1 / 26

Individual Interaction

Individual Interaction. Chapter 18. Interpersonal Attraction (Friends). On a sheet of paper write the name of one of your good friends (can be someone from when you were younger). On the back, write the name of another friend.

siusan
Télécharger la présentation

Individual Interaction

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Individual Interaction Chapter 18

  2. Interpersonal Attraction (Friends) • On a sheet of paper write the name of one of your good friends (can be someone from when you were younger). • On the back, write the name of another friend. • Under each friend write down some of their characteristics as a friend, how you became friends, what you have in common, etc. • Hang on to the list, we’ll come back to it.

  3. Interpersonal Attraction (Friends) • Social psychology – the study of how our thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and behaviors are influenced by our interactions with others. • Questions social psychologists might ask: • Why did we choose the friends we have? • What attracted us them in the first place? • Are these friendships helpful or harmful?

  4. Anxiety and Companionship • When we are afraid/nervous, we seems to want someone there to relate to • Examples: • “Misery loves company” experiment- Higher anxiety = more companionship 2. 2nd grade – 1st day of Student Council

  5. Comparing Experiences • Test Days – how many of you ask someone who has the class earlier in the day about the test? Why? • 1st Day of School – how many of you ask your friends what they are going to wear? Ask about certain teachers? • We compare experiences to know that we aren’t alone in what we are going through. • What if the women in the previous experiment had talked to a friend before going in?

  6. Interpersonal Attraction (Friends) • How You Choose Friends • Proximity • Reward Values • Physical Appearance • Approval • Similarity • Complementarity

  7. Proximity • Physical proximity – the distance of one person to another person • We choose friends based on location. • Probably most of your friends go to this high school (or went). You all (for the most part) live relatively close to each other. • Example – my neighborhood friends.

  8. Reward Values • We make friends based on what they can do for us (is this bad?). • Stimulation value – ability of a person to introduce new things • Utility value – ability of a person to help you accomplish something • Ego-support value – ability of a person to provide support and encouragement

  9. Physical Appearance • Varying degrees of physical attractiveness (Dane Cook) • Style of clothes/hair • Self-Assured/Poised vs. Insecure

  10. Approval • Sometimes we just need friends, and we’ll be friends with whoever will accept us. • How can this be a good/bad thing?

  11. Similarity • Common interests – sports, religion, educational values • Agreement on major issues – makes for easier conversation

  12. Complementarity • You complete me. • Opposites attract? • Sometimes you have friends that on paper don’t look like you would match up, but you work. • One friend provides what the other lacks.

  13. Assessment • Look back at your two friends that you chose that the beginning of class. • See what your reasons are for being friends with that person. • Is it based on proximity? Similarity? Both? None?

  14. Personal Relationships • Parent – Child Relationships • Love Relationships

  15. PARENT – CHILD RELATIONSHIPS • Erik Erikson – psychologist - believed that the relationship of parent and child at an early age influences people’s expectations about relationships with others later on in life. • How have your relationships with your parents influenced your relationships with other people?

  16. PARENT – CHILD RELATIONSHIPS • Adolescence is usually a time when children and parents have a hard time getting along • Generational identity – theory that people of different ages tend to think differently about certain issues • What is considered rebellion in one generation is usually trendy in the next.

  17. Love Relationships • Two types of love. • Passionate – intense, sensual; great excitement, but yet there is the fear that it may go away at any moment (adding to the intensity) • Companionate – friendship, trust; more stable love because it includes commitment

  18. Greek Words For Love • Eros – passionate, physical love • Ludus – love played as a game and not taken seriously • Storge – slow-growing love based on affection and friendship • Pragma – practical love • Mania – highly emotional love (similar to a roller coaster ride) • Agape – selfless, giving love

  19. Marriage • The chances of being happily married are greater when you marry someone from similar background, education, religion. • They are also better if your parents had a good marriage, if you had a good childhood, and you have a good view on marriage as a whole.

  20. STERNBERG’S TRIANGULAR LOVE

  21. Social Perception • First Impressions • Attribution Theory • Non-verbal Communication

  22. First Impressions • We tend to make initial judgments on people based on physical appearance. • Primacy effect – the tendency to form opinions on others based on first impressions • Examples-1. “Guest speaker.”2. Student from my first year.

  23. First Impressions • What was your first impression of me? • Impressions I gave off in high school • Schema – knowledge or set of assumptions that we develop about any person or event • Stereotype – a set of assumptions about people in a given category based on half-truths or nontruths

  24. Attribution Theory • A collection of principles based on our explanations of the causes of events, other people’s behaviors, and our behaviors • Internal/dispositional attributions- based on personal characteristics • External/situational – characteristics based on a given situation • Example at Woody’s.

  25. Attribution Theory • Fundamental attribution error – tendency to attribute others’ behavior to dispositional causes (internal) and discount situational factors contributing to their behavior • Actor-observer bias – tendency to attribute one’s own behavior to outside causes but attribute the behavior of others to internal causes • Self-serving bias – a tendency to claim success is due to our efforts, while failure is due to circumstances beyond our control (good or bad)

  26. Non-verbal Communication • Non-verbal communication – the process through which messages are conveyed using space, body language, and facial expression • Body language – the way you carry your body that communicates a certain message

More Related