PSYC3122 Revision Week 1- 4
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PSYC3122 Revision Week 1- 4 - Leaderboard
PSYC3122 Revision Week 1- 4 - Details
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35 questions
🇬🇧 | 🇬🇧 |
The descriptive norm | What other people do |
The descriptive norm | What other people do |
The descriptive norm | What other people do |
The descriptive norm | What other people do |
Intracomponent | Both positive and negative emotions |
Intercomponent | Positive emotions, negative beliefs |
Ambivalent attitudes do not predict... | Ambivalent attitudes do not predict behaviours as well as non-ambivalent attitudes |
Response polarisation | Makes people more influenced by environmental cues that make +/- reminders salient |
Indicators of attitude strength | Certainty, importance, and accessibility |
Explicit attitudes | Attitudes we're consciously aware of and can therefore control |
Implicit attitudes | Attitudes we're NOT consciously aware of |
Knowledge function | Implies thinking and cognitions |
Symbolic function | Requires expression and behaviour |
Social identity function | Behaviour according to your attitude makes you feel good and makes others like you |
Theory of reasoned action | Attitude +subjective norm > intention > behaviour |
Subjective norm | Perceived social pressure to perform or not perform a behaviour |
Normative beliefs x motivation to comply leads to ________ | Subjective norms |
Theory of planned behaviour | What people think about the decisions they make |
Control beliefs x perceived power leads to ________ | Perceived behavioural control |
Two important considerations in attitude measurement | Reliability and validity |
Osgood's semantic differential | A binary attitude scale which includes various subscales that measure the connotative meaning of an attitude object (good_______________bad) |
Cognition | Beliefs, thoughts, knowledge |
Affect | Feelings, emotions |
Behaviour | Behavioural disposition, action |
What is this model called ? | Tripartite model |
Principle of compatibility | When we measure attitudes, we need to be compatible in terms of action, target, context, and time |
Low correspondence | Different attitude than behaviour |
Partial correspondence | Completing a behaviour within the realm of your attitude (e.g. bringing flowers to someone you like) |
High correspondence | The same attitude as behaviour |
TACT model | The TACT model says that we can define an attitude in terms of the target (T), action (A), context (C), and time (T). |
Prototype | A mental representation of an attitude object |
Prototypicality | Compatibility between the mental representation of the target when the attitude is assessed and again at the time of behaviour. This increases attitude-behaviour correspondence |
The descriptive norm | What other people do |