Prosocial Behaviour

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social saved (Finished ) Quiz sobre Prosocial Behaviour, criado por murat sertay em 15-08-2016.
murat sertay
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Resumo de Recurso

Questão 1

Questão
Prosocial behaviour is:
Responda
  • Behaviour only intended to help oneself
  • Behaviour intended to help others without the expectation of reward for the effort(s)

Questão 2

Questão
A man sexually assaulted Kitty Genovese in 1964. There were reportedly 38 witnesses in the 30-minute span in which it had occurred. Darley and Latané (1968) highlighted that all the witnesses involved would have been aware of others that were there to see it as well. What was this effect called?
Responda
  • The bystander effect
  • The witness effect
  • The Latané effect

Questão 3

Questão
According to Darley and Latané (1968), were participants more or less likely to help when the participant was alone?
Responda
  • More likely
  • Less likely

Questão 4

Questão
According to Darley and Latané (1968), were participants more or less likely to help when there were up to four others involved that required additional help?
Responda
  • More likely
  • Less likely

Questão 5

Questão
Was there a significant difference when it came to sex differences in the Darley and Latané (1968) study?
Responda
  • Yes
  • No

Questão 6

Questão
Was there a significant difference when it came to whether or not a bystander was medically qualified in the Darley and Latané (1968) study?
Responda
  • Yes
  • No

Questão 7

Questão
Manning (et al., 2007) criticised the Darley and Latané (1968) study. How many witnesses were there at the scene?
Responda
  • 6
  • 10
  • 25
  • More than 100

Questão 8

Questão
According to Manning (et al., 2007) did witnesses call the police after the man's initial attack (Darley and Latané, 1968)?
Responda
  • Yes, they did
  • No, they did not

Questão 9

Questão
According to Manning (et al., 2007) did witnesses attempt to notify the police (Darley and Latané, 1968)?
Responda
  • Yes, they did
  • No, they did not

Questão 10

Questão
Did Dickerson (2012) find there to be erroneous reporting in the Kitty Genovese case?
Responda
  • Yes, they have existed for decades now
  • No, it was completely verified

Questão 11

Questão
What do the Dickerson (2012) findings imply?
Responda
  • A culture of consensual, uncritical acceptance
  • A culture of hate and discrimination
  • A culture of repetition

Questão 12

Questão
Are the Dickerson (2012) findings largely within the realm of social psychology, or out of it?
Responda
  • Largely within it
  • Largely out of it

Questão 13

Questão
According to the Piliavin, Rodin, and Piliavin (1969) findings, did onlookers spontaneously help when a person collapsed on a train?
Responda
  • Yes, 62/65 times (95.4%)
  • No, 3/65 times (4.6%)

Questão 14

Questão
Did the proportion of people that helped a person who had collapsed spontaneously on a train differ significantly dependent on its cause?
Responda
  • Yes, it did (eg, heart attack vs. alcoholism)
  • No, it did not, people helped anyway

Questão 15

Questão
Can the bystander effect explain the results found by Piliavin, Rodin, and Piliavan (1969) for prosocial behaviour on a train for someone who has spontaneously collapsed?
Responda
  • Yes
  • No

Questão 16

Questão
In discussion of the role of attribution in prosocial behaviour, how successful was the request for notes when there was no internal attribution (eg, "Someone stole my notes at lunch break")?
Responda
  • A lot more successful compared to "I went to the beach"
  • A lot less successful compared to versions such as "My dog ate my homework"

Questão 17

Questão
In discussing the role of attribution in prosocial behaviour, what are the effects of being helped when a person appears inebriated (eg, drunk) or smells of alcohol?
Responda
  • Chances are greatly reduced
  • Chances are greatly increased

Questão 18

Questão
Between the two groups, who is more likely to be helped by bystanders in terms of prosocial behaviour: welfare recipients or the poor?
Responda
  • Welfare recipients (internal attribution)
  • The poor (external attribution)

Questão 19

Questão
When people decide to help another person, do they go through a list of internal cognitive processes?
Responda
  • Yes, they do
  • No, it's unlikely that they do

Questão 20

Questão
Piliavin (et al., 1981) incorporated a model to explain prosocial behaviour. It has (a) physical or psychological arousal, (b) the attribution of the cause of arousal, and (c) a cost-benefit analysis - or diffusion of responsibility. What is the made of the model?
Responda
  • The Arousal Cost-Reward Model
  • The Cost Attribution Model
  • The Prosocial Attribution Model

Questão 21

Questão
According to Piliavin (et al., 1981), participants perceive a situation to be more or less costly when others are involved?
Responda
  • More costly
  • Less costly

Questão 22

Questão
In a Darley and Latané (1968) study, participants conducted an internal cost-benefit analysis of whether or not to report a seizure. What were the arousal levels of the non-reporting participants?
Responda
  • They were more emotionally aroused
  • They were less emotionally aroused

Questão 23

Questão
In a Darley and Latané (1968) study, participants conducted an internal cost-benefit analysis of whether or not to report a seizure. What happened to the non-responding participants?
Responda
  • They acted quickly and reported it
  • They were very indecisive

Questão 24

Questão
In a Darley and Latané (1968) study, participants conducted an internal cost-benefit analysis of whether or not to report a seizure. What happened to the participants that were indecisive?
Responda
  • The cost of not helping gradually reduced and the conflict became acute
  • The cost of not helping was increased and the conflict became reduced

Questão 25

Questão
A criticism of prosocial behaviour explanations in terms of its focus is that:
Responda
  • It is too individualistic
  • It is not individualistic enough

Questão 26

Questão
Do prosocial behaviour explanations account for groups or the socially-constructed natures of prosocial behaviour?
Responda
  • Yes, they do account for that
  • No, they do not account for that in local interactional contexts (eg, arguments) or wider sociocultural contexts (eg, ideologies)

Questão 27

Questão
Participants' football team preferences were made salient in the Levine (et al., 2005) study. What happened when participants encountered a jogger that had hurt their ankle when running?
Responda
  • Participants were more likely to help if they were wearing a shirt of their preferred team (92%)
  • Participants were less likely to help if they were wearing a shirt of their preferred team (8%)

Questão 28

Questão
Participants' football team preferences were made salient in the Levine (et al., 2005) study. What happened when the jogger was dressed as a supporter of their own team?
Responda
  • They helped the most (80%)
  • They did not help the most (20%)

Questão 29

Questão
Participants' football team preferences were made salient in the Levine (et al., 2005) study. What happened when the jogger was dressed as supporters of a different team to the participants?
Responda
  • They helped them (70%)
  • They didn't help them (30%)

Questão 30

Questão
Participants' football team preferences were made salient in the Levine (et al., 2005) study. What happened when the jogger was dressed without a football shirt on?
Responda
  • They did help
  • They didn't help (20%)

Questão 31

Questão
According to Levine (et al., 2005) what effect does the perception of common group perception and attitudes have on prosocial behaviour?
Responda
  • Common group membership increases the likelihood of prosocial behaviour
  • Common group membership does not necessarily increase the likelihood of prosocial behaviour

Questão 32

Questão
According to the Levine (et al., 2005) findings, do relevant group identities need to become more active or salient during specific times for prosocial behaviour to become more plausible?
Responda
  • Yes, it does
  • No, it does not

Questão 33

Questão
What did Saucier, Miller, and Doucet (2005) find in their 31-study review of the levels of prosocial behaviour between black and white students?
Responda
  • White students were less likely to help black students
  • White students were more likely to help black students

Questão 34

Questão
Do the findings by Saucier, Miller, and Doucet (2005) highlight both racism and ingroup-outgroup mentalities?
Responda
  • Yes, they do
  • No, they do not

Questão 35

Questão
According to the social constructionist perspective, are the descriptors of prosocial behaviour accurate? Furthermore, can they be used by anyone?
Responda
  • Yes, they can comprise of all realities
  • No, they are not direct representations of reality, only one of many

Questão 36

Questão
Does the overly individualistic focus on prosocial behaviour neglect localised interactional context in which attributions are made?
Responda
  • Yes, they do
  • No, they don't

Questão 37

Questão
According to Dickerson (2012), if the attributions through explanatory talk are being used to justify certain behaviours in a certain light, can they be treated as direct or straightforward representations?
Responda
  • Yes, they can
  • No, they cannot

Questão 38

Questão
Ichheiser (1943) argued that attributions are not simply single cognitive events because they must be considered in wider social contexts. According to Cherry (1995):
Responda
  • Widespread abuse of women during the 1960s was largely ignored and the police were reticent to intervene
  • There is too much conflicting evidence to suggest that there was a salient culture on domestic abuse during the 1960s

Questão 39

Questão
Ichheiser (1943) argued that attributions are not simply single cognitive events because they must be considered in wider social contexts. Can giving money to homeless people be constructed differently depending on where you are?
Responda
  • No, because giving money to the homeless is universally seen as a good thing
  • Yes, because not everyone everywhere sees homeless people in the same way - largely because of sociopolitical cultures

Questão 40

Questão
Ichheiser (1943) argued that attributions are not simply single cognitive events because they must be considered in wider social contexts. Were the "good samaritans" of the 1930s really prosocial?
Responda
  • Yes, they were
  • No, the only thought that they were good people at the time because of the sociopolitical context (eg, Nazi government in Germany during the World War)

Questão 41

Questão
Foucault mentioned that psychology researchers' constructions may be upholding particular ideologies. If we construct psychology as "neutral" or "value-free", could we be subtly reinforcing and legitimising oppressive attitudes (eg, racism, sexism)?
Responda
  • Yes, we could be
  • No, I do not think so

Questão 42

Questão
Burr (2006) noted how psychology constructs itself as "neutral" or "value-free". For example, it highlights variables, uses scientific jargon, is written in third-person, and does not reflect on social influences in its research. Does this construction distract from the researcher's own personal interests?
Responda
  • Yes, because they don't believe them to be necessary
  • No, because they are being objective

Questão 43

Questão
Did Darley and Latané (1968) omit a crucial item of information in the Kitty Genovese case, according to Cherry (1995), in which a man was attacking a woman?
Responda
  • Yes, they did
  • No, they did not

Questão 44

Questão
According to Cherry (1995) in regards to the Darley and Latané (1968) study on Kitty Genovese, was this a neutral thing to do?
Responda
  • Yes, it was at the time
  • No, because ignoring social norms is a subtle acceptance and upholding of oppressive attitudes

Questão 45

Questão
Did Darley and Latané (1968) believe that they were contributing to research that now believes crowds facilitate antisocial behaviour?
Responda
  • Yes, they did believe that
  • No, they did not believe that

Questão 46

Questão
Burr (2006) suggested two ways that psychologists can use to avoid subtly reinforcing oppressive attitudes. One of them is:
Responda
  • By not using qualitative methods with holistic understandings of meanings that the events hold in a number of contexts
  • By using qualitative methods with holistic understandings of meaning that the events hold in a number of contexts (eg, where the research started)

Questão 47

Questão
Burr (2006) suggested two ways that psychologists can use to avoid subtly reinforcing oppressive attitudes. Another way is to:
Responda
  • Not employ "constant reflexivity" where sociocultural assumptions and biases do not underlie research and could not be critiqued in the future
  • Employ "constant reflexivity" where sociocultural assumptions and biases do underlie research and are open to critique in the future

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