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PERSON, SITUATION, INTERACTION AN INTRODUCTION TO THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE Kuliah Psikologi Sosial I

Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

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Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective. Kuliah Psikologi Sosial I. Ross and McDougall: Two Early Versions of Social Psychology. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

PERSON, SITUATION, INTERACTION

AN INTRODUCTION TO THE SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGICAL PERSPECTIVE

Kuliah Psikologi Sosial I

Page 2: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Ross and McDougall: Two Early Versions of Social Psychology

The year was 1908, a sociologist, Edward Ross and the other a psychologist, William McDougall, published their separate introductory textbooks in social psychology.

Both were concerned with understanding the relationships between person and society and therefore their field was called social psychology; however, each offered a different analysis.

Page 3: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Ross and McDougall: Two Early Versions of Social Psychology

Ross emphasized the important role that social and situational factors played in shapping the person;

McDougall stressed the role that person factors played in shaping social interaction and society.

According Ross: Human Behavior = f (situational factors)

According Behavior: Human Behavior = f (person factors)

Page 4: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Social Psychology The scientific study of the ways in which

the thoughts, feelings, and behaviors of one individual are influenced by the real, imagined, or inferred behavior or characteristics of other people.

Social psychology –the scientific study of how people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviors are influenced by other people

Page 5: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Characteristics of social psychology1. The level of analysis is the individual

in the social context (i.e., how an individual influences and is influenced by other individuals)

2. Social psychology studies individuals’ overt behaviors as well as their internal psychological states such emotions, motivations, and beliefs

3. Social psychologists use the scientific method to answer questions

Page 6: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Scientific Description and Explanation

Social Psychology, like any science, involves: Description –

careful and reliable observation Explanation –

development of theories that connect and organize observations

Page 7: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Scientific Description and Explanation

Theories are scientific explanations that: Connect and organize existing observations Suggest fruitful paths for future research.

Page 8: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Major Theoretical Perspectives Sociocultural Evolutionary Social Learning Social Cognitive

Page 9: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Sociocultural Sociocultural perspective –

a theoretical viewpoint that searches for the causes of social behavior in influences from larger social groups E.g., norms within cultural groups, social

class differences, nationality/ethnicity, fads

Page 10: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Evolutionary Evolutionary perspective –

a theoretical viewpoint that searches for the causes of social behavior in the physical and psychological predispositions that helped our ancestors survive and reproduce

Page 11: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Evolutionary What drives social behavior?

Genetic predispositions inherited from our ancestors that promoted their survival and reproduction, such as: The tendency to automatically recognize an

angry face The tendency for mothers to feel protective of

their children

Page 12: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Social Learning Social learning perspective –

a theoretical viewpoint that focuses on past learning experiences as determinants of a person’s social behaviors

Page 13: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Social Learning What drives social behavior?

Classically conditioned preferences For example, the feeling of fear at sight of

person who hit you. Habits rewarded by other people

For example, a boy who fights frequently after his father praised him for winning fight with neighborhood bully.

Page 14: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Social Learning What drives social behavior?

Imitating the rewarded behavior of others For example, buying a gun after seeing a movie

in which the hero wins true love after shooting half the people in his girlfriend’s neighborhood.

Page 15: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Social Cognitive Social cognitive perspective –

a theoretical viewpoint that focuses on the mental processes involved in paying attention to, interpreting, and remembering social experiences E.g., self-enhancing biases

Page 16: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

The study of social behavior Descriptive methods involve attempts to

measure or record behaviors, thoughts or feelings in their natural state.

Experimental methods involve attempts to manipulate social processes by varying some aspect of the situation.

Page 17: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Descriptive MethodsSocial psychologists use five major types of

descriptive methods: Naturalistic Observation Case Studies Archives Surveys Psychological Tests

Page 18: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Experiments An experiment is a research method in

which the researcher sets out to systematically manipulate one source of influence while holding others constant.

Page 19: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Experiments Independent variable –

the variable manipulated by the experimenter

Dependent variable –the variable measured by the experimenter

Page 20: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Experiments Social psychologists use two major types

of experimental methods: Laboratory experiments Field experiments

Page 21: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Experiments Advantages:

Allows cause-effect conclusions Allows control of extraneous variables

Disadvantages: Artificial situations may not represent

relevant events as they naturally unfold (subjects’ responses may not be natural, since they know they are being observed).

Page 22: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective
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Page 24: Person, situation, interaction an introduction to the social psychological perspective

Orientation in Social Psychology The Reinforcement-Theory Orientation The Field-Theoritical Orientation The Cognitive Orientation The Psychoanalytic Orientation Role Theory