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Summary Social Psychology Chapter 3

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Summary of Social Psychology Chapter 3 - IBP

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  • October 2, 2018
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Social Psychology – Chapter 3 – Perceiving and Understanding Others


Social perceptoo – the process through which we seek to know and understand other
people

Nooverbal commuoicatoo – communicaton between individuals that does not involve the
content of spoken language. It relies instead on an unspoken language of facial expressions,
eye contact, and body language

Atributoo – the process through which we seek to identfy the causes of otherss behavior
and so gain knowledge of their stable traits and dispositons

Impressioo formatoo – the process through which we form impressions of others

Impressioo maoagemeot (self-preseotatoon – eforts by individuals to produce favorable
frst impressions on others

Nonverbal Communicatonn The Unspoken Language of Expressions, Gazes, Gestures, and
Scents

Nonverbal cues  irrepressible (difficult to control)n informaton conveyed by such cues and
eforts to interpret this input  “nonverbal communicatonn

Nonverbal communicatonn The Basic Channels
1. Facial expressions as clues to otherss emotons
 Anger, fear, happiness, sadness, disgust  basic emotons, clearly
represented
 Emotons can occur in many combinatons and each reacton can vary in
strength
 Facial expressions are universal in many diferent cultures
 Cultural diferences also exist with respect to the precise meaning of facial
expressions
2. Eye Contact as a nonverbal cue
 High level of eye contact with others  interpreted as a sign of liking/positve
feelings
o exceptonn stariog – a form of eye contact in which one person
contnues to gaze steadily at another regardless of what the recipient
does
( people already in highly excitable state, interpret anything
approaching a stare from another driver as an aggressive act)
3. Body language as nonverbal cue
 Body laoguage – cues provided by the positon, posture, and movement of
otherss bodies or body parts
 Especially movements in which one body part does something to another part
(touching, rubbing, scratching) suggests emotonal arousal  the greater the
frequency of such behavior, the higher level of arousal or nervousness

,  Large-scale body movements or postures sometmes provide important
informaton about otherss emotons, and even about their apparent traits
 Gesturesn emblems – body movements carrying specifc meanings in a given
culture
4. Touching as nonverbal cue
 Interpretng Informaton about touching depends on the person, the nature of
physical contact, the context in which touching takes place
 When touching is appropriate  positve reactons in the person being touched

Scentn Another Source of Nonverbal Social Informaton
 Body scent as a subtle nonverbal cue

Paralinguistc cues – changes in the tone or infecton of otherss voices

Are Facial Expressions an Especially Important Source of Informaton About Others?

Facial expressions are especially important
 Almost impossible to ignore such informaton
o If facial expressions (esp. negatve ones) are seen once, they are stll easier
notced than other stmuli on later occasions
 We tend to perceive more in otherss faces than is really there, interpretng the basic
appearance of their faces as suggestve of specifc emotons, even if they arenst really
present
 Facial expression play a role in generatng emotons or feelings  they can
trigger/infuence internal emotonal experiences (facial feedback hypothesis)

The Facial Feedback Hypothesis
 suggests that there is a close link between the facial expressions we show and our
internal feelings, and that this relatonship works in both ways
 expressions we show refect our internal feelings or emotons and these expressions
feed back into our brains and infuence our subjectve experiences of emoton
 feedback forming our facial muscles do play a role in shaping our emotonal
experiences

Deceptonn Recognizing It Through Nonverbal Cues, and Its Efects on Social Relatons

Lying  all-too-common part of social life
1. How good are we at recognizing deceptons by others?
 We tend to assume that if people are truthful in one situaton or context, they
will be truthful in others
2. How can we do a beter job at this task?

Microexpressioos – feetng facial expressions lastng only a few tenths of a second (quick,
difficult to suppress)

Ioterchaooel discrepaocies – inconsistencies between nonverbal cues from diferent basic
channels (results from fact that people lying ofen fnd it difficult to control all channels at
once)

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