Deck 10: Performance

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Question
You are the manager of a large group of people performing an additive task.What steps would you take to minimize the Ringelmann effect in general and social loafing in particular?
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Question
Is there any wisdom in the old expression "Two heads are better than one"?
Question
Select and defend one of current theory of social facilitation,supporting your points with evidence drawn from empirical studies of performance when alone and with others.
Question
Use theory and research pertaining to social facilitation and social loafing to explain the productivity of a crew responsible for road repairs in a medium-size city.
Question
Are some people more likely than others to show improved performance in the presence of an audience?
Question
Apply Steiner's process model of group performance to explain the productivity of a group of people working together taking a multiple-choice test.
Question
Describe the methods used and results obtained by Latané and his colleagues in their study of groups,pseudogroups,and social loafing.
Question
Define and give an example of an additive,compensatory,disjunctive,conjunctive,and discretionary task,and draw a conclusion about a group's effectiveness in performing such tasks.
Question
Social facilitation has been documented in several species,including ants.Which theory can explain the generality of this effect,and which theory has trouble accounting for these findings?
Question
Explain how online group discussions may be able to avoid some of the problems that reduce the productivity of offline brainstorming groups.
Question
How do free riding and the sucker effect influence social loafing?
Question
Give an example of the Ringelmann effect,and identify the two factors that contribute to this group process.
Question
What makes eating such a socially complicated process?
Question
Use theories of social facilitation to make recommendations about how to best structure both simple and complicated tasks performed by employees in a manufacturing plant.
Question
Compare social compensation effects,as described by Karau and Williams in their studies of the collective effort model,to the Kohler effect.
Question
A group you belong to decides to use "brainstorming" to identify some creative solutions to a problem.What rules should your group follow? And what research findings would you cite to try to talk them out of their decision?
Question
If you were a university professor,would you encourage your students to work in study groups? Defend your answer.
Question
What is synergy,what forms does it take,and when is it likely to occur?
Question
You are intrigued by the different performances shown by high-school swim team members when they are practicing alone,when swimming with others,and when watched by their coach.Draw on studies of social facilitation to offer predictions of when swimmers will turn in their best and worst times.
Question
Discuss at least three different studies that have tested the basic question: Does the presence of other people facilitate or inhibit performance.
Question
Social loafing occurs most often when individuals are highly motivated to achieve the group goal.
Question
When people work on simple tasks with an audience,they tend to display a challenge response rather than a threat response.
Question
In a unitary,conjunctive task the group is only as strong as its weakest link.
Question
Because of process loss,actual output rarely equals potential output.
Question
The Köhler effect documents how the most productive individuals will continue being the most productive individuals only if they are rewarded for their performance.
Question
The presence of others increases productivity when the task requires dominant responses,but decreases performance when the task calls for nondominant responses.
Question
Using an individual idea session prior to a group brainstorm is referred to as the nominal group technique.
Question
Steiner's "law" of productivity states that actual productivity = potential productivity - process loss.
Question
Working on difficult problems in the presence of others triggers activity in the dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex.
Question
Intellective tasks are usually optimizing tasks.
Question
Strong synergy-performing at a level that exceeds the capability of even the best member-is common in groups.
Question
When people are distracted,they perform even simple tasks more poorly.
Question
As the group discusses an issue,Mary has a great idea for a solution.She tries to make her ideas known to others,but with all the ideas flying around the room no one pays her any attention.She is experiencing groupthink.
Question
As evaluation apprehension suggests,only individuals with personality characteristics that are indicators of a negative orientation show social facilitation effects.
Question
Drive theory predicts social facilitation occurs even when there is no interaction between the actor and observer.
Question
The wisdom of the crowd effect was first documented by Francis Galton in the early 20th century.
Question
Decreases in productivity when individuals work in groups is the Ringelmann effect.
Question
When people feel anonymous,they work harder because they are free of evaluative pressure.
Question
Triplett,who was one of the first researchers to study social facilitation,was inspired to do his work after watching ants in an ant colony working collaboratively as they foraged.
Question
Because audiences facilitate performance,students should be encouraged to study in groups.
Question
When people are eating,social facilitation is more likely in ___ situations and less likely in ___ situations.

A)audience;alone
B)alone;coaction
C)audience;coaction
D)coaction;audience
E)alone;audience
Question
Studies of social facilitation challenge the wisdom of which relatively standard,and well-accepted,practice?

A)brainstorming
B)study groups
C)banquets
D)assembly lines
E)teams
Question
Which of the following statements is true,in general?

A)Most people report that they prefer to eat alone rather than with others.
B)People eat more when they are alone rather than with others.
C)People prepare relatively larger portions for meals that will be eaten individually.
D)Meals eaten by groups are longer in duration than those eaten by solo individuals.
Question
Which of the following findings is most likely?

A)Expert pool players play worse when observed.
B)Roaches complete a simple maze faster alone.
C)People who stutter speak more slowly alone than when observed.
D)People can more rapidly dress in familiar clothes when an observer is present.
Question
Elizabeth,a camp director,has seen some people rise to the challenge of the collective hike,as they seem to draw energy from the group.But other campers seem to become weaker when they must hike with the others.Elizabeth's insights are consistent with ___ theory.

A)Zajonc's drive
B)distraction/conflict
C)social orientation
D)Triplett's hypnosis
E)Cottrell's evaluation apprehension
Question
Triplett (1898)found that children would reel faster when

A)they were timed.
B)next to another reeling child.
C)an experimenter was in the room.
D)in a large group of observers.
E)a cockroach was placed next to them.
Question
When I try to remember the definition of the word synergy,if another person is with me and possibly evaluating me,I expend more mental effort,but that effort causes me to access more readily accessible bits of information,such as the word "energy" and "metallurgy." My reaction is MOST consistent with

A)Zajonc's drive theory.
B)distraction/conflict theory.
C)social orientation theory.
D)the mere-effort model.
E)a self-presentation analysis.
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Social facilitation occurs when people perform coaction tasks,but not audience tasks.
B)Social facilitation becomes more likely when the task requires dominant responses.
C)Social facilitation occurs for physical tasks,but not for mental tasks.
D)Humans are the only species to show social facilitation effects.
Question
Blascovich and his colleagues,by monitoring physiological reactions in social facilitation settings,discovered that people display a(n)___ reaction when working on easy tasks and a ___ reaction when working on difficult tasks.

A)physiological;psychological
B)inhibition;activation
C)challenge;threat
D)flight;fight
E)alpha wave;beta wave
Question
According to ___,people perform better when others are watching because a failure or poor showing would threaten their social image,or "face."

A)Zajonc's drive theory
B)distraction/conflict theory
C)social orientation theory
D)the mere-effort model
E)a self-presentation analysis
Question
The tendency for individuals to become less productive as group size increases is known as

A)laziness.
B)the Ringelmann effect.
C)groupthink.
D)social inhibition.
E)input output losses.
Question
Which conceptual distinction is most relevant to understanding social facilitation?

A)task vs.socioemotional
B)dominant vs.nondominant
C)internal vs.external
D)unitary vs.discretionary
Question
A meta-analysis of 241 social facilitation studies (Bond & Titus,1983)concluded that

A)the presence of others increases the quality (not quantity)of task performance on simple tasks.
B)performance decrements on complex tasks are more pronounced that performance gains on simple tasks.
C)people perform complex tasks more rapidly when others are present.
D)social facilitation rarely occurs.
Question
Which finding is NOT consistent with a cognitive explanation of social facilitation?

A)Many species,including cockroaches,show signs of social facilitation.
B)Recall is poorer when stimuli are presented in the presence of others.
C)Facilitation is reduced if the others in the situation are not noticed.
D)Presence of others improves performance on the Stroop task.
Question
Zajonc's drive theory (compresence)explanation of the impact of others on performance assumes that an audience increases

A)mental effectiveness.
B)arousal.
C)physical strength.
D)distraction.
E)apprehension over evaluation.
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Due to evaluation apprehension,prejudiced people are less likely to express their biases when they are in groups.
B)Electronic performance monitoring (EPM),because it is an invasion of workers' privacy,has been banned in U.S.industries.
C)Students who are learning new material should study together in groups.
D)When eating,social facilitation effects are strongest when people are with family or friends.
Question
___ theory stresses the role cognitive factors,such as attention to the task,play in producing social facilitation.

A)Zajonc's compresence
B)Distraction/conflict
C)Cottrell's evaluation apprehension
D)Triplett's hypnosis
E)Self-presentation
Question
According to Zajonc,for ___ tasks the presence of others ___ performance.

A)simple;detracts from
B)conjunctive;detracts from
C)complex;enhances
D)simple;enhances
E)conjunctive;enhances
Question
Fred,Ned,and Ted must make some party hats by folding up pieces of paper.When working alone,they could make ten hats an hour each.If the Ringelmann effect occurs,when Fred works with Ned they will turn out ___ hats an hour each,and when Ted joins them,they will turn out ___ hats an hour each.

A)12;14
B)5;1
C)8;6
D)4;3
E)15;20
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Social facilitation occurs when an audience is present,but not in coaction situations.
B)Compresence is the personality characteristic that predicts how a person reacts when working in the presence of others.
C)People only experience social facilitation when the task is easy and the others who are present are focusing their attention on them.
D)Working in the presence of others can be distracting,but distraction does not inevitably undermine performance.
Question
Which of the following increases social loafing?

A)identifiability
B)trust in co-members
C)involvement
D)task complexity
E)low evaluation apprehension
Question
Which is the key to determining when social facilitation AND social loafing will or will not occur?

A)social identity
B)involvement
C)evaluation apprehension
D)size of the group
E)arousal
Question
Which of the following is NOT a component of Steiner's typology of tasks?

A)divisibility of the task
B)difficulty of the task
C)quantity or quality desired
D)procedures used to combine inputs
Question
The task is a(n)___ one if the group's solution to a yes/no type question must be selected from among all individual solutions.

A)conjunctive
B)compensatory
C)disjunctive
D)discretionary
E)additive
Question
How did Latané,Williams,and Harkins,in their classic study of social loafing,distinguish between productivity loss caused by loafing,and loss caused by coordination problems?

A)They studied highly motivated people in one condition,and unmotivated people in another.
B)They led some people to believe they were working in groups when they were alone.
C)They had some people work at collective tasks,whereas others worked on a coaction task.
D)They trained some groups to eliminate coordination problems,but did not train others.
E)They set clear,difficult but attainable goals for some groups,but other groups had no goals.
Question
Studies of the "wisdom of crowd" effect suggest that

A)groups are particularly effective when working on extremely difficult problems.
B)once the group reaches 5 members,it reaches its maximum level of "wisdom".
C)making decisions by averaging individuals judgments is,in some cases,both efficient and accurate.
D)the "crowd" members,to become accurate,must initially discuss the issue among members.
Question
The Ringelmann effect is caused by

A)social loafing.
B)poor leadership.
C)coordination losses.
D)both social loafing and coordination losses.
E)both social loafing and poor leadership.
Question
Which of the following does not fit with the others?

A)high personal involvement
B)indispensability
C)anonymity
D)clear group goals
E)challenging group goals
Question
Edwina knows the answer to the problem is 6.3,but the group does not accept that answer until Edward says,"I agree with Edwina;I think it is 6.3,too." This process is consistent with

A)social facilitation.
B)distraction-conflict theory.
C)the truth-wins rule.
D)conjunctive task solutions.
E)the truth-supported wins rule.
Question
Steiner's "law" of group productivity assumes that you must consider ___ to predict a group's actual performance level.

A)losses due to faulty process
B)the personalities of the group members
C)the performance of other groups
D)the extent to which the group functions as a team
E)communication,leadership,and motivation
Question
Which task is unitary,maximizing and additive?

A)relay race
B)leading
C)tug-of-war
D)mountain climbing
E)softball
Question
Which one will decrease social loafing?

A)eliminate group members' feelings of anonymity
B)remind members that they are part of a group
C)stress that responsibility is shared by the group as a whole
D)increase the size of the group
E)all will decrease social loafing
Question
Which of the following is NOT consistent with the collective effort model (CEM)of social loafing?

A)People will loaf less if they believe that can reach their goal.
B)People loaf less when they work on easy,unchallenging tasks.
C)If people believe that a poor performance will affect them personally,they don't loaf.
D)People who are committed to their group and its goals loaf less than people are more interested in pursuing individualistic goals.
Question
Steiner's "law" of group productivity states Actual Productivity (AP)=

A)PP - PL.
B)P + PG.
C)PP + AP - PL.
D)PO + PL.
E)PG + PL.
Question
Two things MUST happen for groups to solve disjunctive tasks.First,someone in the group must know the answer.Second,the

A)leader must accept the solution.
B)group must accept that solution as the correct one.
C)group must vote on the correct solution.
D)problem must be a noneureka one.
E)group's communication must be clear.
Question
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Anonymity,and not a lack of concern about evaluation,causes social loafing.
B)Social loafing can be eliminated by minimizing coordination problems.
C)Social loafing does not occur if the group faces a social dilemma.
D)Group members tend to underestimate the quality of their group's products.
E)Individuals loaf less when they are personally involved with the task.
Question
Latane,Williams,and Harkins,in their classic study of social loafing,

A)discovered loafing was eliminated when groups set clear goals.
B)manipulated the indefinability of each member by having groups work in a dark room.
C)distinguished between productivity losses due to loafing and losses due to lack of coordination.
D)examined how rapidly people working in a pickle factory packed pickles.
E)concluded that cognitive dissonance was a primary cause of social loafing.
Question
Williams and Karau found that individuals would ___ other social loafing members if the task was meaningful.

A)antagonize and insult
B)teach and instruct
C)isolate the
D)compensate for
Question
Studies suggest that social loafing can be avoided if

A)group members are reminded to "give their all."
B)individuals' contributions to the group product are identifiable.
C)group members are trained to better coordinate their combined efforts.
D)the leader is strong.
Question
Janet does not work as hard preparing notes for her study group because she knows Linda,"the brain," will do the work if she doesn't.Janet illustrates

A)the compensatory effect.
B)groupthink.
C)the free-rider effect.
D)the sucker effect.
E)the collective effort effect.
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Deck 10: Performance
1
You are the manager of a large group of people performing an additive task.What steps would you take to minimize the Ringelmann effect in general and social loafing in particular?
Answers will vary.
2
Is there any wisdom in the old expression "Two heads are better than one"?
The old expression "Two heads are better than one" suggests that collaboration and teamwork often lead to better outcomes than individual effort. There is indeed wisdom in this saying, as it highlights several advantages of working together:
1. **Diverse Perspectives**: Different people bring unique viewpoints and experiences to the table. This diversity can lead to more creative and comprehensive solutions to problems.
2. **Shared Knowledge**: No one person knows everything. By working together, individuals can pool their knowledge and skills, which can lead to more effective decision-making and learning opportunities for everyone involved.
3. **Error Checking**: When one person might overlook a mistake or a detail, a second person can catch it. This collaborative approach can lead to higher quality results and fewer errors.
4. **Moral Support**: Facing challenges together can be less daunting than facing them alone. Team members can encourage and motivate each other, which can be especially beneficial during difficult tasks or when making tough decisions.
5. **Efficiency**: Dividing tasks according to each person's strengths can lead to more efficient completion of projects. When people focus on what they do best, they can accomplish tasks faster and more effectively.
6. **Learning and Growth**: Working with others can be a learning experience. Individuals can learn new approaches and skills from their collaborators, which can contribute to personal and professional growth.
7. **Resilience**: A team can often withstand setbacks and continue working towards a goal even if one member is unavailable or underperforming. This redundancy can make a collaborative effort more resilient than an individual one.
However, it's important to note that the expression "Two heads are better than one" is not without its caveats. Successful collaboration requires good communication, mutual respect, and a willingness to compromise. Without these elements, teamwork can lead to conflict, inefficiency, and a dilution of responsibility. Additionally, there are situations where too many opinions can lead to indecision or "analysis paralysis," where no action is taken due to overthinking.
In conclusion, the wisdom in the expression "Two heads are better than one" lies in the recognition that collaboration often yields better results than solitary efforts. It emphasizes the value of teamwork and the potential benefits of combining the strengths and abilities of multiple individuals to achieve a common goal.

3
Select and defend one of current theory of social facilitation,supporting your points with evidence drawn from empirical studies of performance when alone and with others.
Answers will vary.
4
Use theory and research pertaining to social facilitation and social loafing to explain the productivity of a crew responsible for road repairs in a medium-size city.
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5
Are some people more likely than others to show improved performance in the presence of an audience?
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6
Apply Steiner's process model of group performance to explain the productivity of a group of people working together taking a multiple-choice test.
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7
Describe the methods used and results obtained by Latané and his colleagues in their study of groups,pseudogroups,and social loafing.
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8
Define and give an example of an additive,compensatory,disjunctive,conjunctive,and discretionary task,and draw a conclusion about a group's effectiveness in performing such tasks.
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9
Social facilitation has been documented in several species,including ants.Which theory can explain the generality of this effect,and which theory has trouble accounting for these findings?
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10
Explain how online group discussions may be able to avoid some of the problems that reduce the productivity of offline brainstorming groups.
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11
How do free riding and the sucker effect influence social loafing?
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12
Give an example of the Ringelmann effect,and identify the two factors that contribute to this group process.
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13
What makes eating such a socially complicated process?
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14
Use theories of social facilitation to make recommendations about how to best structure both simple and complicated tasks performed by employees in a manufacturing plant.
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15
Compare social compensation effects,as described by Karau and Williams in their studies of the collective effort model,to the Kohler effect.
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16
A group you belong to decides to use "brainstorming" to identify some creative solutions to a problem.What rules should your group follow? And what research findings would you cite to try to talk them out of their decision?
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17
If you were a university professor,would you encourage your students to work in study groups? Defend your answer.
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18
What is synergy,what forms does it take,and when is it likely to occur?
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19
You are intrigued by the different performances shown by high-school swim team members when they are practicing alone,when swimming with others,and when watched by their coach.Draw on studies of social facilitation to offer predictions of when swimmers will turn in their best and worst times.
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20
Discuss at least three different studies that have tested the basic question: Does the presence of other people facilitate or inhibit performance.
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21
Social loafing occurs most often when individuals are highly motivated to achieve the group goal.
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22
When people work on simple tasks with an audience,they tend to display a challenge response rather than a threat response.
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23
In a unitary,conjunctive task the group is only as strong as its weakest link.
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24
Because of process loss,actual output rarely equals potential output.
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25
The Köhler effect documents how the most productive individuals will continue being the most productive individuals only if they are rewarded for their performance.
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26
The presence of others increases productivity when the task requires dominant responses,but decreases performance when the task calls for nondominant responses.
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27
Using an individual idea session prior to a group brainstorm is referred to as the nominal group technique.
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28
Steiner's "law" of productivity states that actual productivity = potential productivity - process loss.
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29
Working on difficult problems in the presence of others triggers activity in the dorso-lateral prefrontal cortex.
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30
Intellective tasks are usually optimizing tasks.
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31
Strong synergy-performing at a level that exceeds the capability of even the best member-is common in groups.
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32
When people are distracted,they perform even simple tasks more poorly.
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33
As the group discusses an issue,Mary has a great idea for a solution.She tries to make her ideas known to others,but with all the ideas flying around the room no one pays her any attention.She is experiencing groupthink.
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34
As evaluation apprehension suggests,only individuals with personality characteristics that are indicators of a negative orientation show social facilitation effects.
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35
Drive theory predicts social facilitation occurs even when there is no interaction between the actor and observer.
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36
The wisdom of the crowd effect was first documented by Francis Galton in the early 20th century.
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37
Decreases in productivity when individuals work in groups is the Ringelmann effect.
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38
When people feel anonymous,they work harder because they are free of evaluative pressure.
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39
Triplett,who was one of the first researchers to study social facilitation,was inspired to do his work after watching ants in an ant colony working collaboratively as they foraged.
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40
Because audiences facilitate performance,students should be encouraged to study in groups.
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k this deck
41
When people are eating,social facilitation is more likely in ___ situations and less likely in ___ situations.

A)audience;alone
B)alone;coaction
C)audience;coaction
D)coaction;audience
E)alone;audience
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42
Studies of social facilitation challenge the wisdom of which relatively standard,and well-accepted,practice?

A)brainstorming
B)study groups
C)banquets
D)assembly lines
E)teams
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
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43
Which of the following statements is true,in general?

A)Most people report that they prefer to eat alone rather than with others.
B)People eat more when they are alone rather than with others.
C)People prepare relatively larger portions for meals that will be eaten individually.
D)Meals eaten by groups are longer in duration than those eaten by solo individuals.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Which of the following findings is most likely?

A)Expert pool players play worse when observed.
B)Roaches complete a simple maze faster alone.
C)People who stutter speak more slowly alone than when observed.
D)People can more rapidly dress in familiar clothes when an observer is present.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Elizabeth,a camp director,has seen some people rise to the challenge of the collective hike,as they seem to draw energy from the group.But other campers seem to become weaker when they must hike with the others.Elizabeth's insights are consistent with ___ theory.

A)Zajonc's drive
B)distraction/conflict
C)social orientation
D)Triplett's hypnosis
E)Cottrell's evaluation apprehension
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
Triplett (1898)found that children would reel faster when

A)they were timed.
B)next to another reeling child.
C)an experimenter was in the room.
D)in a large group of observers.
E)a cockroach was placed next to them.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
When I try to remember the definition of the word synergy,if another person is with me and possibly evaluating me,I expend more mental effort,but that effort causes me to access more readily accessible bits of information,such as the word "energy" and "metallurgy." My reaction is MOST consistent with

A)Zajonc's drive theory.
B)distraction/conflict theory.
C)social orientation theory.
D)the mere-effort model.
E)a self-presentation analysis.
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Unlock for access to all 90 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Social facilitation occurs when people perform coaction tasks,but not audience tasks.
B)Social facilitation becomes more likely when the task requires dominant responses.
C)Social facilitation occurs for physical tasks,but not for mental tasks.
D)Humans are the only species to show social facilitation effects.
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49
Blascovich and his colleagues,by monitoring physiological reactions in social facilitation settings,discovered that people display a(n)___ reaction when working on easy tasks and a ___ reaction when working on difficult tasks.

A)physiological;psychological
B)inhibition;activation
C)challenge;threat
D)flight;fight
E)alpha wave;beta wave
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50
According to ___,people perform better when others are watching because a failure or poor showing would threaten their social image,or "face."

A)Zajonc's drive theory
B)distraction/conflict theory
C)social orientation theory
D)the mere-effort model
E)a self-presentation analysis
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51
The tendency for individuals to become less productive as group size increases is known as

A)laziness.
B)the Ringelmann effect.
C)groupthink.
D)social inhibition.
E)input output losses.
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52
Which conceptual distinction is most relevant to understanding social facilitation?

A)task vs.socioemotional
B)dominant vs.nondominant
C)internal vs.external
D)unitary vs.discretionary
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53
A meta-analysis of 241 social facilitation studies (Bond & Titus,1983)concluded that

A)the presence of others increases the quality (not quantity)of task performance on simple tasks.
B)performance decrements on complex tasks are more pronounced that performance gains on simple tasks.
C)people perform complex tasks more rapidly when others are present.
D)social facilitation rarely occurs.
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54
Which finding is NOT consistent with a cognitive explanation of social facilitation?

A)Many species,including cockroaches,show signs of social facilitation.
B)Recall is poorer when stimuli are presented in the presence of others.
C)Facilitation is reduced if the others in the situation are not noticed.
D)Presence of others improves performance on the Stroop task.
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55
Zajonc's drive theory (compresence)explanation of the impact of others on performance assumes that an audience increases

A)mental effectiveness.
B)arousal.
C)physical strength.
D)distraction.
E)apprehension over evaluation.
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56
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Due to evaluation apprehension,prejudiced people are less likely to express their biases when they are in groups.
B)Electronic performance monitoring (EPM),because it is an invasion of workers' privacy,has been banned in U.S.industries.
C)Students who are learning new material should study together in groups.
D)When eating,social facilitation effects are strongest when people are with family or friends.
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57
___ theory stresses the role cognitive factors,such as attention to the task,play in producing social facilitation.

A)Zajonc's compresence
B)Distraction/conflict
C)Cottrell's evaluation apprehension
D)Triplett's hypnosis
E)Self-presentation
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58
According to Zajonc,for ___ tasks the presence of others ___ performance.

A)simple;detracts from
B)conjunctive;detracts from
C)complex;enhances
D)simple;enhances
E)conjunctive;enhances
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59
Fred,Ned,and Ted must make some party hats by folding up pieces of paper.When working alone,they could make ten hats an hour each.If the Ringelmann effect occurs,when Fred works with Ned they will turn out ___ hats an hour each,and when Ted joins them,they will turn out ___ hats an hour each.

A)12;14
B)5;1
C)8;6
D)4;3
E)15;20
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60
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Social facilitation occurs when an audience is present,but not in coaction situations.
B)Compresence is the personality characteristic that predicts how a person reacts when working in the presence of others.
C)People only experience social facilitation when the task is easy and the others who are present are focusing their attention on them.
D)Working in the presence of others can be distracting,but distraction does not inevitably undermine performance.
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61
Which of the following increases social loafing?

A)identifiability
B)trust in co-members
C)involvement
D)task complexity
E)low evaluation apprehension
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62
Which is the key to determining when social facilitation AND social loafing will or will not occur?

A)social identity
B)involvement
C)evaluation apprehension
D)size of the group
E)arousal
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63
Which of the following is NOT a component of Steiner's typology of tasks?

A)divisibility of the task
B)difficulty of the task
C)quantity or quality desired
D)procedures used to combine inputs
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64
The task is a(n)___ one if the group's solution to a yes/no type question must be selected from among all individual solutions.

A)conjunctive
B)compensatory
C)disjunctive
D)discretionary
E)additive
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65
How did Latané,Williams,and Harkins,in their classic study of social loafing,distinguish between productivity loss caused by loafing,and loss caused by coordination problems?

A)They studied highly motivated people in one condition,and unmotivated people in another.
B)They led some people to believe they were working in groups when they were alone.
C)They had some people work at collective tasks,whereas others worked on a coaction task.
D)They trained some groups to eliminate coordination problems,but did not train others.
E)They set clear,difficult but attainable goals for some groups,but other groups had no goals.
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66
Studies of the "wisdom of crowd" effect suggest that

A)groups are particularly effective when working on extremely difficult problems.
B)once the group reaches 5 members,it reaches its maximum level of "wisdom".
C)making decisions by averaging individuals judgments is,in some cases,both efficient and accurate.
D)the "crowd" members,to become accurate,must initially discuss the issue among members.
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67
The Ringelmann effect is caused by

A)social loafing.
B)poor leadership.
C)coordination losses.
D)both social loafing and coordination losses.
E)both social loafing and poor leadership.
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68
Which of the following does not fit with the others?

A)high personal involvement
B)indispensability
C)anonymity
D)clear group goals
E)challenging group goals
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69
Edwina knows the answer to the problem is 6.3,but the group does not accept that answer until Edward says,"I agree with Edwina;I think it is 6.3,too." This process is consistent with

A)social facilitation.
B)distraction-conflict theory.
C)the truth-wins rule.
D)conjunctive task solutions.
E)the truth-supported wins rule.
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70
Steiner's "law" of group productivity assumes that you must consider ___ to predict a group's actual performance level.

A)losses due to faulty process
B)the personalities of the group members
C)the performance of other groups
D)the extent to which the group functions as a team
E)communication,leadership,and motivation
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71
Which task is unitary,maximizing and additive?

A)relay race
B)leading
C)tug-of-war
D)mountain climbing
E)softball
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72
Which one will decrease social loafing?

A)eliminate group members' feelings of anonymity
B)remind members that they are part of a group
C)stress that responsibility is shared by the group as a whole
D)increase the size of the group
E)all will decrease social loafing
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73
Which of the following is NOT consistent with the collective effort model (CEM)of social loafing?

A)People will loaf less if they believe that can reach their goal.
B)People loaf less when they work on easy,unchallenging tasks.
C)If people believe that a poor performance will affect them personally,they don't loaf.
D)People who are committed to their group and its goals loaf less than people are more interested in pursuing individualistic goals.
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74
Steiner's "law" of group productivity states Actual Productivity (AP)=

A)PP - PL.
B)P + PG.
C)PP + AP - PL.
D)PO + PL.
E)PG + PL.
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75
Two things MUST happen for groups to solve disjunctive tasks.First,someone in the group must know the answer.Second,the

A)leader must accept the solution.
B)group must accept that solution as the correct one.
C)group must vote on the correct solution.
D)problem must be a noneureka one.
E)group's communication must be clear.
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76
Which of the following statements is true?

A)Anonymity,and not a lack of concern about evaluation,causes social loafing.
B)Social loafing can be eliminated by minimizing coordination problems.
C)Social loafing does not occur if the group faces a social dilemma.
D)Group members tend to underestimate the quality of their group's products.
E)Individuals loaf less when they are personally involved with the task.
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77
Latane,Williams,and Harkins,in their classic study of social loafing,

A)discovered loafing was eliminated when groups set clear goals.
B)manipulated the indefinability of each member by having groups work in a dark room.
C)distinguished between productivity losses due to loafing and losses due to lack of coordination.
D)examined how rapidly people working in a pickle factory packed pickles.
E)concluded that cognitive dissonance was a primary cause of social loafing.
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78
Williams and Karau found that individuals would ___ other social loafing members if the task was meaningful.

A)antagonize and insult
B)teach and instruct
C)isolate the
D)compensate for
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79
Studies suggest that social loafing can be avoided if

A)group members are reminded to "give their all."
B)individuals' contributions to the group product are identifiable.
C)group members are trained to better coordinate their combined efforts.
D)the leader is strong.
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80
Janet does not work as hard preparing notes for her study group because she knows Linda,"the brain," will do the work if she doesn't.Janet illustrates

A)the compensatory effect.
B)groupthink.
C)the free-rider effect.
D)the sucker effect.
E)the collective effort effect.
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Unlock Deck
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