Deck 4: Social Interaction and Everyday Life in the Age of the Internet
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Deck 4: Social Interaction and Everyday Life in the Age of the Internet
1
Two people are standing together in an elevator,but they do not speak to each other or look each other in the eye.Erving Goffman called this type of interaction:
A) sociological interaction
B) social attention
C) civil inattention
D) uncivil behavior
A) sociological interaction
B) social attention
C) civil inattention
D) uncivil behavior
C
2
The sociologist who developed the field of microsociology and emphasized the importance of understanding the seemingly trivial was:
A) Erving Goffman
B) Elijah Anderson
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Karl Marx
A) Erving Goffman
B) Elijah Anderson
C) Émile Durkheim
D) Karl Marx
A
3
According to Erving Goffman,one of the reasons it is important to study subtle day-to-day interactions is because:
A) it reveals how humans are like other primates
B) it can be used to measure a person's intelligence
C) we can learn a great deal about ourselves as human beings
D) it can inform us about political and military strategy
A) it reveals how humans are like other primates
B) it can be used to measure a person's intelligence
C) we can learn a great deal about ourselves as human beings
D) it can inform us about political and military strategy
C
4
Civil inattention is defined as:
A) acknowledging the presence of others but avoiding interaction
B) totally ignoring the presence of others
C) acting rude and inappropriate
D) pretending you do not know someone whom you have met before
A) acknowledging the presence of others but avoiding interaction
B) totally ignoring the presence of others
C) acting rude and inappropriate
D) pretending you do not know someone whom you have met before
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5
According to Erving Goffman,social interaction is like:
A) playing basketball in a gym
B) playing baseball in a stadium
C) swimming in a pool
D) performing a play in a theater
A) playing basketball in a gym
B) playing baseball in a stadium
C) swimming in a pool
D) performing a play in a theater
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6
You may be a sibling,a spouse,a student,an employee,and a parent.These are called:
A) social mobilities
B) stereotypes
C) occupations
D) social positions
A) social mobilities
B) stereotypes
C) occupations
D) social positions
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7
According to the research by Paul Ekman and W.V.Friesen ,the modes of human emotional expression:
A) vary across cultures
B) change as we grow older
C) are the same among all human beings
D) are very similar to other mammals
A) vary across cultures
B) change as we grow older
C) are the same among all human beings
D) are very similar to other mammals
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8
According to Charles Darwin,basic human emotional expressions:
A) are exactly the same as the basic emotional expressions of primates
B) are the same in all human beings
C) vary widely,depending on the culture one is in
D) are learned and vary among cultures
A) are exactly the same as the basic emotional expressions of primates
B) are the same in all human beings
C) vary widely,depending on the culture one is in
D) are learned and vary among cultures
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9
According to Erving Goffman,reality is not fixed or static but created through:
A) mass media
B) human ideas
C) human interactions
D) human mistakes
A) mass media
B) human ideas
C) human interactions
D) human mistakes
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10
Socially defined expectations of a person in a given social position are referred to as:
A) status positions
B) social roles
C) markers of inequality
D) prejudices
A) status positions
B) social roles
C) markers of inequality
D) prejudices
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11
Maria's friend posted an unflattering picture of her from a Halloween party on Facebook.Maria was embarrassed and quickly took it down because she is friends with many co-workers on Facebook.This is an example of:
A) impression management
B) social role management
C) controlled alertness
D) interactional vandalism
A) impression management
B) social role management
C) controlled alertness
D) interactional vandalism
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12
What do sociologists call the social honor or prestige society accords to a group of people?
A) status
B) social role
C) race
D) expectation
A) status
B) social role
C) race
D) expectation
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13
The exchange of information about human emotion through facial expressions,gestures,and movements of the body is called:
A) nonverbal communication
B) harassment
C) asensory communication
D) backchanneling
A) nonverbal communication
B) harassment
C) asensory communication
D) backchanneling
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14
Arrive to class on time,raise your hand before speaking,turn in assignments on time-these expectations are part of the __________ of students.
A) status marker
B) social role
C) stereotype
D) identity
A) status marker
B) social role
C) stereotype
D) identity
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15
When a CEO wears a suit and tie to a board meeting and later in the day changes into jeans and a T-shirt to attend a football event with friends,he is engaging in:
A) social engineering
B) impression management
C) social positioning
D) false impressions
A) social engineering
B) impression management
C) social positioning
D) false impressions
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16
Which of the following would NOT be classified as civil inattention?
A) riding the bus to class and reading a book
B) waiting in line at the ATM and talking on the phone
C) selecting a seat in a large lecture hall where you do not know your fellow students
D) working on a group project but contributing very little and letting others do the work
A) riding the bus to class and reading a book
B) waiting in line at the ATM and talking on the phone
C) selecting a seat in a large lecture hall where you do not know your fellow students
D) working on a group project but contributing very little and letting others do the work
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17
With e-mail it is difficult to capture dimensions of emotional expressions that are present only in facial expressions and with body language.For example,Jane sent her boss an e-mail suggesting that she begin a performance review to see whether Jane was ready for a raise.Her boss replied angrily in an e-mail that Jane was out of line and that she would give her a performance review at the same time as other employees.Face-to-face communication may have helped Jane avoid upsetting her boss by:
A) allowing her to pressure her boss by looking her straight in the eye
B) allowing her to respond to her boss's anger in real time
C) allowing Jane to claim gender discrimination without putting it in writing
D) allowing her to subtly try out the idea of a performance review and evaluate her boss's body language before suggesting she was ready for a raise
A) allowing her to pressure her boss by looking her straight in the eye
B) allowing her to respond to her boss's anger in real time
C) allowing Jane to claim gender discrimination without putting it in writing
D) allowing her to subtly try out the idea of a performance review and evaluate her boss's body language before suggesting she was ready for a raise
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18
Gestures and body postures that are an important part of nonverbal communication are:
A) universal and the same in all cultures
B) neither universal nor the same in all cultures
C) unique to each person
D) embedded in our DNA
A) universal and the same in all cultures
B) neither universal nor the same in all cultures
C) unique to each person
D) embedded in our DNA
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19
Wearing a new dress on a first date is an example of:
A) gender non-specific norms
B) race
C) impression management
D) social exclusion
A) gender non-specific norms
B) race
C) impression management
D) social exclusion
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20
Another term for social status is:
A) social impression
B) social class
C) social marker
D) social position
A) social impression
B) social class
C) social marker
D) social position
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21
Ethnomethodology is the study of:
A) how people sustain meaningful interactions with each other
B) how people learn language
C) the methods sociologists use
D) extraordinary social events that occur over space and time
A) how people sustain meaningful interactions with each other
B) how people learn language
C) the methods sociologists use
D) extraordinary social events that occur over space and time
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22
Interactional vandalism is defined as:
A) a subordinate person breaking the tacit rules of interaction
B) a high-status person refusing to interact
C) two people having a miscommunication
D) social avoidance
A) a subordinate person breaking the tacit rules of interaction
B) a high-status person refusing to interact
C) two people having a miscommunication
D) social avoidance
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23
Trevor takes the subway to and from work.He usually wears his headphones and listens to his music on the subway.He is careful not to bump shoulders with the passengers next to him when he is standing on the crowded train.Trevor engages in __________ on the subway.
A) social positioning
B) focused interaction
C) impression management
D) unfocused interaction
A) social positioning
B) focused interaction
C) impression management
D) unfocused interaction
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24
People engage in __________ to reconcile their role in one part of life with their role in another part of their social world.
A) space-time separation
B) audience segregation
C) social engineering
D) role swapping
A) space-time separation
B) audience segregation
C) social engineering
D) role swapping
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25
While grocery shopping,you run into your sociology professor.This creates an awkward interaction because you are not used to seeing her outside of class and you are not sure how to behave.The interaction is awkward because it violated your:
A) audience segregation
B) status position
C) sense of self
D) stress-free space
A) audience segregation
B) status position
C) sense of self
D) stress-free space
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26
An example of audience segregation is:
A) being openly gay at home but being straight at work for fear of discrimination
B) inviting both spouses' families over for a holiday,even though they are uncomfortable around each other
C) keeping two of your friends who do not like each other apart at a party
D) taking a friend to a concert to introduce her to music she has never heard before
A) being openly gay at home but being straight at work for fear of discrimination
B) inviting both spouses' families over for a holiday,even though they are uncomfortable around each other
C) keeping two of your friends who do not like each other apart at a party
D) taking a friend to a concert to introduce her to music she has never heard before
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27
The social positions that a person occupies determines that person's:
A) social roles
B) ideas
C) gender identity
D) racial identity
A) social roles
B) ideas
C) gender identity
D) racial identity
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28
According to Harold Garfinkel,people use __________ to organize everyday conversations.
A) formal grammar
B) background expectancies
C) deceptive tactics
D) facial expressions
A) formal grammar
B) background expectancies
C) deceptive tactics
D) facial expressions
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29
The technique used to examine the organizational principles of talk is called:
A) survey analysis
B) language studies
C) conversation analysis
D) talk analysis
A) survey analysis
B) language studies
C) conversation analysis
D) talk analysis
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30
To understand a conversation,we need to understand __________,which is why electronic communication,such as e-mail or text messaging,can lead to miscommunication.
A) the social context
B) the language
C) what the participants look like
D) the emoticons
A) the social context
B) the language
C) what the participants look like
D) the emoticons
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31
Ethnomethodology is the study of __________,which every person uses in day-to-day life to make sense of what others do.
A) cultural relativism
B) interviews
C) social confinement
D) ethnomethods
A) cultural relativism
B) interviews
C) social confinement
D) ethnomethods
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32
As a medical doctor,Enrique has the privilege of being called Dr.Chavez.This is because our society gives high __________ to medical doctors.
A) rates of disapproval
B) wages
C) status
D) expectations
A) rates of disapproval
B) wages
C) status
D) expectations
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33
Social positions can be both general and specific.Which of the following is an example of a specific social position in American society?
A) race
B) doctor
C) gender
D) sexual orientation
A) race
B) doctor
C) gender
D) sexual orientation
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34
Encounters always need __________,which indicate(s)that civil inattention is being discarded and focused interaction will begin.
A) impression management
B) pre-openings
C) openings
D) controlled alertness
A) impression management
B) pre-openings
C) openings
D) controlled alertness
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35
According to the textbook,interactional vandalism,such as when men on the street call out to and follow women,is likely to have the effect of:
A) challenging status positions
B) encouraging violence
C) supporting status positions
D) breaking down audience segregation
A) challenging status positions
B) encouraging violence
C) supporting status positions
D) breaking down audience segregation
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36
When Jane arrived at the party,her friend Alyssa came over immediately to say hello.According to Erving Goffman,this is an example of:
A) controlled alertness
B) focused interaction
C) unfocused interaction
D) interactional vandalism
A) controlled alertness
B) focused interaction
C) unfocused interaction
D) interactional vandalism
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37
Social positions can be both general and specific.Which of the following is an example of a general social position in American society?
A) politician
B) doctor
C) gender
D) basketball player
A) politician
B) doctor
C) gender
D) basketball player
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38
During a dinner at a fancy restaurant,a young woman knocks over a glass of water as she reaches for the salt.As the water soaks the tablecloth she exclaims,"Oops,sorry!" This is an example of a:
A) response cry
B) reflex cry
C) status marker
D) social cover-up
A) response cry
B) reflex cry
C) status marker
D) social cover-up
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39
Which of the following would NOT be a case in which both focused and unfocused interaction are likely to occur?
A) an individual watching TV alone
B) the parking lot before a football game
C) a lunchtime crowd in a university cafeteria
D) the first day of a university class
A) an individual watching TV alone
B) the parking lot before a football game
C) a lunchtime crowd in a university cafeteria
D) the first day of a university class
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40
Unfocused interaction is when people:
A) ignore each other completely in a small space
B) exhibit mutual awareness but do not engage in face-to-face interaction
C) demonstrate how they perceive others through body language
D) communicate over e-mail or text message
A) ignore each other completely in a small space
B) exhibit mutual awareness but do not engage in face-to-face interaction
C) demonstrate how they perceive others through body language
D) communicate over e-mail or text message
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41
__________ of all adult Americans use some kind of social networking site.
A) 25 percent
B) 50 percent
C) 75 percent
D) 90 percent
A) 25 percent
B) 50 percent
C) 75 percent
D) 90 percent
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42
What is civil inattention? Using the example of a crowded public bus,explain how individuals on the bus might engage in civil inattention.
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43
What is interactional vandalism? Give an example.Why does interactional vandalism create problems in everyday interaction and conversation?
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44
Edward T.Hall identifies how many zones for personal space?
A) one
B) two
C) three
D) four
A) one
B) two
C) three
D) four
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45
The verbal harassment of a single woman by a group of men as she walks past a construction site can be examined as a social interaction but must also be understood as part of a larger system of:
A) occupational stratification
B) gender inequality
C) politeness norms
D) social stratification
A) occupational stratification
B) gender inequality
C) politeness norms
D) social stratification
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46
Sociologists Deirdre Boden and Harvey Molotch argue that even with the growth of electronic communication,such as text messaging and e-mail,people have a strong need to interact in each other's presence.They call this concept:
A) focused interaction
B) compulsion of proximity
C) impression management
D) social status
A) focused interaction
B) compulsion of proximity
C) impression management
D) social status
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47
The sociologist Carol Brooks Gardner linked the harassment of women by men to the larger system of male privilege in public spaces,women's physical vulnerability,and the omnipresent threat of rape.Her analysis of these interactions shows the importance of linking __________ and __________ to understand social interaction.
A) gender; class
B) harassment; violence
C) norms; actions
D) microsociology; macrosociology
A) gender; class
B) harassment; violence
C) norms; actions
D) microsociology; macrosociology
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48
Throughout our day we alternate our activities and where they take place according to what sociologists call:
A) time-space
B) space continuum
C) time-mood
D) social expectations
A) time-space
B) space continuum
C) time-mood
D) social expectations
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49
Using the example of fans watching a football game at your college stadium,explain how individuals would be engaged in both unfocused and focused interaction with others.Discuss the appropriate terms Erving Goffman and other sociologists used to analyze such situations.
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50
Which of the following is an example of the compulsion of proximity?
A) John and Irma went to high school together and reconnected on Facebook.
B) Maria and Thomas met online and communicated using e-mail,text messages,and the phone regularly,but they did not feel a real connection until they met in person for the first time over coffee.
C) Trevor and Alyssa broke up,and now they dislike having to see each other in their sociology class.
D) Travis and Alma do not know each other,but the bus they are on is very crowded,which forces them to rub shoulders
A) John and Irma went to high school together and reconnected on Facebook.
B) Maria and Thomas met online and communicated using e-mail,text messages,and the phone regularly,but they did not feel a real connection until they met in person for the first time over coffee.
C) Trevor and Alyssa broke up,and now they dislike having to see each other in their sociology class.
D) Travis and Alma do not know each other,but the bus they are on is very crowded,which forces them to rub shoulders
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51
As of January 2014,Facebook had over 1.3 billion active users.Explain how electronic technology,such as Facebook,affects audience segregation.Be sure to define audience segregation.
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52
According to Edward T.Hall,which zone of personal space is most acceptable during an encounter with your spouse or romantic partner?
A) touching distance
B) public distance
C) social distance
D) intimate distance
A) touching distance
B) public distance
C) social distance
D) intimate distance
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53
In the book Streetwise: Race,Class,and Change in an Urban Community (1990),Elijah Anderson noted that studying everyday life sheds light on how social order is created by the individual building blocks of:
A) macro-level institutions
B) prejudice and racism
C) impression management
D) micro-level interactions
A) macro-level institutions
B) prejudice and racism
C) impression management
D) micro-level interactions
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54
According to sociologists,all of us have multiple social roles.What are your social roles,and how are they related to your social position?
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55
Our actions throughout the day are generally organized according to both the time of day and:
A) information
B) other people
C) mood
D) space
A) information
B) other people
C) mood
D) space
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56
In modern societies large-scale social institutions are organized by __________,which allows for the precise timing of activities.
A) clock-time
B) managers
C) time maximization
D) time-rules
A) clock-time
B) managers
C) time maximization
D) time-rules
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57
What is impression management? Give an example of how a college student engages in impression management when interacting with professors.
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58
According to sociologists,in what ways do individuals communicate their emotions to each other? Explain how technology altered some of the ways in which individuals communicate their emotions.
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59
Regionalization is the idea that social life is separated into regional settings or zones.These social zones are separated physically,such as a kitchen and a bedroom,but also by:
A) time
B) income
C) modern architectural design
D) interior design principles
A) time
B) income
C) modern architectural design
D) interior design principles
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60
The measuring of time by clocks is standard around the world today.World standard time was first introduced in:
A) the 1900s
B) the early 2000s
C) the 1600s
D) the 1800s
A) the 1900s
B) the early 2000s
C) the 1600s
D) the 1800s
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61
Using the concept of regionalization,explain how time and space shaped your social activities and interactions in the past 24 hours.
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62
Use an example from your own experience to explain how our day-to-day social interactions are shaped by gender and racial hierarchies and in turn reinforce those same hierarchies.
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63
What is the compulsion of proximity? Explain how the increase in electronic communication affects the compulsion of proximity.Use examples.
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