Dyadic Psychology

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Dyadic Psychology Terminology
Dr Dzhon Dzhonzon PhD
Fichas por Dr Dzhon Dzhonzon PhD, actualizado hace más de 1 año
Dr Dzhon Dzhonzon PhD
Creado por Dr Dzhon Dzhonzon PhD hace más de 4 años
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Dyadic Psychology Dyadic Psychology is a subdisapline of Social Psychology, primarily focusing on studying "Equally Yoked Dyads"; elecletically utilizing research sciences from 'normative' psychology, 'relationship' psychology, and 'comparative' psychology.
Social Psychology The scientific study of how people feel about, think about, and behave toward the people around them and how other’s feelings, thoughts, and behaviors influences people.
Social Mores Social Mores - A pro-social behavior valued by a healthy functioning social group observed either formally and/or causually.
Cooperation Cooperation - Any behavior that occurs, demonstrating trust in people or groups and are willing to talk and share together.
Self-Concept Self Concept - A knowledge of one’s representation about ‘who I am’, ..beliefs, moral values, abilities, personality, roles, social character, goals in life, as well as insight and self-awareness.
Civil Identity Civil Identity - A mosaic of various features that at least includes: ancestral ethnicity, political party membership, disability, religion/beliefs, age, sex, sexual (pleasure preference), marital status, …etc
Self Self - A sense of PI (Personal Identity) and of who someone is as an individual.
Social Influence Social Influence - The process through which people change the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of other people or vice versa.
Equally Yoked Equally Yoked - A couple with an identical ‘civil identity’, (see Civil Identity) i.e., ethnicity, political and religious beliefs, race, color, age, disability, sex, sexual (pleasure preference) orientation, marital status, etc.
unequally yoked unequally yoked – Any couple whose ‘Civil Identity’ is mismatched, and incompatible, and are non- homogenous.
Attachement Style Attachment Style – The individual, clear and subtle, differences in just how people relate well to one another especially significant others/people within very close relationships, e.g., coupleships.
Societal Identity Societal Identity – The way one relates to one’s own: Citizenship, residency, ownership, profession, credentials, titles, (tax bracket) class
Social Impact Social Impact - The measured increase in the amount of conformity that is produced by adding new members to the majority group.
Social Norms Social Norms - The usual ways of an individual thinking, feeling, or behaving in a group just in order to cope in modern society.
Injunctive Norms Injunctive Norms - The rules that specify just how group members are expected to behave.
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