PSY204 Intergroup Behaviour

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PSY204 - Week 10 - Intergroup Behaviour - Chapter 11 - Practice quiz
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Quiz by S E, updated more than 1 year ago
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Created by S E about 5 years ago
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Resource summary

Question 1

Question
Behaviour among individuals that is regulated by those individuals’ awareness of and identification with different social groups.
Answer
  • Intergroup Behaviour (p. 414)
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Social Identity Theory (p. 430)
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)

Question 2

Question
A group to which people belong.
Answer
  • Ingroup (p. 414)
  • Outgroup (p. 414)
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)

Question 3

Question
A group to which people do not belong.
Answer
  • Ingroup (p. 414)
  • Outgroup (p. 414)
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)

Question 4

Question
Classification of people as members of different social groups.
Answer
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Social Identity Theory (p. 430)
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)
  • Stereotype (p. 431)

Question 5

Question
Theory of group membership and intergroup relations based on self-categorization, social comparison and the construction of a shared self-definition in terms of ingroup-defining properties.
Answer
  • Social Identity Theory (p. 430)
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)
  • Stereotype (p. 431)
  • Social Identity (p. 431)

Question 6

Question
Turner and associates’ theory of how the process of categorizing oneself as a group member produces social identity and group and intergroup behaviours.
Answer
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Social Identity Theory (p. 430)
  • Social Identity (p. 431)

Question 7

Question
That part of the self-concept that derives from our membership in social groups.
Answer
  • Social Identity (p. 431)
  • Ingroup (p. 414)
  • Social Categorization (p. 429)
  • Self-Categorization Theory (p. 430)

Question 8

Question
Evaluative preference for all aspects of our own group relative to other groups.
Answer
  • Ethnocentrism (p. 420)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431
  • Stereotype (p. 431)

Question 9

Question
Behaviour that favours one’s own group over other groups.
Answer
  • Ethnocentrism (p. 420)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431)
  • Stereotype (p. 431)

Question 10

Question
Behaviour that emphasises differences between our own group and other groups.
Answer
  • Ethnocentrism (p. 420)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431)
  • Stereotype (p. 431)

Question 11

Question
Widely shared and simplified evaluative image of a social group and its members.
Answer
  • Ethnocentrism (p. 420)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431)
  • Stereotype (p. 431)

Question 12

Question
A sense of having less than we feel entitled to.
Answer
  • Relative Deprivation (p. 415)
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Arbitration (p. 463)
  • Conciliation (p. 464)

Question 13

Question
A feeling of personally having less than we feel we are entitled to, relative to our aspirations or to other individuals.
Answer
  • Egoistic Relative Deprivation (p. 416)
  • Fraternalistic Relative Deprivation (p. 416)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431)
  • Arbitration (p. 463)

Question 14

Question
Sense that our group has less than it is entitled to, relative to its aspirations or to other groups.
Answer
  • Fraternalistic Relative Deprivation (p. 416)
  • Ingroup Favouritism (p. 431)
  • Intergroup Differentiation (p. 431)
  • Egoistic Relative Deprivation (p. 416)

Question 15

Question
Sherif ’s theory of intergroup conflict that explains intergroup behaviour in terms of the nature of goal relations between groups.
Answer
  • Realistic Conflict Theory (p. 422)
  • Intergroup Relations (p. 420)
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Emergent Norm Theory (p. 449)

Question 16

Question
Relations between two or more groups and their respective members.
Answer
  • Intergroup Relations (p. 420)
  • Ingroup (p. 414)
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Emergent Norm Theory (p. 449)

Question 17

Question
Goals that both groups desire but that can be achieved only by both groups cooperating (shared goals that were unachievable by either group alone).
Answer
  • Superordinate Goals (p. 421, 460)
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Collective Behaviour (p. 444)

Question 18

Question
The view that bringing members of opposing social groups together will improve intergroup relations and reduce prejudice and discrimination.
Answer
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Conciliation (p. 464)
  • Collective Behaviour (p. 444)

Question 19

Question
Process of intergroup conflict resolution where representatives reach agreement through direct negotiation.
Answer
  • Superordinate Goals (p. 421, 460)
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Conciliation (p. 464)

Question 20

Question
Process of intergroup conflict resolution where a neutral third party intervenes in the negotiation process to facilitate a settlement.
Answer
  • Superordinate Goals (p. 421, 460)
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Conciliation (p. 464)

Question 21

Question
Process of intergroup conflict resolution in which a neutral third party is invited to impose a mutually binding settlement.
Answer
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Arbitration (p. 463)

Question 22

Question
Process whereby groups make cooperative gestures to one another in the hope of avoiding an escalation of conflict.
Answer
  • Bargaining (p. 462)
  • Mediation (p. 462)
  • Arbitration (p. 463)
  • Conciliation (p. 464)

Question 23

Question
The behaviour of people en masse – such as in a crowd, protest or riot.
Answer
  • Relative Deprivation (p. 415)
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Collective Behaviour (p. 444)
  • Deindividuation (p. 446)

Question 24

Question
Process whereby people lose their sense of socialised individual identity and engage in unsocialised, often antisocial, behaviours.
Answer
  • Relative Deprivation (p. 415)
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Collective Behaviour (p. 444)
  • Deindividuation (p. 446)

Question 25

Question
Collective behaviour is regulated by norms based on distinctive behaviour that arises in the initially normless crowd.
Answer
  • Emergent Norm Theory (p. 449)
  • Relative Deprivation (p. 415)
  • Contact Hypothesis (p. 456)
  • Deindividuation (p. 446)
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