Creado por Dr Dzhon Dzhonzon PhD
hace alrededor de 5 años
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Pregunta | Respuesta |
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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