Deck 3: Perceiving Ourselves and Others in Organizations

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Question
Selective attention occurs after incoming information is organized and interpreted.
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Question
Social identity theory explains why we see unique characteristics in everyone else but not in ourselves.
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Seeing a trend in a sequence of sales figures involves the process of categorical thinking.
Question
Our emotions influence what we recognize or screen out.
Question
Confirmation bias causes us to screen out information that is contrary to our values and assumptions.
Question
A person's expectations make them more sensitive to incoming information,but also less sensitive to unexpected information.
Question
We are more likely to notice objects with features that are repetitive,intense and in motion.
Question
People have a natural and conscious tendency to seek out information that supports their self-concept.
Question
The perceptual process begins by attributing behaviour to internal or external causes.
Question
Mental models that give us a rich understanding of one's environment may cause us to screen out or ineffectively organize information in another environment.
Question
A person's social identity is a complex combination of his or her memberships in many groups.
Question
Homogenization and differentiation are two activities in the process of forming and maintaining our social identity.
Question
Social identity theory explains the dynamics of social perception.
Question
Employees can break out of their existing mental models by working with colleagues from diverse backgrounds who bring different mental models to the workplace.
Question
Social identity theory states that we define ourselves in terms of our differences with people who belong to other social categories.
Question
Social identity theory states that the observer's expectation of others causes the observed person to act in ways consistent with the observer's expectations.
Question
Social identity process includes categorization and attribution activities.
Question
According to social identity theory,we tend to see unique characteristics in every person who is different from us.
Question
Categorical thinking is mostly a conscious process of deciding what information in the environment to notice.
Question
Grouping people and objects into recognizable patterns is part of the selective attention process.
Question
When making an internal or external attribution about a person's behaviour,we tend to look at whether the person has acted this way in the past and other situations,and whether other people act similarly in this situation.
Question
Stereotyping is an extension of the social identity process.
Question
The first step in a self-fulfilling prophecy occurs when the observer acts differently towards people with whom he or she has high expectations than towards those with whom he or she has low expectations.
Question
The three steps in stereotyping,in order,are: (a)identify negative information,(b)behave in ways consistent with previous expectations and (c)watch the employee form a positive or negative opinion of you.
Question
Attribution theory mainly explains the selective attention process.
Question
We can eliminate the activation of stereotyping by choosing to ignore stereotypic information.
Question
People who believe that their successful completion of a project is due to their skill and hard work are making an internal attribution.
Question
Self-serving bias is the tendency to take credit for our successes and blame others or the situation for our mistakes.
Question
People tend to make an internal attribution about someone's behaviour if that person has rarely acted like this either in the past or in other situations.
Question
You are more likely to make an internal attribution about someone's poor performance if you have also observed the person performing that task poorly in the past and have observed other employees performing the task well.
Question
Stereotyping is partly responsible for prejudice and discrimination.
Question
One problem with stereotyping is that few traits assigned to a particular social category accurately describe every person identified with that group.
Question
Self-fulfilling prophecy may result in either better or worse performance than if the employee is not exposed to the self-fulfilling prophecy effect.
Question
Employee satisfaction with work accomplishments is influenced to a large degree by whether they take credit for those accomplishments or attribute the success to external causes.
Question
Stereotyping is a natural process that helps us to economize mental effort.
Question
Self-fulfilling prophecy occurs whenever supervisors accurately predict the future performance of recently hired employees.
Question
Fundamental attribution error would cause a supervisor to believe that an employee's lateness is due to factors beyond the employee's control rather than to a lack of motivation to attend work.
Question
Fundamental attribution error refers to the tendency to attribute the behaviour of other people to internal factors more than external factors.
Question
Self-fulfilling prophecy tends to have a stronger effect on employees who are new to the job than on employees who have worked in that job for a few years.
Question
The easiest way to minimize stereotyping is by preventing the activation of stereotypes in our heads.
Question
Interacting with people from other backgrounds is more likely to minimize perceptual biases when these people have equal status with you throughout the interaction.
Question
The more we interact with someone,the more we rely on stereotypes to understand that individual.
Question
According to the Johari Window,the hidden area is reduced through disclosure.
Question
The main objective of the Johari Window process is to maintain the same amount of information about yourself in each of the four quadrants.
Question
Primacy and recency effects are two attribution errors.
Question
The contact hypothesis states that the more individuals interact with one another,the less they rely on stereotypes to perceive each other.
Question
The four areas of the Johari Window are open,closed,internal and external.
Question
The only way to know whether an employee has learned something is if there is a relatively permanent change in the employee's behaviour.
Question
Learning influences our motivation,role perceptions and ability.
Question
The primacy effect causes interviewers to ignore information presented at the beginning of the interview and to pay more attention to information presented later in the interview.
Question
People who learn to empathize with others are less likely to engage in attribution errors.
Question
Diversity awareness programs are designed specifically to correct deep-rooted prejudice and intolerance in the workplace.
Question
Diversity awareness programs mainly educate employees about the value of diversity and the problems with stereotyping.
Question
The primacy effect occurs because we have a strong need to quickly make sense of other people.
Question
One of the most effective ways to minimize negative self-fulfilling prophecy is to make managers aware of the power of positive expectations.
Question
When demonstrating how to perform a task,you are transferring explicit knowledge (rather than tacit knowledge).
Question
According to the halo effect,a supervisor's initial expectations of you influence your behaviour so that you are more likely to act consistently with those expectations.
Question
The recency effect occurs when a person's annual performance evaluation is heavily influenced by performance results over the last month.
Question
The halo effect occurs when one characteristic of a person shapes our general impression of that person which,in turn,biases our perceptions about the other characteristics of that person.
Question
The Johari Window is a training program that teaches employees how to change their personality.
Question
Behaviour modification emphasizes human thoughts rather than the environment as the source of all learning.
Question
According to behaviour modification theory,people learn to anticipate consequences mainly by observing the experiences of other people.
Question
Tacit knowledge is mainly learned through observation and experience.
Question
The main problem with behavioural modelling is that it transfers explicit knowledge,but not tacit knowledge.
Question
One problem with experiential learning is that it captures explicit knowledge,but overlooks tacit knowledge.
Question
Behavioural modelling can increase an observer's self-confidence.
Question
One problem with behaviour modification programs is that some employees view the variable ratio schedule of reinforcement as a form of gambling,like a lottery.
Question
Punishment decreases the frequency of future behaviour whereas negative reinforcement increases or maintains the frequency of future behaviour.
Question
If you praise an employee every time after he or she has performed the job well,then extinction of the desired behaviours is less likely to occur after you stop giving any more praise.
Question
Tacit knowledge is best learned through formal classroom instruction.
Question
Negative reinforcement occurs when the introduction of a consequence increases or maintains the frequency or future probability of a behaviour.
Question
Behaviour modification is an effective strategy for helping employees to improve their decision making and other conceptual activities.
Question
People transfer explicit knowledge when they have to show you how to perform a task because they are unable to describe the information clearly enough.
Question
Experiential learning model is an eight-stage process where people first learn explicit and later tacit knowledge.
Question
The variable ratio schedule of reinforcement makes behaviour highly resistant to extinction.
Question
Most knowledge in organizations is tacit rather than explicit.
Question
Research has concluded that punishment and negative reinforcement should never be used in organizational settings.
Question
According to social learning theory,people can reinforce their own behaviour.
Question
Continuous reinforcement provides the most rapid learning of the targeted behaviour.
Question
In behaviour modification,antecedents refer to environmental cues,informing employees that certain behaviours will have particular consequences.
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Deck 3: Perceiving Ourselves and Others in Organizations
1
Selective attention occurs after incoming information is organized and interpreted.
False
2
Social identity theory explains why we see unique characteristics in everyone else but not in ourselves.
False
3
Seeing a trend in a sequence of sales figures involves the process of categorical thinking.
True
4
Our emotions influence what we recognize or screen out.
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5
Confirmation bias causes us to screen out information that is contrary to our values and assumptions.
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6
A person's expectations make them more sensitive to incoming information,but also less sensitive to unexpected information.
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7
We are more likely to notice objects with features that are repetitive,intense and in motion.
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8
People have a natural and conscious tendency to seek out information that supports their self-concept.
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9
The perceptual process begins by attributing behaviour to internal or external causes.
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10
Mental models that give us a rich understanding of one's environment may cause us to screen out or ineffectively organize information in another environment.
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11
A person's social identity is a complex combination of his or her memberships in many groups.
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12
Homogenization and differentiation are two activities in the process of forming and maintaining our social identity.
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13
Social identity theory explains the dynamics of social perception.
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14
Employees can break out of their existing mental models by working with colleagues from diverse backgrounds who bring different mental models to the workplace.
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15
Social identity theory states that we define ourselves in terms of our differences with people who belong to other social categories.
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16
Social identity theory states that the observer's expectation of others causes the observed person to act in ways consistent with the observer's expectations.
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17
Social identity process includes categorization and attribution activities.
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18
According to social identity theory,we tend to see unique characteristics in every person who is different from us.
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19
Categorical thinking is mostly a conscious process of deciding what information in the environment to notice.
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20
Grouping people and objects into recognizable patterns is part of the selective attention process.
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21
When making an internal or external attribution about a person's behaviour,we tend to look at whether the person has acted this way in the past and other situations,and whether other people act similarly in this situation.
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22
Stereotyping is an extension of the social identity process.
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23
The first step in a self-fulfilling prophecy occurs when the observer acts differently towards people with whom he or she has high expectations than towards those with whom he or she has low expectations.
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24
The three steps in stereotyping,in order,are: (a)identify negative information,(b)behave in ways consistent with previous expectations and (c)watch the employee form a positive or negative opinion of you.
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25
Attribution theory mainly explains the selective attention process.
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26
We can eliminate the activation of stereotyping by choosing to ignore stereotypic information.
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27
People who believe that their successful completion of a project is due to their skill and hard work are making an internal attribution.
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28
Self-serving bias is the tendency to take credit for our successes and blame others or the situation for our mistakes.
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29
People tend to make an internal attribution about someone's behaviour if that person has rarely acted like this either in the past or in other situations.
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30
You are more likely to make an internal attribution about someone's poor performance if you have also observed the person performing that task poorly in the past and have observed other employees performing the task well.
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31
Stereotyping is partly responsible for prejudice and discrimination.
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32
One problem with stereotyping is that few traits assigned to a particular social category accurately describe every person identified with that group.
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33
Self-fulfilling prophecy may result in either better or worse performance than if the employee is not exposed to the self-fulfilling prophecy effect.
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34
Employee satisfaction with work accomplishments is influenced to a large degree by whether they take credit for those accomplishments or attribute the success to external causes.
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35
Stereotyping is a natural process that helps us to economize mental effort.
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36
Self-fulfilling prophecy occurs whenever supervisors accurately predict the future performance of recently hired employees.
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37
Fundamental attribution error would cause a supervisor to believe that an employee's lateness is due to factors beyond the employee's control rather than to a lack of motivation to attend work.
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38
Fundamental attribution error refers to the tendency to attribute the behaviour of other people to internal factors more than external factors.
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39
Self-fulfilling prophecy tends to have a stronger effect on employees who are new to the job than on employees who have worked in that job for a few years.
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40
The easiest way to minimize stereotyping is by preventing the activation of stereotypes in our heads.
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41
Interacting with people from other backgrounds is more likely to minimize perceptual biases when these people have equal status with you throughout the interaction.
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42
The more we interact with someone,the more we rely on stereotypes to understand that individual.
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43
According to the Johari Window,the hidden area is reduced through disclosure.
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44
The main objective of the Johari Window process is to maintain the same amount of information about yourself in each of the four quadrants.
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45
Primacy and recency effects are two attribution errors.
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46
The contact hypothesis states that the more individuals interact with one another,the less they rely on stereotypes to perceive each other.
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k this deck
47
The four areas of the Johari Window are open,closed,internal and external.
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48
The only way to know whether an employee has learned something is if there is a relatively permanent change in the employee's behaviour.
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49
Learning influences our motivation,role perceptions and ability.
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50
The primacy effect causes interviewers to ignore information presented at the beginning of the interview and to pay more attention to information presented later in the interview.
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51
People who learn to empathize with others are less likely to engage in attribution errors.
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52
Diversity awareness programs are designed specifically to correct deep-rooted prejudice and intolerance in the workplace.
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53
Diversity awareness programs mainly educate employees about the value of diversity and the problems with stereotyping.
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54
The primacy effect occurs because we have a strong need to quickly make sense of other people.
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55
One of the most effective ways to minimize negative self-fulfilling prophecy is to make managers aware of the power of positive expectations.
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k this deck
56
When demonstrating how to perform a task,you are transferring explicit knowledge (rather than tacit knowledge).
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57
According to the halo effect,a supervisor's initial expectations of you influence your behaviour so that you are more likely to act consistently with those expectations.
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58
The recency effect occurs when a person's annual performance evaluation is heavily influenced by performance results over the last month.
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59
The halo effect occurs when one characteristic of a person shapes our general impression of that person which,in turn,biases our perceptions about the other characteristics of that person.
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60
The Johari Window is a training program that teaches employees how to change their personality.
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k this deck
61
Behaviour modification emphasizes human thoughts rather than the environment as the source of all learning.
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62
According to behaviour modification theory,people learn to anticipate consequences mainly by observing the experiences of other people.
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63
Tacit knowledge is mainly learned through observation and experience.
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64
The main problem with behavioural modelling is that it transfers explicit knowledge,but not tacit knowledge.
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65
One problem with experiential learning is that it captures explicit knowledge,but overlooks tacit knowledge.
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66
Behavioural modelling can increase an observer's self-confidence.
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67
One problem with behaviour modification programs is that some employees view the variable ratio schedule of reinforcement as a form of gambling,like a lottery.
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68
Punishment decreases the frequency of future behaviour whereas negative reinforcement increases or maintains the frequency of future behaviour.
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69
If you praise an employee every time after he or she has performed the job well,then extinction of the desired behaviours is less likely to occur after you stop giving any more praise.
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70
Tacit knowledge is best learned through formal classroom instruction.
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71
Negative reinforcement occurs when the introduction of a consequence increases or maintains the frequency or future probability of a behaviour.
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72
Behaviour modification is an effective strategy for helping employees to improve their decision making and other conceptual activities.
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73
People transfer explicit knowledge when they have to show you how to perform a task because they are unable to describe the information clearly enough.
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74
Experiential learning model is an eight-stage process where people first learn explicit and later tacit knowledge.
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75
The variable ratio schedule of reinforcement makes behaviour highly resistant to extinction.
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76
Most knowledge in organizations is tacit rather than explicit.
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77
Research has concluded that punishment and negative reinforcement should never be used in organizational settings.
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78
According to social learning theory,people can reinforce their own behaviour.
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79
Continuous reinforcement provides the most rapid learning of the targeted behaviour.
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80
In behaviour modification,antecedents refer to environmental cues,informing employees that certain behaviours will have particular consequences.
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