Deck 10: Social Perception and Social Cognition

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Question
What do psychologists call psychological tensions caused by the perceived mismatch between attitudes and behavior?

A) attribution
B) cognitive power
C) frustration
D) stereotype
E) cognitive dissonance
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Question
The tendency to be closed-minded, rigid, and inflexible in one's opinions and subsequent behavior is called "_____________."

A) dogmatism
B) attitude
C) cognitive dissonance
D) egalitarianism
E) skepticism
Question
_________________ is the process wherein the individual so strongly feels that he or she is a member of a group that he or she adopts its opinions, attitudes, and values.

A) attitude
B) obedience
C) identification
D) membership
E) cognitive dissonance
Question
"_____________" refers to the tendency to take credit for our successes and avoid responsibility for our failures.

A) Unassuming bias
B) Power to judge
C) Cognitive dissonance
D) Self-centered bias
E) Cognitive style of lying
Question
What do psychologists call the process through which we seek to explain and identify the causes of the behavior of others and our own actions?

A) Self-serving bias
B) Unassuming bias
C) Social attribution
D) Locus of control
E) Stereotype
Question
Traits or characteristics generally attributed to all members of specific groups are called ____________.

A) unassuming bias
B) cognitive dissonance
C) locus of control
D) cognitive power
E) stereotypes
Question
The tendency to explain one's own success as a result of external factors and one's failure as a result of personal mistakes or weaknesses is called _____________.

A) unassuming bias
B) locus of control
C) cognitive dissonance
D) dogmatism
E) value
Question
What do psychologists call a complex belief that reflects a principle, standard, or quality considered by the individual as the most desirable or appropriate?

A) Self-serving bias
B) Value
C) Social attribution
D) Locus of control
E) Stereotype
Question
__________________ is the process through which we interpret, remember, and then use information about the social world.

A) Social attribution
B) Social cognition
C) Social value
D) Unassuming bias
E) Dogmatism
Question
Actions that reward those who follow the norms and reprove those who are deviant are called _________________.

A) roles
B) sanctions
C) groupthink
D) obedience to authority
E) social facilitation
Question
What is the psychological term for the tendency of group members to shift, as a result of group discussion, toward more extreme positions than those they initially held?

A) stereotypes
B) disobedience
C) conformity shift
D) group polarization
E) group sanctions
Question
The tendency of members of groups to adhere to the shared views so strongly that they ignore information inconsistent with those views is called ______________.

A) leadership
B) group polarization
C) groupthink
D) group inattention
E) sanctions
Question
A form of social influence in which one person simply orders one other or others to perform some action(s) is called ____________.

A) groupthink
B) obedience
C) group polarization
D) rude behavior
E) sanctions
Question
What do psychologists call the effects upon performance resulting from the presence of others?

A) Group polarization
B) Sanctions
C) Obedience
D) Groupthink
E) Social facilitation
Question
The tendency of some group members to exert less effort on a task than they would if working on alone is called _____________.

A) laziness
B) social loafing
C) authoritarian power
D) social facilitation
E) group polarization
Question
The degree to which individuals and groups are enmeshed (involved) together is called _____________.

A) embeddedness
B) involvement quotient
C) horizontal collectivism
D) individualism
E) groupthink
Question
All forces acting on group members to cause them to remain part of a group, including mutual attraction, interdependence, and shared goals are usually labeled as:

A) cohesiveness
B) cognitive dissonance
C) obedience to authority
D) individualism
E) groupthink
Question
What type of values is associated with exercising control over society and exploiting its natural resources?

A) Mastery values
B) Democratic values
C) Liberal values
D) Conservative values
E) Harmony values
Question
Individuals who believe in the status quo, advocate self-discipline, and care about social order and tradition share what type of values?

A) Democratic
B) Liberal
C) Conservative
D) Socialist
E) Reactionary
Question
In the debate about Western and non-Western values, it is argued that, in general, Western values are based on the fundamental beliefs that the nature of human beings is selfish, scarcity is a primary condition of nature and ____________.

A) progress means gradual conquest of weaker groups and territories
B) happiness is impossible to achieve without knowledge
C) happiness is understood as a movement toward a goal
D) progress means growth, complexity, competition, and freedom
E) suffering is unnecessary and people have to learn how to live without fear
Question
If a researcher observed that most of the individuals from a given sample displayed an unassuming bias, what does this mean?

A) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of their own effort, talents, and skills.
B) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of external factors, such as luck and help from other people.
C) The people in this group refused to talk about their own success, but insisted on talking about own mistakes.
D) The people in this group said that they had no idea about why they were successful.
E) The people in this group did not believe that they were successful at all.
Question
Social stereotypes are most likely rooted in____________ because they are more salient and notable.

A) age characteristics
B) educational opportunities
C) weather patterns
D) ethnic and racial attributes
E) quantity and quality of food
Question
Which of the following statements can be best associated the frustration-aggression theory of prejudice?

A) Prejudice weakens if people are frustrated about their own safety.
B) Prejudice weakens when people are scared of an external threat.
C) Frustration is not connected to aggression and prejudice is not based on frustration.
D) People commit violent acts and then face criticism
E) Prejudice is a form of displayed aggression caused by frustration.
Question
Which of the following statements is not necessarily a reflection of a stereotype?

A) All Italians like pizza and spaghetti.
B) All men are aggressive.
C) All Chinese politicians are corrupt.
D) All U.S. presidents were men.
E) All Koreans are performing artists like their ancestors.
Question
Research has shown that bodily symmetry, which is considered a cross-culturally accepted feature of a beautiful body or face, is one of the strongest predictors of _________________.

A) stronger immune systems
B) aggressive behavior in uncertain situations
C) anti-social personality disorder
D) unkind and greedy behavior
E) high achievement motivation
Question
According to the old Indian caste system, an individual's social status was primarily ________________.

A) achieved in adolescence
B) ascribed for boys, but achieved for girls
C) achieved in adulthood
D) ascribed
E) achieved in childhood
Question
Which of the following is likely to be an example of an ascribed status?

A) After a lengthy interview, Ravi was chosen to be the new manager of the company.
B) After checking with the referees, Ravi learned that he won the championship match
C) After his 18th birthday, Ravi took a test and received his driver's license.
D) After he was born, Ravi was named the heir (inheritor) to his father's business.
E) After midnight, Ravi became a newly elected member of the Parliament.
Question
Replications of the Milgram experiment in different countries _____________.

A) yielded results substantially different from those obtained originally by Milgram
B) failed due to financial problems associated with the cost of these experiments
C) were not done due to the subjects' objections
D) yielded similar results, but only in non-democratic countries
E) yielded generally similar results
Question
Milgram's studies revealed that people tend to engage in obedient behavior ______________.

A) in ordinary situations
B) in highly unusual situations
C) only in collectivist cultural groups
D) only in individualist cultural groups
E) in situations of emergency
Question
Which of the following accurately characterizes obedient behavior?

A) People tend to obey when they are told that they are not responsible for their actions.
B) People tend to obey less often when they are told that they are not responsible for their obedient actions.
C) People tend to ask questions when they are told that they are legally responsible for their obedient actions.
D) People tend to get angry when they are told that they are not responsible for their obedient actions.
E) People tend to obey more often and out of confusion when they are told that they will be punished for their obedient actions.
Question
What is the phenomenon opposite of groupthink?

A) Group emotion
B) Social loafing
C) Authoritarian power
D) Social facilitation
E) Group polarization
Question
Evolutionary psychologists suggest that values allow human groups to adjust to their environments. They become embedded in cultures and passed on to new generations.
Question
Individuals from Western countries are expected to demonstrate a stronger internal locus of control than individuals from non-Western countries.
Question
Experimental research shows that the principle of cognitive balance does not work outside the psychological laboratories of major European and American universities.
Question
Across cultures, people with scars on their faces are evaluated as being more attractive, sociable, and honest than people with no scars on their faces.
Question
Persistent gambling may be a behavioral pattern typical for individuals with an external locus of control.
Question
It is a universal tendency for men to underestimate their own IQ's when asked to make a guess about their own intelligence.
Question
Negative emotions tend to make stereotypes more accessible from memory.
Question
According to the deprivation theories of prejudice, people develop a prejudice against other groups when those groups are believed to be frightening or possess something they are not entitled to possess.
Question
Most myths and fairy tales from all continents show a consistent pattern: "good" characters are those who obtained their success due to their effort and "bad" individuals are those who enrich themselves by harming others or doing nothing.
Question
People in the United States and Australia perceived stories about initially rich and subsequently poor individuals as more competent and likeable than individuals initially poor and subsequently rich.
Question
The rules of greeting and introducing oneself to other people appear similar across various ethnic groups.
Question
Overall, collectivist cultures maintain weaker systems of sanctions and rewards related to group behavior as compared to individualist cultures.
Question
Compared to other national groups, Americans score lower on tests and experiments assessing conformity.
Question
Anthropologists suggest that territorial behavior is not natural for individuals and social groups.
Question
People in individualist cultures are more inclined to belong to a large variety of social groups, but for shorter periods of time.
Question
The rules of address appear to be comparable across cultures.
Question
Conformity, in general, is more common in individuals from lower socioeconomic standing than individuals from upper-middle class standing.
Question
Conformity is a dichotomous variable.
Question
Unfortunately, the Milgram experiment was not conducted in countries outside the United States and researchers had no opportunity to see if this study had cross-cultural validity.
Question
Studies show that some national differences exist in the way people maintain eye contact.
Question
Imagine that a store owner is experiencing an unpleasant state of emotions caused by a mismatch (disparity) between his belief that anger is inappropriate and his angry reaction to the rude behavior of an apparently foreign tourist. What is the psychological term for this state?
Question
If a person has a deep-seated belief that all individuals are equals and must share basic interests and receive similar treatment, he/she holds a(n) _____________ value system?
Question
Name the two basic views of morality and justice mentioned in the text.
Question
A dogmatic person would likely respond to new information in a ___________ manner.
Question
Studies suggest that individuals from ___________ countries are more likely to employ an unassuming bias in explanations of success and failure.
Question
What kinds of emotional experiences are commonly associated with cognitive dissonance?
Question
If a person has a fundamental belief in the legitimacy of an unequal distribution of power, resources, and social roles, they are supporting the notion of a(n)________.
Question
International surveys show that Americans, for the most part, are described as___________________.
Question
What is cultural embeddedness?
Question
What is the relationship between power distance and obedience to authority?
Question
What is the unassuming bias? Give examples.
Question
Describe the differences between Western and non-Western values. Describe the similarities.
Question
Why do individuals from Western countries, as a group, tend to display a somewhat stronger internal locus of control?
Question
Describe the distinctions between conservative values and values of autonomy.
Question
Provide examples of instances in which conformity would be an effective behavioral response.
Question
Compare conformity in collectivist and individualist cultures.
Question
Are individuals from Western countries more or less likely to engage in social loafing than individuals from non-Western countries? Why?
Question
According to cross-cultural replications of Milgram's studies, how are measures of power distance and rates of obedience related and why?
Question
Describe similarities and differences in the rules of address.
Question
Explain groupthink. Which cultural factors should affect its manifestations?
Question
Explain social loafing. Which cultural factors should affect its manifestations?
Question
What do professionals call individual psychological tensions caused by the perceived mismatch between attitudes and behavior?

A) attribution
B) cognitive power
C) frustration
D) stereotype
E) cognitive dissonance
Question
In the debate about Western and non-Western values, it is argued that, in general, Western values are based on the fundamental beliefs that the nature of human beings is selfish, scarcity is a primary condition of nature and ____________.

A) progress means gradual conquest of weaker groups and territories
B) happiness is impossible to achieve without knowledge
C) happiness is understood as a movement toward a goal
D) progress means growth, complexity, competition, and freedom
E) suffering is unnecessary and people have to learn how to live without fear
Question
If a researcher observed that most of the individuals from a given sample displayed an unassuming bias, what would this mean?

A) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of their own effort, talents, and skills.
B) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of external factors, such as luck and help from other people.
C) The people in this group refused to talk about their own success but insisted on talking about their own mistakes.
D) The people in this group said that they had no idea about why they were successful.
E) The people in this group did not believe that they were successful at all.
Question
What is the psychological term for the tendency of group members to shift, as a result of group discussion, toward more extreme positions than those they initially held?

A) Social loafing
B) disobedience
C) Conformity shift
D) Group polarization
E) Group sanctions
Question
Replications of the Milgram experiment in different countries ________.

A) yielded results substantially different from those obtained by Milgram himself
B) failed due to financial problems
C) were not completed due to the subjects' complaints
D) yielded similar results, but only in non-democratic countries
E) yielded, in general, similar results
Question
According to the deprivation theories of prejudice, people develop a prejudice against other groups when those groups are believed to be frightening or possess something they are not entitled to possess.
Question
Across cultures, people with scars on their faces are evaluated as being more attractive, sociable, and honest than people with no scars on their faces.
Question
It is a universal tendency for men to underestimate their own IQ's when asked to make a guess about their own intelligence.
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Deck 10: Social Perception and Social Cognition
1
What do psychologists call psychological tensions caused by the perceived mismatch between attitudes and behavior?

A) attribution
B) cognitive power
C) frustration
D) stereotype
E) cognitive dissonance
E
2
The tendency to be closed-minded, rigid, and inflexible in one's opinions and subsequent behavior is called "_____________."

A) dogmatism
B) attitude
C) cognitive dissonance
D) egalitarianism
E) skepticism
A
3
_________________ is the process wherein the individual so strongly feels that he or she is a member of a group that he or she adopts its opinions, attitudes, and values.

A) attitude
B) obedience
C) identification
D) membership
E) cognitive dissonance
C
4
"_____________" refers to the tendency to take credit for our successes and avoid responsibility for our failures.

A) Unassuming bias
B) Power to judge
C) Cognitive dissonance
D) Self-centered bias
E) Cognitive style of lying
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
5
What do psychologists call the process through which we seek to explain and identify the causes of the behavior of others and our own actions?

A) Self-serving bias
B) Unassuming bias
C) Social attribution
D) Locus of control
E) Stereotype
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
6
Traits or characteristics generally attributed to all members of specific groups are called ____________.

A) unassuming bias
B) cognitive dissonance
C) locus of control
D) cognitive power
E) stereotypes
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
7
The tendency to explain one's own success as a result of external factors and one's failure as a result of personal mistakes or weaknesses is called _____________.

A) unassuming bias
B) locus of control
C) cognitive dissonance
D) dogmatism
E) value
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
8
What do psychologists call a complex belief that reflects a principle, standard, or quality considered by the individual as the most desirable or appropriate?

A) Self-serving bias
B) Value
C) Social attribution
D) Locus of control
E) Stereotype
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
9
__________________ is the process through which we interpret, remember, and then use information about the social world.

A) Social attribution
B) Social cognition
C) Social value
D) Unassuming bias
E) Dogmatism
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
10
Actions that reward those who follow the norms and reprove those who are deviant are called _________________.

A) roles
B) sanctions
C) groupthink
D) obedience to authority
E) social facilitation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
11
What is the psychological term for the tendency of group members to shift, as a result of group discussion, toward more extreme positions than those they initially held?

A) stereotypes
B) disobedience
C) conformity shift
D) group polarization
E) group sanctions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
12
The tendency of members of groups to adhere to the shared views so strongly that they ignore information inconsistent with those views is called ______________.

A) leadership
B) group polarization
C) groupthink
D) group inattention
E) sanctions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
13
A form of social influence in which one person simply orders one other or others to perform some action(s) is called ____________.

A) groupthink
B) obedience
C) group polarization
D) rude behavior
E) sanctions
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
14
What do psychologists call the effects upon performance resulting from the presence of others?

A) Group polarization
B) Sanctions
C) Obedience
D) Groupthink
E) Social facilitation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
15
The tendency of some group members to exert less effort on a task than they would if working on alone is called _____________.

A) laziness
B) social loafing
C) authoritarian power
D) social facilitation
E) group polarization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
16
The degree to which individuals and groups are enmeshed (involved) together is called _____________.

A) embeddedness
B) involvement quotient
C) horizontal collectivism
D) individualism
E) groupthink
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
17
All forces acting on group members to cause them to remain part of a group, including mutual attraction, interdependence, and shared goals are usually labeled as:

A) cohesiveness
B) cognitive dissonance
C) obedience to authority
D) individualism
E) groupthink
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
18
What type of values is associated with exercising control over society and exploiting its natural resources?

A) Mastery values
B) Democratic values
C) Liberal values
D) Conservative values
E) Harmony values
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
19
Individuals who believe in the status quo, advocate self-discipline, and care about social order and tradition share what type of values?

A) Democratic
B) Liberal
C) Conservative
D) Socialist
E) Reactionary
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
20
In the debate about Western and non-Western values, it is argued that, in general, Western values are based on the fundamental beliefs that the nature of human beings is selfish, scarcity is a primary condition of nature and ____________.

A) progress means gradual conquest of weaker groups and territories
B) happiness is impossible to achieve without knowledge
C) happiness is understood as a movement toward a goal
D) progress means growth, complexity, competition, and freedom
E) suffering is unnecessary and people have to learn how to live without fear
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
21
If a researcher observed that most of the individuals from a given sample displayed an unassuming bias, what does this mean?

A) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of their own effort, talents, and skills.
B) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of external factors, such as luck and help from other people.
C) The people in this group refused to talk about their own success, but insisted on talking about own mistakes.
D) The people in this group said that they had no idea about why they were successful.
E) The people in this group did not believe that they were successful at all.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
22
Social stereotypes are most likely rooted in____________ because they are more salient and notable.

A) age characteristics
B) educational opportunities
C) weather patterns
D) ethnic and racial attributes
E) quantity and quality of food
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
23
Which of the following statements can be best associated the frustration-aggression theory of prejudice?

A) Prejudice weakens if people are frustrated about their own safety.
B) Prejudice weakens when people are scared of an external threat.
C) Frustration is not connected to aggression and prejudice is not based on frustration.
D) People commit violent acts and then face criticism
E) Prejudice is a form of displayed aggression caused by frustration.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
24
Which of the following statements is not necessarily a reflection of a stereotype?

A) All Italians like pizza and spaghetti.
B) All men are aggressive.
C) All Chinese politicians are corrupt.
D) All U.S. presidents were men.
E) All Koreans are performing artists like their ancestors.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
25
Research has shown that bodily symmetry, which is considered a cross-culturally accepted feature of a beautiful body or face, is one of the strongest predictors of _________________.

A) stronger immune systems
B) aggressive behavior in uncertain situations
C) anti-social personality disorder
D) unkind and greedy behavior
E) high achievement motivation
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
26
According to the old Indian caste system, an individual's social status was primarily ________________.

A) achieved in adolescence
B) ascribed for boys, but achieved for girls
C) achieved in adulthood
D) ascribed
E) achieved in childhood
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
27
Which of the following is likely to be an example of an ascribed status?

A) After a lengthy interview, Ravi was chosen to be the new manager of the company.
B) After checking with the referees, Ravi learned that he won the championship match
C) After his 18th birthday, Ravi took a test and received his driver's license.
D) After he was born, Ravi was named the heir (inheritor) to his father's business.
E) After midnight, Ravi became a newly elected member of the Parliament.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
28
Replications of the Milgram experiment in different countries _____________.

A) yielded results substantially different from those obtained originally by Milgram
B) failed due to financial problems associated with the cost of these experiments
C) were not done due to the subjects' objections
D) yielded similar results, but only in non-democratic countries
E) yielded generally similar results
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
29
Milgram's studies revealed that people tend to engage in obedient behavior ______________.

A) in ordinary situations
B) in highly unusual situations
C) only in collectivist cultural groups
D) only in individualist cultural groups
E) in situations of emergency
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
30
Which of the following accurately characterizes obedient behavior?

A) People tend to obey when they are told that they are not responsible for their actions.
B) People tend to obey less often when they are told that they are not responsible for their obedient actions.
C) People tend to ask questions when they are told that they are legally responsible for their obedient actions.
D) People tend to get angry when they are told that they are not responsible for their obedient actions.
E) People tend to obey more often and out of confusion when they are told that they will be punished for their obedient actions.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
31
What is the phenomenon opposite of groupthink?

A) Group emotion
B) Social loafing
C) Authoritarian power
D) Social facilitation
E) Group polarization
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
32
Evolutionary psychologists suggest that values allow human groups to adjust to their environments. They become embedded in cultures and passed on to new generations.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
33
Individuals from Western countries are expected to demonstrate a stronger internal locus of control than individuals from non-Western countries.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
34
Experimental research shows that the principle of cognitive balance does not work outside the psychological laboratories of major European and American universities.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
35
Across cultures, people with scars on their faces are evaluated as being more attractive, sociable, and honest than people with no scars on their faces.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
36
Persistent gambling may be a behavioral pattern typical for individuals with an external locus of control.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
37
It is a universal tendency for men to underestimate their own IQ's when asked to make a guess about their own intelligence.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
38
Negative emotions tend to make stereotypes more accessible from memory.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
39
According to the deprivation theories of prejudice, people develop a prejudice against other groups when those groups are believed to be frightening or possess something they are not entitled to possess.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
40
Most myths and fairy tales from all continents show a consistent pattern: "good" characters are those who obtained their success due to their effort and "bad" individuals are those who enrich themselves by harming others or doing nothing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
41
People in the United States and Australia perceived stories about initially rich and subsequently poor individuals as more competent and likeable than individuals initially poor and subsequently rich.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
42
The rules of greeting and introducing oneself to other people appear similar across various ethnic groups.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
43
Overall, collectivist cultures maintain weaker systems of sanctions and rewards related to group behavior as compared to individualist cultures.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
44
Compared to other national groups, Americans score lower on tests and experiments assessing conformity.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
45
Anthropologists suggest that territorial behavior is not natural for individuals and social groups.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
46
People in individualist cultures are more inclined to belong to a large variety of social groups, but for shorter periods of time.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
47
The rules of address appear to be comparable across cultures.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
48
Conformity, in general, is more common in individuals from lower socioeconomic standing than individuals from upper-middle class standing.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
49
Conformity is a dichotomous variable.
Unlock Deck
Unlock for access to all 82 flashcards in this deck.
Unlock Deck
k this deck
50
Unfortunately, the Milgram experiment was not conducted in countries outside the United States and researchers had no opportunity to see if this study had cross-cultural validity.
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51
Studies show that some national differences exist in the way people maintain eye contact.
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52
Imagine that a store owner is experiencing an unpleasant state of emotions caused by a mismatch (disparity) between his belief that anger is inappropriate and his angry reaction to the rude behavior of an apparently foreign tourist. What is the psychological term for this state?
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53
If a person has a deep-seated belief that all individuals are equals and must share basic interests and receive similar treatment, he/she holds a(n) _____________ value system?
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54
Name the two basic views of morality and justice mentioned in the text.
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55
A dogmatic person would likely respond to new information in a ___________ manner.
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56
Studies suggest that individuals from ___________ countries are more likely to employ an unassuming bias in explanations of success and failure.
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57
What kinds of emotional experiences are commonly associated with cognitive dissonance?
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58
If a person has a fundamental belief in the legitimacy of an unequal distribution of power, resources, and social roles, they are supporting the notion of a(n)________.
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59
International surveys show that Americans, for the most part, are described as___________________.
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60
What is cultural embeddedness?
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61
What is the relationship between power distance and obedience to authority?
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62
What is the unassuming bias? Give examples.
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63
Describe the differences between Western and non-Western values. Describe the similarities.
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64
Why do individuals from Western countries, as a group, tend to display a somewhat stronger internal locus of control?
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65
Describe the distinctions between conservative values and values of autonomy.
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66
Provide examples of instances in which conformity would be an effective behavioral response.
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67
Compare conformity in collectivist and individualist cultures.
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68
Are individuals from Western countries more or less likely to engage in social loafing than individuals from non-Western countries? Why?
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69
According to cross-cultural replications of Milgram's studies, how are measures of power distance and rates of obedience related and why?
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70
Describe similarities and differences in the rules of address.
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71
Explain groupthink. Which cultural factors should affect its manifestations?
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72
Explain social loafing. Which cultural factors should affect its manifestations?
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73
What do professionals call individual psychological tensions caused by the perceived mismatch between attitudes and behavior?

A) attribution
B) cognitive power
C) frustration
D) stereotype
E) cognitive dissonance
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74
In the debate about Western and non-Western values, it is argued that, in general, Western values are based on the fundamental beliefs that the nature of human beings is selfish, scarcity is a primary condition of nature and ____________.

A) progress means gradual conquest of weaker groups and territories
B) happiness is impossible to achieve without knowledge
C) happiness is understood as a movement toward a goal
D) progress means growth, complexity, competition, and freedom
E) suffering is unnecessary and people have to learn how to live without fear
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75
If a researcher observed that most of the individuals from a given sample displayed an unassuming bias, what would this mean?

A) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of their own effort, talents, and skills.
B) The people in this group believe their behavior is the result of external factors, such as luck and help from other people.
C) The people in this group refused to talk about their own success but insisted on talking about their own mistakes.
D) The people in this group said that they had no idea about why they were successful.
E) The people in this group did not believe that they were successful at all.
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76
What is the psychological term for the tendency of group members to shift, as a result of group discussion, toward more extreme positions than those they initially held?

A) Social loafing
B) disobedience
C) Conformity shift
D) Group polarization
E) Group sanctions
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77
Replications of the Milgram experiment in different countries ________.

A) yielded results substantially different from those obtained by Milgram himself
B) failed due to financial problems
C) were not completed due to the subjects' complaints
D) yielded similar results, but only in non-democratic countries
E) yielded, in general, similar results
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78
According to the deprivation theories of prejudice, people develop a prejudice against other groups when those groups are believed to be frightening or possess something they are not entitled to possess.
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79
Across cultures, people with scars on their faces are evaluated as being more attractive, sociable, and honest than people with no scars on their faces.
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80
It is a universal tendency for men to underestimate their own IQ's when asked to make a guess about their own intelligence.
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