     Depressed people view self

    and world negatively

     Learned helplessness may
    coexist with self-defeating
    beliefs, self-focused
    rumination, and self-blaming
    and pessimistic explanatory
    style

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Social-cognitive perspective explores how people’s assumptions and expectations influence their perceptions:
    Self-defeating beliefs and a negative explanatory style contribute to the cycle of depression.
    Depression is an ongoing cycle of stressful experiences (interpreted through negative beliefs, attributions, and memories), leading to negative moods and actions and fueling new stressful experiences.
    It’s normal to think about our flaws. But dwelling constantly on negative thoughts—particularly negative thoughts about ourselves—makes it difficult to believe in ourselves and solve problems. People sometimes seek therapy to reduce their rumination.

    Understanding Depressive Disorders and
    Bipolar Disorder (part 5)

     Social-cognitive perspective
     Explores how people’s assumptions and expectations

    influence their perceptions
     Self-defeating beliefs and a negative explanatory

    style contribute to the cycle of depression
     Views depression as an ongoing cycle of stressful

    experiences (interpreted through negative beliefs,
    attributions, and memories) which lead to negative
    moods and actions and fuel new stressful
    experiences

  • Explanatory Style and Depression
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    After a negative experience, a depression-prone person may respond with a negative explanatory style.

  • The Vicious Cycle of Depressed Thinking
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Therapists recognize this cycle, and they work to help depressed people break out of it by changing their negative thinking, turning their attention outward, and engaging them in more pleasant and competent behavior.

  • Suicide and Self-Injury (part 1)
  •  Suicide
     Affects 1 million people worldwide
     Higher risk with diagnosis of depression but may

    occur with rebound
     More likely to occur when people feel disconnected

    from or as if they are a burden to others

     Nonsuicidal self-injury (NSSI)
     Cutting, burning, hitting oneself, pulling out hair,

    inserting objects under nails or skin, self-administered
    tattooing

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Only 1 in 25 suicide attempts is successful.
    Reasons for engaging in NSSI:
    • Gain relief from intense negative thoughts through the distraction of pain
    • Ask for help and gain attention
    • Relieve guilt by self-punishment
    • Get others to change their negative behavior (bullying, criticism)
    • Fit in with a peer group

  • Suicide and Self-Injury (part 2)
  •  Research into the suicide rates of different
    groups shows:
     National differences
     Racial differences
     Gender differences
     Age differences and trends
     Other group differences
     Day of the week differences

    Why Do People Who Engage in Nonsuicidal
    Self-Injury Hurt Themselves?

     Reasons for engaging in NSSI
     Gain relief from intense negative thoughts through the

    distraction of pain
     Ask for help and gain attention
     Relieve guilt by self-punishment
     Get others to change their negative behavior

    (bullying, criticism)
     Fit in with a peer group

  • U.S. Rates of Nonfatal Self-Injury
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Self-injury rates peak higher for females than for males (CDC, 2009).

    Schizophrenia
    Psychological disorder characterized by delusions,
    hallucinations, disorganized speech, and/or diminished,
    inappropriate emotional expression

     Symptoms – positive and negative
     Positive – presence of something undesirable
     Negative – the absence of something desirable
     Disturbed perceptions (hallucinations)
     Disorganized thinking and speech
    DELUSION of GRANDURE PARANOIA
     Diminished and inappropriate emotions and actions

    FLAT AFFECT CATATONIA SENSLESS ACTS

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Hallucinations – taste, sounds, visual
    Delusions – false beliefs – of grandeur of paranoia; chopped thoughts – word salad
    Emotions are inappropriate – laughing at death, crying when other laugh, angry for no reason ; flat affective state – no emotion and no feeling; inappropriate motor behavior – senseless compulsive acts – rocking, rubbing; other may be motionless for hours – catatonia
    People live in a inner world with disrupted social relations and work relations.

    Schizophrenia: Onset and Development

     Chronic schizophrenia (also called process
    schizophrenia)
     Form of schizophrenia in which symptoms usually appear by late

    adolescence or early adulthood

     As people age, psychotic episodes last longer and recovery
    periods shorten.

     Acute schizophrenia (also called reactive schizophrenia)
     Form of schizophrenia that can begin at any age, frequently

    occurs in response to an emotionally traumatic event, and has
    extended recovery periods

  • Risk of Developing Schizophrenia
  • Dissociative, Personality, and Eating
    Disorders

     Dissociative disorder
     Conscious awareness becomes separated

    (dissociated) from previous memories, thoughts, and
    feelings

     Dissociative identity disorder (DID)
     Rare dissociative disorder in which a person exhibits

    two or more distinct and alternating personalities
     Formerly called multiple personality disorder

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Skeptics note that dissociative identity disorder, formerly known as multiple personality disorder, increased dramatically in the late twentieth century, is rarely found outside North America, and may reflect role playing by people who are vulnerable to therapists’ suggestions. Others view this disorder as a manifestation of feelings of anxiety, or as a response learned when behaviors are reinforced by anxiety reduction.

  • Personality Disorders (part 1)
  •  Personality disorder
     Disruptive, inflexible, and enduring behavior patterns

    that impair social functioning.
     Disorder forms three clusters, characterized by:

     Anxiety

     Eccentric or odd behaviors

     Dramatic or impulsive behaviors

  • Personality Disorders (part 2)
  •  Antisocial personality disorder
     Lack of conscience for wrongdoing, even toward

    friends and family members; impulsive, fearless,
    irresponsible; some genetic tendencies, including low
    arousal

     Genetic predispositions may interact with the
    environment to produce the altered brain activity
    associated with antisocial personality disorder

  • Murderous Minds
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Researchers have found reduced activation in a murderer’s frontal lobes. This brain area (shown in a left-facing brain) helps put the brakes on impulsive, aggressive behavior (Raine, 1999).

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    Eating Disorders
    • Anorexia nervosa

    – Characterized by self-starvation to being 85% or less
    of healthy body weight

    • Starvation can destroy body organs and cause death.
    • Medical emergencies require hospitalization (2/3 of ideal

    weight or less).
    – Menstruation ceases
    – Distorted body image

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    When

  • Kesha
  • was deep in her
    eating disorder, she thought
    “being hungry to the point of
    feeling almost faint was a
    positive thing. The worse it got,
    the more positive feedback I was
    getting. Inside I was really
    unhappy, but outside, people
    were like, ‘Wow, you look great.’”
    When her therapist helped her
    realize how big of a problem it
    was, she called her mom and
    went to rehab where she learned
    how food is a great thing—not
    something to fear.

    Kesha

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  • Troian Bellisario
  • Troian Bellisario, who starred
    in Pretty Little Liars, used the
    eating disorder she had as a
    teenager as a way to punish
    herself. “I started self-harming
    when I was a junior. I would
    withhold food or withhold going
    out with my friends, based on
    how well I did that day in school,”
    “I didn’t know what was right and
    what was wrong, so I think I
    created this bizarre system of
    checks and balances to create
    order in my world. But it really
    backfired.”

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    Eating Disorders
    • Bulimia nervosa

    – Characterized by at least biweekly cycles of binging
    and purging

    • In addition to forced vomiting, purging may include taking
    laxatives and/or diuretics, fasting, and excess exercise.

    – Major consequences
    • Mouth sores, loss of tooth enamel (gray teeth), esophageal

    ulcers, esophageal cancer

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  • Lady Gaga
  • “I used to throw up all the time
    in high school. So I’m not that
    confident,” she said. “I wanted
    to be a skinny little ballerina
    but I was a voluptuous little
    Italian girl whose dad had
    meatballs on the table every
    night.” At one point, her
    bulimia started to affect her
    singing. “It made my voice
    bad, so I had to stop.”

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  • What causes these conditions?
  • • Strong hereditary
    component, especially
    in girls

    • Temperamental
    tendency
    – to be anxious,
    – to have low self-efficacy,
    – to have a great need for

    approval,
    – and an inability to

    express legitimate
    needs.

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  • Understanding Eating Disorders
  •  People with anorexia nervosa continue to diet and exercise

    excessively because they view themselves as fat.
     People with bulimia nervosa secretly binge and then

    compensate by purging, fasting, or excessive exercise.
     People with binge-eating disorder binge but do not follow

    with purging, fasting, and exercise.
     Cultural pressures, low self-esteem, and negative emotions

    interact with stressful life experiences and genetics to
    produce eating disorders.

      Psychological Disorders
      Chapter Overview

    • Introduction to Psychological Disorders �(part 1)
    • Yesterday’s “Therapy”

    • Introduction to Psychological Disorders�(part 2)
    • Biopsychosocial Approach to Psychological Disorders
    • Introduction to Psychological Disorders�(part 3)
    • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual�of Mental Disorders (DSM-5)
    • Diagnostic and Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders (DSM-5) (part 2)
    • Does Disorder Equal Danger?
      Rates of Psychological Disorders

    • Percentage of Americans Reporting Selected Psychological Disorders in the Past Year
    • What Increases Vulnerability to Mental Disorders?
    • Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and PTSD

    • Slide Number 15
    • Some Common and Uncommon Specific Fears
    • Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
      Obsessive-Compulsive Disorder (OCD)
      Posttraumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD)

    • Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and PTSD (part 1)
    • Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and PTSD (part 2)
    • Understanding Anxiety Disorders, OCD, and�PTSD (part 3)
    • An Obsessive-Compulsive Brain
      Depressive Disorders
      Bipolar Disorder

    • Understanding Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder (part 1)
    • Gender and Major Depressive Disorder
      Genetic Influences

    • Understanding Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder (part 2)
    • The Ups and Downs of Bipolar Disorder�(part 1)
    • Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder

    • Understanding Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder (part 3)
    • Understanding Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder (part 4)
    • Understanding Depressive Disorders and Bipolar Disorder (part 5)
    • Explanatory Style and Depression
      The Vicious Cycle of Depressed Thinking
      Suicide and Self-Injury (part 1)
      Suicide and Self-Injury (part 2)

    • Why Do People Who Engage in Nonsuicidal Self-Injury Hurt Themselves?
    • U.S. Rates of Nonfatal Self-Injury
      Schizophrenia

    • �Schizophrenia: Onset and Development�
    • Risk of Developing Schizophrenia
      Dissociative, Personality, and Eating Disorders
      Personality Disorders (part 1)
      Personality Disorders (part 2)
      Murderous Minds
      Eating Disorders
      Kesha
      Troian Bellisario
      Eating Disorders
      Lady Gaga
      What causes these conditions?
      Understanding Eating Disorders

    Julian Menon 

    Chapter 13

    COLLAPSE

    窗体顶端

    We have been trying to control our emotions and stress level since the year 400, allow a moment to let this sink in – we are now closer as we find even scales to counter our emotions, however this took a turn for the worst in March when the pandemic started and now were almost at a stage where we start all over and add a new anomaly to the mix, COVID 19 has caused a whirlwind of new disorders from anxiety, to stress to depression and worst of all suicide. We must learn the delicate nature of brain structure and be both conscious of the current situation and not allow ourselves to be caught up in the unfortunate events that hold us all hostage at the moment. Understanding that stress can cause disease is one that should not be taken lightly and should practice self care and be open to everything once. Chapter 13 allows a chance to delve in to the social aspect of psychology and this is the topic you can not escape at the moment,  we find ways to self-medicate and not end up in another Milgram type encounter since this pandemic is nurturing many positive aspects of wellbeing as well as some radical ways to cope.

    窗体底端

    Julian Menon 

    Capter 15

    COLLAPSE

    窗体顶端

    Chapter 15 delves in to a very serious topic and what we are all here for to learn more about is psychological disorders, what actually construes a disorder, repetitious, unnatural, violent based, and or any mental thought that ruins the wellness of being alive. Now, with the pandemic raging we have seen a new classification(s) of disorders and they are yet to be studied, agoraphobia is rampant, how did these disorders manifest themselves to the extreme they are now, those that have OCD are now even more compromised due to the COVID-19 pandemic, we need to constantly expand our database and her sub categories to constantly keep vigilance on the wellbeing of our fellow man.

    Anjelica Garduno 

    Chapter 13

    COLLAPSE

    窗体顶端

    Chapter 13 
    What I found interesting was the four types of attribution, including the internal and external. It’s essential to understand one another, and not to project judgment—the fundamental attribution error. Just proves humans were not might to be perfect. I think that’s one of the things that social psychology struggles with is being a perfectionist. I enjoyed all the videos that we had watched in this chapter. I learned more new vocabulary. The danger of conformity. I can see how attribution error can also lead to dangerous conformity to lack of responsibility, incorrect judgment, and irrational thoughts. I like how the professor said “Attitude can follow the action, attitude can predict behavior. I used it all the time with my client. I can tell what kind of day was going to have. By the tone, body language, and movement. With Coivd-19 I can tell behavior will have. when the camera zoom is away or turn off. 

    Hannah Bickel 

    Module 3 Discussion 1

    COLLAPSE

    窗体顶端

    From this weeks module, I found that chapter 16 was an interesting chapter to learn about because it deals with therapy. When I was in high school, I had to go to therapy for my anxiety disorder, but I have always found group therapy very interesting. I have always wanted to try group therapy because if you’re in an environment with people that have shared experiences, you are more likely to have better self esteem knowing that you’re not alone. As someone who has anxiety, my biggest fear was no one understanding the way I was feeling, which made me even more anxious. If I had gone to group therapy back in high school, I know that I would have had a better experience knowing that I was not alone in overcoming a mental illness. I wish school districts had more programs like this at their high schools because there are a countless number of teenagers who struggle with mental illnesses. 

    窗体底端
    窗体底端
    窗体底端

  • Social Psychology
  • PSYCHOLOGY David G. Myers C. Nathan DeWall Twelfth Edition

    Chapter 13

  • Chapter Overview
  • Social Thinking
  • Social Influence
  •  Antisocial Relations
     Prosocial Relations

    Social Thinking

     Social psychology
     The scientific study of how we think about, influence,

    and relate to one another

     Social psychologists
     Use scientific methods to study how people think

    about, influence, and relate to one another
     Study the social influences that explain why the same

    person will act differently in different situations

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    Social Psychology
    Scientific study of how individuals think about,

    influence, and relate to one another
    ▪ Personality

    psychologists
    ▪ Study personal traits and

    processes that explain
    why different people may
    act differently in a given
    situation

    ▪ Social psychologists
    ▪ Study social forces that

    explain why the same
    person may act differently
    in different situations

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    A student in our class got an F on Exam 2.
    You happen to see their score…

    What are your thoughts?

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  • How Do We Explain Our Social World?
  • §

    §

    underestimate situational influences and

    overestimate personality influences

    You need to
    Attribute Cause

    (what explains the grade?)

    Personality
    (Internal Disposition)

    Situation
    (External)

  • Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
  • When we observe others’ behavior, we tend to:

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    When explaining behavior of others, we tend to:

    Underestimate
    the influence of

    the situation

    Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)

    overestimate
    the effects of
    personality

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    overestimate the
    effects of

    personality

    When explaining behavior of others, we tend to:

    underestimate
    the influence of

    the situation
    Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)

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    Overestimate
    the effects of
    personality

    Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
    When explaining behavior of others, we tend to:

    Underestimate
    the influence of
    the situation

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    overestimate
    situational

    factors

    When explaining our own behavior, we tend to:

    Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
    Underestimate
    the influence of
    the situation

    Social Thinking

     When explaining others’ behavior, especially
    from an individualist Western cultural
    perspective:
     Fundamental attribution error is committed by

    underestimating the influence of the situation and
    overestimating the effects of stable, enduring traits.

     Behavior is more readily attributed to the influence of
    the situation.

     Explaining and attributing actions can have important
    real-life social and economic effects.

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    es You are in charge of
    distributing funds
    that can impact
    homeless people.

    What would committing
    the FAE sound like if
    you were to explain why
    someone might be
    homeless?

    AN ATTRIBUTION QUESTION
    Poverty and homelessness
    ▪ Personal traits (drug addict, irresponsible, lazy)
    ▪ Social circumstances (no low-cost housing, poor economic

    conditions, and insufficient mental health services)

    Could this affect how you might distribute those funds?

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  • Fundamental Attribution Error – Me vs You
  • ▪ Driving to school one snowy
    day, Marco narrowly misses a
    car that slides through a red
    light.

    ▪ “Slow down! What a terrible
    driver,” he thinks to himself.

    ▪ Moments later, Marco himself
    slips through an intersection
    and yelps, “Wow! These roads
    are awful. The city plows need
    to get out here.”

    ▪ What social psychology
    principle has Marco just
    demonstrated?

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  • Attitudes Affect Actions
  • Affect Attitudes

    Attitudes are feelings influenced by beliefs, that
    predispose reactions to objects, people, and events.

    Actions are our behaviors toward objects, people,
    and events.

    You stand up for
    what you believe
    in.

    You believe
    more in
    something
    you’ve stood up
    for.

    Attitude
    Action

    Action
    Attitude

    Positive Neutral Negative

    Attitudes Affect Actions

     Attitudes are feelings influenced by beliefs,
    which predispose people to have specific
    reactions to objects, people, and events.
     Peripheral route persuasion occurs when people

    are influenced by incidental cues, such as a speaker’s
    attractiveness

     Central route persuasion occurs when interested
    people focus on the arguments and respond with
    favorable thoughts

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    When other influences are minimal, attitudes that are stable, specific, and easily recalled can affect our actions.

  • Actions Affect Attitudes (part 2)
  •  Actions can modify attitudes
     Foot-in-the-door phenomenon: The tendency for people

    who have first agreed to a small request to comply later
    with a larger request

     Role: A set of expectations (norms) about a social
    position, defining how those in the position ought to
    behave

     Attitudes follow behavior
     Cooperative actions, such as those performed by people

    on sports teams, feed mutual liking. Such attitudes, in turn,
    promote positive behavior.

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  • Actions Affect Attitudes – your doings build your beliefs.
  • ▪ Foot-in-the-door phenomenon involves compliance
    with a large request after having agreed to a small
    request

  • Social Thinking (part 4)
  •  When attitudes do not fit with actions,
    tensions are often reduced by changing
    attitudes to match actions (cognitive
    dissonance theory).
     We act to reduce the discomfort (dissonance) we feel

    when two of our thoughts (cognitions) clash.
     Brain regions become active when people experience

    cognitive dissonance.
     Through cognitive dissonance, we often bring

    attitudes into line with our actions (Festinger).

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    For example, when we become aware that our attitudes and our actions don’t match, we may change our attitudes so that we feel more comfortable.
    Changing our behavior can change how we think about others and how we feel about ourselves.

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  • Actions conflict with Attitudes conflict with Actions
  • ▪ Cognitive Dissonance inconsistency between
    actions and attitudes resulting in feeling of frustration
    and being uncomfortable.

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    Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment
    The Power of Situation

    ▪ Role playing
    ▪ Guards

    ▪ Justified their actions with the need to maintain order
    ▪ Gained power from uniform, mirror glasses and baton

  • Deindividuation
  • ▪ Prisoners
    ▪ Isolated
    ▪ Humiliated
    ▪ Dehumanized
    ▪ Learned to be helpless

    ▪ Ethical Concerns

    Social Influence

     Social contagion
     Chartrand and colleagues

    (1999)
     Demonstrated the chameleon

    effect with college students
     Automatic mimicry helps people to

    empathize and feel what others
    feel.

     The more we mimic, the greater
    our empathy, and the more people
    tend to like us.

     This is a form of conformity.

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  • Chameleon effect
  • You start laughing
    exactly like your

    friend

    You are likely to buy something
    from a salesperson who wears a
    hat with the logo of a team you
    like

    ▪ Humans are natural mimics, unconsciously imitating others’
    expressions, postures, and voice tones.

    ▪ Automatic mimicry helps people empathize and feel what
    others feel. The more the mimicry, greater the empathy

    People heard that an accident occurred
    because some car brand’s breaks were
    faulty. All of a sudden everybody with
    that car brand started experiencing
    ”faulty breaks” until it was discovered
    that the original accident was due to
    something else…

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    es What IsConformity?
    Change in behavior or belief as

    the result of real or imagined
    group pressure

     Positive or Negative?

    Acceptance Compliance Obedience

  • Conformity and Obedience
  •  Solomon Asch and others have found that people are most
    likely to adjust their behavior or thinking to coincide with a
    group standard in the following circumstances:
     They feel incompetent or insecure.
     Their group has at least three people.
     Everyone else agrees.
     They admire the group’s status and attractiveness.
     They have not already committed to another response.
     They know they are being observed.
     Their culture encourages respect for

    social standards

    .

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  • More
  • Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies
  • ?

    Asch’s Studies of Group Pressure

    Test of perceptual judgment

    7-9 people in a group

    All confederates exceptYOU

    All confederates give thesame
    wrong answer

    What answer would YOU give?

    33% of the timeYOU will go
    along with thegroup

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    es More Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies?

    Asch’s Studies of Group Pressure

    In what city can you find Hollywood?

    San Francisco 78%

    This was in the 1950. What about us, today?

    Los Angeles 22%

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  • Group Pressure and Conformity
  • People are more likely to conform when they:

    • Are made to feel incompetent or insecure
    • Are in a group with at least three people
    • Are in a group in which everyone else agrees
    • Admire the group’s status and attractiveness
    • Have not already committed themselves to any response
    • Know that others in the group will observe their behavior
    • Are from a culture that strongly encourages respect for

    social standards

  • People May Conform for Many Reasons
  •  Normative social
    influence: Influence
    resulting from a person’s
    desire to gain approval or
    avoid disapproval

     Informational social
    influence: Influence
    resulting from one’s
    willingness to accept
    others’ opinions about
    reality

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    As tattoos become perceived as fashion conformity, their popularity may wane

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  • Why Conform?
  • Based on a person’s
    desire to fulfill the
    expectations of others
    ▪ “I don’t want tobe

    different”
    ▪ to gain acceptance
    ▪ Produced by social

    image

     Occurring when
    people accept
    evidence about reality
    provided by other
    people

    to appear correct
    “You must be right!”

    Produced by
    desire to be
    correct

    Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.

    Normative Influence Informational Influence

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    Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies

    lea
    of

    • 65
    pa
    be

    Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.

  • Milgram’s Obedience Experiments
  • What happens when the demands of authority • Te
    clash with the demands of conscience…

    What did Nazi soldiers did during WWII?

    They were
    evil.

    Followed
    orders.

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    Figure 6.4 – Milgram’s Obedience Experiment

    Milgram’s Obedience Experiments

    Assigned to be “teacher” or “student”

    A “mock” study of punishment on memory.

    Teacher administers shock after every
    wrong answer. Shocks increase in intensity.

    Student is in a different room but his voice
    could be heard.

    Teachers are told by experimenter they must
    continue with stronger and stronger shock.

    Milgram’s Obedience Experiments

     Stanley Milgram’s
    experiments
     People obeyed orders even when

    they thought they were harming
    another person.

     Strong social influences can make
    ordinary people conform to
    falsehoods or exhibit cruel
    behavior.

     In any society, great evil acts often
    grow out of people’s compliance
    with lesser evils.

  • Milgram’s Follow-up Obedience Experiment
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    In a repeat of the earlier experiment, 65 percent of the adult male “teachers” fully obeyed the experimenter’s commands to continue. They did so despite the “learner’s” earlier mention of a heart condition and despite hearing cries of protest after they administered what they thought were 150 volts and after hearing agonized protests after they supposedly administered a shock of 330 volts. (Data from Milgram, 1974.)

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    What Are the Classic
    Conformity and
    Obedience Studies?

    Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.

    110 surveyed adults said they
    would disobey at 135 volts.

    How about others?

    Maybe 1 in 1000 would go to the
    XXX level of shock. 65% went all

    the way to 450
    volts

    Prod 1: Please continue.
    Prod 2: The experiment requires that you continue.
    Prod 3: It is absolutely essential that you continue.
    Prod 4: You have no other choice. You must go on.

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    Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or display.
    Milgram’s Obedience Experiments

    What breeds obedience?

    DISTANCE

    CLOSENESS AND LIGITIMACY
    OF AUTHORITY

    INSTITUTIONLAUTHORITY

    LIBERATING EFFECT OF
    GROUP INFLUENCE

  • Group Behavior (part 1)
  •  Social facilitation (Triplett): The presence of
    others arouses people, improving performance
    on easy or well-learned tasks but decreasing
    performance on difficult tasks.
     Performance can also be hindered because the most

    likely, but not necessarily the correct, response
    occurs.
     Home town advantage

     Crowding effect

  • Group Behavior (part 2)
  •  Home team advantage
     When others observe us, we perform well-learned

    tasks more quickly and accurately.
     On new and difficult tasks, performance is slower and

    less accurate.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    When others observe us, we become aroused, and this arousal amplifies our other reactions.
    When you do well, you are likely to do even better in front of an audience, especially a friendly audience. What you normally find difficult may seem all but impossible when you are being watched.

    Sport Years
    Percentage of
    home games won

    Nippon League Baseball 1998–2009 53.6

    Major League Baseball 1903–2009 53.9

    National Hockey League 1917–2009 55.7

    International Rugby 1871–2009 56.9

    National Football League 1966–2009 57.3

    International Cricket 1877–2009 57.4

    National Basketball Association 1946–2009 60.5

    Women’s National Basketball
    Association

    2003–2009 61.7

    English Premier League Soccer 1993–2009 63.0

    NCAA Men’s Basketball 1947–2009 68.8

    Major League Soccer 2002–2009 69.1

  • Home Advantage in Team Sports
  • Group Behavior (part 3)
  •  Social loafing
     Tendency for people in a group to exert less effort

    when pooling their efforts toward attaining a common
    goal than when individually accountable

     Causes
     Acting as part of group and feeling less accountable
     Feeling individual contribution does not matter
     Taking advantage when there is lack of identification

    with the group

  • Group Behavior (part 4)
  •  Deindividuation
     A loss of self-awareness and self-restraint that occurs

    in group situations that foster arousal and anonymity
     Thrives in many different settings

    Phenomenon Social context
    Psychological effect of
    others’ presence Behavioral effect

    Social facilitation Individual being observed Increased arousal Amplified dominant behavior,
    such as doing better what one
    does well (or doing worse what
    is difficult)

    Social loafing Group projects Diminished feelings of
    responsibility when not
    individually accountable

    Decreased effort

    Deindividuation Group setting that fosters
    arousal and anonymity

    Reduced self-awareness Lowered self-restraint

    Behavior in the Presence of Others: Three
    Phenomena

    Deindividuation

    During England’s
    2011 riots and
    looting, rioters were
    disinhibited by
    social arousal and
    by the anonymity
    provided by
    darkness and their
    hoods and masks.
    Later, some of
    those arrested
    expressed
    bewilderment over
    their own behavior.

  • Group Polarization
  • and Groupthink

     Group polarization
     Group discussions with like-minded others strengthen members’

    prevailing beliefs and attitudes.
     Internet communication magnifies this effect, for better or for worse.

     Groupthink
     People are driven by a desire for harmony within a decision-making

    group, with this desire overriding realistic appraisal of alternatives.

     Individual power
     The power of the individual and the power of the situation interact.
     A small minority that consistently expresses its views may sway the

    majority.

    Group Polarization

     If group members are
    like-minded, discussion
    strengthens the
    prevailing opinions.

     Talking over racial
    issues increased
    prejudice in a high-
    prejudice group of high
    school students and
    decreased it in a low-
    prejudice group (Myers
    & Bishop, 1970).

  • Antisocial Relations (part 1)
  •  Prejudice: An unjustifiable (and usually
    negative) attitude toward a group and its
    members. Prejudice generally involves
    stereotyped beliefs, negative feelings, and a
    predisposition to discriminatory action.

     Stereotype: A generalized (sometimes accurate
    but often overgeneralized) belief about a group
    of people.

     Discrimination: unjustifiable negative behavior
    toward a group and its members.

  • Antisocial Relations (part 2)
  •  Prejudice
     “Prejudgment”
     An unjustified negative attitude

    toward some group and its
    members

     Often targets a different cultural,
    ethnic, or gender group

     Components
     Beliefs
     Emotions
     Predispositions to action

    (to discriminate)

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Important distinctions:
    Prejudice is a negative attitude.
    Discrimination is a negative behavior.

  • Antisocial Relations (part 3)
  •  Implicit prejudice
     Implicit racial associations

     Implicit association tests results: Even people who deny
    racial prejudice may carry negative associations.

     Unconscious patronization
     Lower expectations, inflated praise, and insufficient criticism

    for minority student achievement

  • Antisocial Relations (part 4)
  •  Implicit prejudice
     Race-influenced perceptions

     Automatic racial bias

     Reflexive bodily responses
     Unconscious, selective responses when looking at faces

  • Explicit and Implicit Prejudice
  •  Our prejudice is more often implicit—an
    unthinking knee-jerk response operating below
    the radar, leaving us unaware of how our
    attitudes are influencing our behavior.

     Psychologists study implicit prejudice in several
    ways:
     Testing for unconscious group associations
     Considering unconscious patronization
     Monitoring reflexive bodily responses

  • Prejudice Over Time
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Over the last quarter-century, Americans have increasingly approved of interracial dating, with each successive generation expressing more approval. (Data from Pew, 2012.)

  • Targets of Prejudice (part 1)
  •  Racial and ethnic prejudice
     People with darker skin tones experience greater

    criticism and accusations of immoral behavior (Alter
    et al., 2016).

     Our perceptions can reflect implicit bias.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Race primes perceptions. In experiments by Keith Payne (2006), people viewed (1) a White or Black face, immediately followed by (2) a flashed gun or hand tool, which was then followed by (3) a visual mask. Participants were more likely to misperceive a tool as a gun when it was preceded by a Black face rather than a White face.

  • Targets of Prejudice (part 2)
  •  Gender prejudice
     Overt gender prejudice has declined sharply, but both

    implicit and explicit gender prejudice and
    discrimination persist.

     Despite equality between the sexes in intelligence
    scores, people have tended to perceive their fathers
    as more intelligent than their mothers (Furnham &
    Wu, 2008).

  • Targets of Prejudice (part 3)
  •  LBGT prejudice
     In 2016 two dozen countries allowed same-sex marriage, but

    dozens more had laws criminalizing same-sex relationships.
     39 percent of LBGT persons reported having “been rejected by a

    friend or family member” because of their sexual orientation or
    gender identity (Pew, 2013a).

     58 percent reported being “subject to slurs or jokes” (Pew,
    2013a).

     80 percent of LGBT adolescents reported sexual orientation-
    related harassment in the prior year (GLSEN, 2012).

     Gays and lesbians are America’s most at-risk group for hate
    crimes (Sherman, 2016).

  • Roots of Prejudice (part 1)
  •  Social roots of prejudice
     Social inequalities: Often lead to the development of

    attitudes that justify the status quo
     Just-world phenomenon: Good is rewarded and evil

    is punished
     Stereotypes: Rationalize inequalities

  • Roots of Prejudice (part 2)
  •  Groups: Through social identities, people
    associate themselves with others.

     Evolution prepares people to identify with a
    group.
     Ingroup: “Us”—people with whom we share a

    common identity
     Outgroup: “Them”—those perceived as different or

    apart from our ingroup
     Ingroup bias: The tendency to favor our own group

  • Roots of Prejudice (part 3)
  •  Scapegoat theory: The theory that prejudice
    offers an outlet for anger by providing someone
    to blame

     Research evidence (Zimbardo)
     Prejudice levels tend to be high among economically

    frustrated people.
     In experiments, a temporary frustration increases

    prejudice.

  • Cognitive Shortcuts
  •  Forming categories
     Humans categorize people by race: Mixed-race

    people are identified based on their minority identity.
     Similarities are overestimated during categorization,

    creating “us” and “they.”
     Overestimation also occurs, in the form of the other-

    race effect or bias.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Other-race effect: Tendency to recall faces of one’s own race more accurately than faces of other races

  • Categorizing Mixed-Race People
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    When New Zealanders quickly classified 104 photos by race, those of European descent more often than those of Chinese descent classified the ambiguous middle two photos as Chinese (Halberstadt et al., 2011).

  • Vivid Cases Feed Stereotypes
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    The Muslim terrorists who struck the United States on September 11, 2001, created, in many minds, an exaggerated stereotype of Muslims as terrorism-prone. A U.S. National Research Council panel on terrorism, when presenting this inexact illustration, reported that most terrorists are not really Muslim and “the vast majority of Islamic people have no connection with and do not sympathize with terrorism” (Smelser & Mitchell, 2002).

  • The Biology of Aggression
  •  Biology influences aggression at three levels.
     Genetic influences

     Evidence from animal studies and twin studies; genetic Y
    chromosome genetic marker; MAOA gene

     Alcohol associated with aggressive responses to frustration

     Neural influences
     Neural systems facilitate or inhibit aggression when provoked

     Aggression more likely to occur with frontal lobe damage

     Biochemical influences
     Testosterone linked with irritability, assertiveness,

    impulsiveness, and low tolerance for frustration; alcohol effect

    Psychological and Social-Cultural Factors in
    Aggression

     Aversive events
     Frustration-aggression principle: Frustration

    creates anger, which can spark aggression

     Other anger triggers
     Hot temperatures, physical pain, personal insults, foul

    odors, cigarette smoke, and crowding, among others
     Previous reinforcement for aggressive behavior,

    observing an aggressive role model, and poor self-
    control

  • Temperature and Retaliation
  • Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Richard Larrick and his colleagues (2011) looked for occurrences of batters hit by pitchers during 4,566,468 pitcher–batter matchups across 57,293 Major League Baseball games since 1952. The probability of a hit batter increased if one or more of the pitcher’s teammates had been hit, and also with temperature.

    Psychological and Social-Cultural Factors in
    Aggression

     Media portrayals of violence provide social
    scripts that children learn to follow.

     Viewing sexual violence contributes to greater
    aggression toward women .

     Playing violent video games increases
    aggressive thoughts, emotions, and behaviors.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Social script: A culturally modeled guide for how to act in various situations

    Psychological and Social-Cultural Influences
    on Aggression
    Do violent video games teach
    social scripts for violence?
     Nearly 400 studies of 130,000

    people suggest video games
    can prime aggressive
    thoughts, decrease empathy,
    and increase aggression.

     Some researchers dispute this
    finding and note other factors:
    depression, family violence,
    and peer influence.

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Coincidence or cause? In 2011, Norwegian Anders Behring Breivik bombed government buildings in Oslo, and then went to a youth camp, where he shot and
    killed 69 people, mostly teens.�
    As a player of first-person shooter games, Breivik stirred debate when he commented that “I see MW2 [Modern Warfare 2] more as a part of my training-simulation than anything else.” Did his violent game playing contribute to his violence, or was it a mere coincidental association? To explore such questions, psychologists experiment.
    Experiments in North America, Western Europe, Singapore, and Japan indicate that playing positive games produces positive effects (Gentile et al., 2009; Greitemeyer & Osswald, 2010).

    Biopsychosocial Understanding of
    Aggression

  • Altruism (part 1)
  •  Altruism is an unselfish concern for the welfare
    of others.
     People are most likely to help when they notice an

    incident, interpret it as an emergency, and assume
    responsibility for helping (Darley et al.).

     Odds for being helped increase if the person appears
    to deserve help or is a woman.

     Similarity to self, being unhurried or in a good mood,
    feeling guilty, and being focused on others and not
    preoccupied also raise the likelihood of being helped.

  • Altruism (part 2)
  • Bystander effect
  •  Tendency for any given bystander to be less likely to

    give aid if other bystanders are present
     Occurs when there is a diffusion of responsibility

    Presenter
    Presentation Notes
    Before helping, one must first notice an emergency, then correctly interpret it, and then feel responsible. (Adapted from Darley & Latané, 1968b.)

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    Bystander effect

    ▪ Kitty Genovese Legacy
    ▪ Tendency for any given

    bystander to be less
    likely to give aid if other
    bystanders are present

    ▪ Occurs when there is a
    diffusion of responsibility

  • The Norms for Helping
  • Positive social norms encourage generosity and
    enable group living.
     Socialization norm: Social expectation that

    prescribes how we should behave
     Reciprocity norm: Expectation that people will

    respond favorably to each other by returning
    benefits for benefit (cost-benefit analysis;
    utilitarianism; social exchange theory)

     Social-responsibility norm: Expectation that
    people should help those who depend on them

      Social Psychology
      Chapter Overview
      Social Thinking

    • Social Psychology
      Scientific study of how individuals think about, influence, and relate to one another
    • Slide Number 5
    • How Do We Explain Our Social World?
      Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
      Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
      Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
      Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE)
      Social Thinking

    • Slide Number 12
    • Fundamental Attribution Error – Me vs You

    • Attitudes are feelings influenced by beliefs, that predispose reactions to objects, people, and events.
    • Attitudes Affect Actions
      Actions Affect Attitudes (part 2)
      Actions Affect Attitudes – your doings build your beliefs.
      Social Thinking (part 4)
      Actions conflict with Attitudes conflict with Actions

    • Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment The Power of Situation
    • Social Influence
      Chameleon effect

    • What Is Conformity?
    • Conformity and Obedience
      More Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies?
      More Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies?
      Group Pressure and Conformity
      People May Conform for Many Reasons
      Why Conform?
      Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies
      Milgram’s Obedience Experiments
      Milgram’s Obedience Experiments
      Milgram’s Follow-up Obedience Experiment

    • What Are the Classic Conformity and Obedience Studies?
    • Milgram’s Obedience Experiments
      Group Behavior (part 1)
      Group Behavior (part 2)
      Home Advantage in Team Sports
      Group Behavior (part 3)
      Group Behavior (part 4)

    • Behavior in the Presence of Others: Three Phenomena
    • Deindividuation
      Group Polarization and Groupthink
      Group Polarization
      Antisocial Relations (part 1)
      Antisocial Relations (part 2)
      Antisocial Relations (part 3)
      Antisocial Relations (part 4)
      Explicit and Implicit Prejudice
      Prejudice Over Time
      Targets of Prejudice (part 1)
      Targets of Prejudice (part 2)
      Targets of Prejudice (part 3)
      Roots of Prejudice (part 1)
      Roots of Prejudice (part 2)
      Roots of Prejudice (part 3)
      Cognitive Shortcuts
      Categorizing Mixed-Race People
      Vivid Cases Feed Stereotypes
      The Biology of Aggression

    • Psychological and Social-Cultural Factors in Aggression
    • Temperature and Retaliation
      Psychological and Social-Cultural Factors in Aggression

    • Psychological and Social-Cultural Influences on Aggression
    • Biopsychosocial Understanding of Aggression
    • Altruism (part 1)
      Altruism (part 2)
      Bystander effect
      The Norms for Helping

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