Human social behavior
Behavior people exhibit in a group (or not alone)
Individual interacting with other people
Analyze and observe many different types of behavior
First tried to understand through fables and stories (try to explain human behavior)
A sense of collective wisdom is used to explain why people do the things that they
Collective wisdom itself has to do with human behavior
Problem to think of it as a starting place to understand human behavior
Like two statements that are opposites but still voted to be at least somewhat accurate
Sources of information
Folk wisdom (not a good source of information for human behavior)
Pennebaker
Clinical psychologist, the influence of self-disclosure (writing, talking, conversations about private thoughts and concerns
Research suggests ⅔ of us get emotional and physical benefits from self-disclosure
Decrease feelings of shame
Criminals often act more relaxed after confessing
Self-disclosure is the power behind most talk therapy
Through telling of the story, the benefits of therapy occur
Comes from within the client
Has tremendous physical benefits too
Boost the immune system, increases white blood cell production, increases production of antibodies
“Confession is good for the soul” still has a flip-side
“Let sleeping dogs lie” (if it's not an issue, don’t bring it up)
“Least said is soonest mended” (if you talk about it less, it will heal faster)
There will be times when self-disclosure can be harmful → forced confession is not beneficial
Can be harmful if the confidant is unfairly judgemental or not respect the confidentiality
Can look at folk wisdom through the lens of social psychology that will be accurate and verifiable
Social psychology deals with feelings of well-being (not the soul)
Get information that is not just folk wisdom
Psychomythology
Lilienfeld and cognitive illusion
Sources of cognitive illusions
Word of mouth- just because it's said a bunch of time does not make it true
Desire for easy answers/quick fixes- everyday life is complex, not making things easy
Selective perception/memory- rarely perceive reality exactly as it is, world with pre-existing beliefs, remember and perceive things in accordance with pre-existing bias, assumptions, and expectations, what you believe can influence what you see
Causation and correlation- not equitable, being related to each other does not mean they cause each other
Post hoc
Ergo propter hoc
Placebo
Exposure to bias sample
If something precedes something it must cause it
Some small amount of truth in some statement-exaggeration of a small piece of truth
Terminology- incorrect use of terminology or jargon, leads to confusion, applying a different meaning entirely
How to distinguish fact from fiction with regard to what is heard, passed down, etc.
The collective body of misinformation about human nature
Feels like it has the trappings of truth
It typically jives with common sense, making people susceptible to it
Human behavior is not always reasonable or sensible
More familiar with visual illusion than a cognitive illusion
In subjective areas, humans are also susceptible to illusions (like looking at human behavior)
Social psychology is seen every day is trying to understand human behavior
Social psychology wants to tell us about non-common sense
To know the truth about human behavior have to go beyond folk wisdom, myth
Look for scientific basis through studies and experiments
Social psychology: Scientific study of feelings, thoughts, or behaviors of the individual in social situations
Seeks to understand the causes of feelings, thoughts, and behaviors in social situations (individuals)
Feelings, thoughts, and actions can be influenced by feelings and actions and thoughts of other people
The person doesn’t have to actually be in a social situation, could just imagine it, and that could still impact their behavior
Deals with the scientific inquiry that deals with the individual, thoughts, feelings, and behaviors in a social or implied situation
Inquiry: takes a scientific approach to answering questions about human social behavior
Values
Methods
Variables
CHAPTER ONE NOTES: Social Psychology- the science of the social side of life
Social psychology: the scientific field that seeks to understand the nature and causes of individual behavior, feelings, and thoughts in social situations
The way in our thoughts, feelings, and actions are influenced by the social environments in which we find ourselves- by other people or our thoughts about them
Science refers to set of values and methods
Core values
Accuracy: commitment to gathering and evaluating information about the world in as careful, precise, and error-free manner as possible
Need to be replicable
Objectivity: commitment to obtaining and evaluating such information in a manner that is as free from bias as possible
Skepticism: commitment to accepting findings as accurate only to the extent they have been verified over and over again.
Importance of replication
Open-mindedness: a commitment to changing one’s views if existing evidence suggests that these views are inaccurate
Common sense provides an inconsistent and unreliable guide to understanding social behavior
Social psychology wants to understand the many factors and conditions that shape the social thought and behavior of individuals. Most variables fall under these categories
The actions and characteristics of other persons
Observe other people and respond to them
Indicates that other people’s emotional expressions often have a powerful impact upon us
Affected by other’s appearances
Cognitive processes
Like if your friend is late, your memory and perception of them will impact how you respond
Are they late all the time? Or did something bad happen?
Try to make sense of people in our social world by attributing their actions to something about them or something about the circumstances
Environmental variables: impact of the physical world
Aspects of the physical environment can influence our feelings, thoughts, and behavior
Biological factors
Biology and social experience is not unidirectional
Environmental factors and social experiences, through the epigenetic processes, can turn on or off the operation of certain genes. This can influence behavior, sometimes long after their initial exposure
Emphasized in the field of evolutionary psychology
Variation (organisms vary in many ways) → inheritance (some of these variations are heritable) → selection (variations that are adaptive become increasingly common in the population) ← THIS IS THE CRUCIAL OUTCOME OF EVOLUTION
Suggests that this applies to at least some aspects of social behavior
Does not suggest that we inherit specific patterns of social behavior, but that we inherit tendencies or predispositions that may be apparent in our over actions, depending on the environment in which we live
Cultures vary is social thought and behavior
Social neuroscience: studies how feelings, thought, emotions, and behaviors present themselves in the brain
January 22nd
A scientist would look at values, methods, and variables
Values
Accuracy: gather information in an error-free manner
Objectivity: commitment to obtaining and evaluating information in a manner that is as free of bias as humanly possible
Skepticism: to accept findings as being accurate only to the extent that they’ve been verified repeatedly
Converging evidence- evidence from different perspectives that come to the same conclusion
Open-mindedness: it's okay to change your view/mind/preconceptions. Be willing to change your view if existing evidence suggests these views are inaccurate
Methods
Engaging in experimentation, not just using common sense
Focus on the individual as the measurement unit
Clear in methodology for social psychology
Clear in types of questions for social psychology
Evident in theorizing
Universal theories → would be able to explain all aspects of human interaction
Like instinct, imitation
In attempting to explain everything, it essentially explains nothing
Mid-range theories → interested in some limited aspect of social behavior
Function of theories:
Explain behavior that it's discussing
Predict future behavior
Description, explanation, and prediction
Relatively cohesive description
Organize empirical findings → common way of thinking about a range of facts (explanation)
Focusing on future research (prediction)
Major approaches (mid-range approaches)
Learning theory
Conditioning (operant and classical)
Closest to being more broad or universal
Cognitive consistency
Individuals strive for consistency in thoughts, beliefs, attitudes, and feelings
Festinger → cognitive dissonance (when an individual holds inconsistent beliefs, produces unpleasant motivational state)
Balanced pattern of liking and disliking
Attitude change is sometimes a drive for cognitive consistency
Attribution
When people try to people figure out why someone behaves the way they do
Focus on thought processes that cause someone’s behavior
Relies on active information processing
How you process, retrieve, interpret stimuli
Equity/exchange
Seek to reduce to all human interaction to what’s the cost of it and what’s the benefit from it
Someone thinks what’s the cost of me doing this and what will I get in return?
Goal is to gather information about human social behavior (not to solve social problems
Special consideration in regard to research in social psychology
Like people have strong beliefs about this human behavior
Participants are aware that they are being studied
Hope that it can be applied to social problems
Measurement
Objective and subjective
Reliability and validity
Variables
Defined and quantifiable
Levels of explanation of social behavior → Lippa
Group level explanations:
Broadest level
Like cultural and social groups
Biological groups
Individual-level explanation:
Experience that shape or form individual
Like family expectations that influence behavior
Heredity and physiology
Past environment and socialization
Current environmental and social situation
Powerful influence on human social behavior
Mediating (internal) variables:
Personality traits
Like an authoritarian need
Beliefs and attitudes
Beliefs are cognitive (something that you think that you know about someone/a particular group)
Attitudes are evaluative
Cognitive schemas
Focusing on thought processes
Role of cognition in social behavior
Emotional states
More transient than personality traits
Involves arousal and cognition
Can motivate and direct behavior
Explanations can emphasize certain levels
Like different biological groups exhibit different levels of aggressive behavior
individual → males tend to be more aggressive (physiology)