Title: Chapter 1 The Mission and the Method
1Chapter 1 - The Mission and the Method
- A Brief History of Social Psychology
- What Do Social Psychologists Do?
- Social Psychologys Place in the World
- Why People Study Social Psychology
- How Do Social Psychologists Answer Their Own
Questions? - How Much of Social Psychology is True?
2The Mission and the Method
- Is it possible for human beings to live in peace?
- How does the situation influence our behavior?
- Can social psychology help us to understand the
complexity of human behavior?
3A Brief History of Social Psychology
- Earliest Social Psychology Experiments
- Norman Triplett, 1897-1898
- Max Ringelmann, 1880s
- Introduction of Textbooks -1908
- Edward Ross (sociologist)
- William McDougall (psychologist)
4A Brief History of Social Psychology
- Influences in Early 20th Century
- Gordon Allport
- Kurt Lewin
- Influences in 1950s and 1960s
- Behaviorism
- Freudian psychoanalysis
- Social Psychology as a Science
5Social Psychology Its All Around You
PLAYVIDEO
6Contemporary Themes in Social Psychology
- Social Cognition
- Biology and the Brain
- Focus on Self
- Focus on Conflict
7What Do Social Psychologists Do?
- Broad understanding of how human beings think,
act, and feel - ABC Triad
- Personal and Situational Influences on ABC
- Use of the Scientific Method
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9Social Psychologys Place in the World
- Within the Social Sciences
- Anthropology
- Economics
- History
- Political Science
- Sociology
- Psychology
10Social Psychologys Place in the World
- Within Psychology
- Biological Psychology
- Clinical Psychology
- Cognitive Psychology
- Developmental Psychology
- Personality Psychology
- Social Psychology
11Why People Study Social Psychology
- Curiosity About People
- Experimental Philosophy
- Making the World Better
- Applied Research
- Fun and Fascinating
12How Do Social Psychologists Answer Their Own
Questions?
- Accumulated Common Wisdom
- Adages are often contradictory
- Poor method of discovering the truth
- May be a starting point for questions
13Scientific Method
- State problem
- Formulate testable hypothesis
- Design study and collect data
- Test the hypothesis with the data
- Communicate study results
14Food for Thought - Does Chicken Soup Reduce Cold
Symptoms?
- Hypothesis
- Chicken soup reduces upper respiratory
inflammation - Experiment
- Effect of chicken soup on white blood cells
(neutrophils) - Independent variable Chicken soup
- Dependent variable Neutrophil counts
15Food for Thought - Does Chicken Soup Reduce Cold
Symptoms?
- Result
- Chicken soup reduced neutrophil counts
- People were less congested after eating chicken
soup than before - Communicate results
- Manuscript was published in scientific journal
Chest
16Scientific Theories
- Constructs linked in some logical way
- Linked through observable variables
- Variables are operationally defined
- Scientific theory must be testable
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18Variables Independent and Dependent
- Independent variable
- Observable event that causes person to do
something - Manipulated versus individual difference
- Dependent variable (operational response)
- Observable behavior produced by the person
19Construct Validity
- Construct validity of the cause
- Independent variable - theoretical stimulus
- Construct validity of the effect
- Dependent variable theoretical response
20Research Design
- Experiment
- Researcher controls procedures
- Participants are randomly assigned
- Allows for statements of cause and effect
- Quasi-experiment
- No random assignment
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22Features of Experimental Studies
- Internal Validity
- Independent variable caused change in dependent
variable - Confederate
- Person pretending to be a participant
23Laboratory and Field Experiments
- Laboratory Experiments
- Experimental realism
- Mundane realism
- Field Experiments
- External validity
- Findings can be generalized
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25Nonexperimental Studies
- Correlational Approach
- No effect to control variables or random
assignment - Correlation
- Relationship between two variables
- Correlation coefficient
- Weakness does not prove causation
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27How Much of Social Psychology Is True?
- Self-Correcting Nature of Science
- Reliance on Student Samples
- Cultural Relativity
- Western cultures dominate social psychology
research - Cultural differences may be substantial and
important