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Topic 2.3Psychology SL100 flashcards

Sociocultural approach

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Card 1 of 1002.3.1
2.3.1
Question

What is social identity theory?

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2.3.110 cards

Card 1definition
Question

What is social identity theory?

Answer

Part of our self-concept comes from group membership, which shapes how we see and treat others.

Card 2concept
Question

What are the three steps?

Answer

Social categorisation, social identification, and social comparison.

Card 3definition
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What is social categorisation?

Answer

Sorting people into in-groups ('us') and out-groups ('them').

Card 4definition
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What is social identification?

Answer

Adopting the identity, norms and values of a group we belong to.

Card 5definition
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What is social comparison?

Answer

Comparing our group favourably with others to boost self-esteem.

Card 6concept
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What is in-group favouritism?

Answer

Favouring our own group over others — a form of bias.

Card 7example
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What do minimal-group studies show?

Answer

Even trivial group divisions trigger in-group favouritism.

Card 8concept
Question

One strength of the theory?

Answer

Supported by minimal-group and real-world studies; explains prejudice and teamwork.

Card 9concept
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One limitation of the theory?

Answer

Lab studies can be artificial, and it underplays individual differences.

Card 10concept
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Which concept is this?

Answer

Bias — group membership tilts judgements towards 'us'.

2.3.1010 cards

Card 11definition
Question

What is the etic approach?

Answer

Studying behaviour from outside a culture, using general categories to compare across cultures.

Card 12comparison
Question

Etic vs emic?

Answer

Etic = outside, to compare cultures; emic = inside, on the culture's terms.

Card 13concept
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What does etic research use?

Answer

Standardised measures applied the same way across cultures.

Card 14definition
Question

What is the 'imposed etic'?

Answer

Applying one culture's measure everywhere as if it were neutral — a route to ethnocentrism.

Card 15concept
Question

One strength of the etic approach?

Answer

It allows direct comparison across cultures and can reveal possible universals.

Card 16concept
Question

One limitation of the etic approach?

Answer

It can impose one culture's categories and miss local meaning.

Card 17concept
Question

How is the imposed etic reduced?

Answer

By checking that measures mean the same thing in each culture (and adding emic depth).

Card 18example
Question

Give an example of an etic study.

Answer

Giving the same memory test in ten countries and comparing the scores.

Card 19concept
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Why combine etic with emic?

Answer

Etic gives comparison; emic gives meaning — together they balance out.

Card 20concept
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Which concept does etic link to?

Answer

Perspective — it takes the outsider's viewpoint.

2.3.210 cards

Card 21definition
Question

What is social learning theory?

Answer

We learn behaviour by observing and imitating others, especially role models.

Card 22concept
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What are the four steps of modelling?

Answer

Attention, Retention, Reproduction, Motivation (ARRM).

Card 23definition
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What is vicarious reinforcement?

Answer

Learning to expect a reward by seeing someone else rewarded for a behaviour.

Card 24definition
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What is a role model?

Answer

A person whose behaviour we observe and are likely to imitate, often high-status or similar to us.

Card 25concept
Question

When do we imitate a model most?

Answer

When we identify with them — similar, admired or high-status people.

Card 26concept
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How does SLT improve on plain conditioning?

Answer

It adds mental steps (attention, memory, motivation) between stimulus and response.

Card 27example
Question

Give an example of social learning.

Answer

A child copying a parent's phrases, or a teen imitating an admired influencer.

Card 28concept
Question

One strength of social learning theory?

Answer

Explains language, aggression, gender roles and media effects, with observational evidence.

Card 29concept
Question

One limitation of social learning theory?

Answer

It can't fully predict who imitates and may underplay biology and choice.

Card 30concept
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Which concept does it link to?

Answer

Causality — observing a model can cause new behaviour.

2.3.310 cards

Card 31definition
Question

What is conformity?

Answer

Changing your behaviour or opinions to match those of a group.

Card 32definition
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What is normative influence?

Answer

Conforming to be accepted and avoid standing out, even when privately unsure.

Card 33definition
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What is informational influence?

Answer

Conforming because you think the group knows better, especially when unsure.

Card 34concept
Question

What factors strengthen conformity?

Answer

A larger group, a unanimous majority, and public responses.

Card 35concept
Question

What reduces conformity most?

Answer

Even one dissenting ally who breaks the unanimity.

Card 36example
Question

Give an example of conformity.

Answer

Picking the same answer as the group even when you think it's wrong.

Card 37concept
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Is conformity always negative?

Answer

No — following sensible norms (queueing, safety) is useful; the concern is overriding good judgement.

Card 38concept
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One limitation of conformity research?

Answer

Some classic tasks are artificial and conformity varies by culture and era.

Card 39concept
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How does culture affect conformity?

Answer

Some cultures value fitting in more, so conformity levels differ.

Card 40concept
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Which concept is this?

Answer

Bias — group pressure can bend judgement away from independent thought.

2.3.410 cards

Card 41definition
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What is compliance?

Answer

Changing your behaviour in response to a direct request from another person.

Card 42definition
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What is foot-in-the-door?

Answer

Starting with a small request so a later, bigger request is more likely to be accepted.

Card 43definition
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What is door-in-the-face?

Answer

Starting with a large request that's refused, so the smaller real request seems reasonable.

Card 44definition
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What is low-balling?

Answer

Getting agreement on a good deal, then revealing added costs; people often stick with it.

Card 45definition
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What is reciprocity (as a technique)?

Answer

Giving something first so the person feels obliged to give back.

Card 46concept
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Why does foot-in-the-door work?

Answer

People want to act consistently with a commitment they've already made.

Card 47comparison
Question

Compliance vs conformity vs obedience?

Answer

Compliance = a request; conformity = a group; obedience = an authority's order.

Card 48concept
Question

One strength of compliance techniques?

Answer

Demonstrated in many field and lab studies; explains sales, charity and marketing.

Card 49concept
Question

One limitation of compliance techniques?

Answer

Effects vary by person/culture, some raise ethical concerns, and they can backfire if obvious.

Card 50concept
Question

Which concept do they link to?

Answer

Causality — the way a request is framed causes agreement.

2.3.510 cards

Card 51definition
Question

What is cognitive dissonance?

Answer

The uncomfortable tension felt when beliefs and behaviour conflict, motivating us to reduce it.

Card 52concept
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How can dissonance be reduced?

Answer

Change the behaviour, change the belief, or add justifying thoughts.

Card 53concept
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Which route do people usually take?

Answer

Changing the belief to fit the action, because it's easier than undoing the action.

Card 54concept
Question

What is the small-reward finding?

Answer

A small reward for acting against a belief causes more attitude change than a big one.

Card 55concept
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Why does a big reward cause less attitude change?

Answer

It gives an external justification, so there's less dissonance to resolve.

Card 56example
Question

Give an example of dissonance reduction.

Answer

A smoker downplaying the risks instead of quitting.

Card 57concept
Question

Which concept does dissonance link to?

Answer

Change — it is a key engine of attitude change.

Card 58concept
Question

One strength of the theory?

Answer

Supported by many classic and modern experiments on attitude change.

Card 59concept
Question

One limitation of the theory?

Answer

Dissonance is an internal feeling that's hard to measure and varies by person and culture.

Card 60concept
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Does dissonance always improve behaviour?

Answer

No — people often rationalise (change the belief) rather than change the behaviour.

2.3.610 cards

Card 61definition
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What is a cultural dimension?

Answer

A broad value that varies between cultures and can be used to compare them.

Card 62concept
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What is the best-known cultural dimension?

Answer

Individualism vs collectivism.

Card 63definition
Question

What do individualist cultures prioritise?

Answer

Personal goals, independence and standing out.

Card 64definition
Question

What do collectivist cultures prioritise?

Answer

Group harmony, loyalty and duty.

Card 65concept
Question

Are cultural dimensions rules for every person?

Answer

No — they are averages; individuals within a culture vary widely.

Card 66concept
Question

How can dimensions be misused?

Answer

By treating an average as a fixed trait of every individual (stereotyping).

Card 67concept
Question

One strength of cultural dimensions?

Answer

They give a shared framework to compare cultures and predict differences.

Card 68concept
Question

One limitation of cultural dimensions?

Answer

They risk stereotyping, may use dated data, and ignore within-culture variation.

Card 69concept
Question

Is one dimension 'better' than another culture's?

Answer

No — dimensions describe differences in values, not which is superior.

Card 70concept
Question

Which concept do dimensions link to?

Answer

Perspective — culture is a lens that shapes what counts as normal.

2.3.710 cards

Card 71definition
Question

What is enculturation?

Answer

Learning and absorbing the norms, values and behaviours of your own culture as you grow up.

Card 72concept
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How does enculturation happen?

Answer

Through observation/imitation, direct teaching, and social norms.

Card 73comparison
Question

Enculturation vs acculturation?

Answer

Enculturation = your own culture growing up; acculturation = adjusting to a new culture.

Card 74example
Question

Give an example of enculturation.

Answer

A child learning their culture's table manners by watching, being taught, and being praised.

Card 75concept
Question

Why does our own culture feel 'natural'?

Answer

Because enculturation is absorbed early and rewarded consistently.

Card 76concept
Question

How does enculturation link to ethnocentrism?

Answer

Absorbed norms feel universal, so other cultures' ways can wrongly seem 'odd'.

Card 77concept
Question

One strength of the concept?

Answer

Explains cultural differences in behaviour, with developmental and cross-cultural support.

Card 78concept
Question

One limitation of the concept?

Answer

Hard to measure as one process and to separate from biology; people also resist norms.

Card 79concept
Question

Are people passive during enculturation?

Answer

No — they can question, resist and reshape their culture's norms.

Card 80concept
Question

Which concept does it link to?

Answer

Change — behaviour changes gradually as culture is absorbed.

2.3.810 cards

Card 81definition
Question

What is acculturation?

Answer

The psychological and cultural change that happens when people from one culture meet another.

Card 82comparison
Question

Acculturation vs enculturation?

Answer

Acculturation = adjusting to a new culture; enculturation = absorbing your own culture growing up.

Card 83definition
Question

What is integration?

Answer

Keeping your own culture and engaging with the new one — a balanced blend.

Card 84definition
Question

What is assimilation?

Answer

Giving up your own culture and fully adopting the new one.

Card 85definition
Question

What is separation?

Answer

Keeping your own culture and avoiding the new one.

Card 86definition
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What is marginalisation?

Answer

Rejecting or being excluded from both cultures — belonging to neither.

Card 87concept
Question

Which strategies link to best and worst wellbeing?

Answer

Integration = best; marginalisation = worst.

Card 88definition
Question

What is acculturative stress?

Answer

The stress of adapting to a new culture — language barriers, discrimination, lost support.

Card 89concept
Question

Is the acculturation strategy a free choice?

Answer

No — a hostile host society can push people towards separation or marginalisation.

Card 90concept
Question

Which concept does acculturation link to?

Answer

Change — contact with a new culture reshapes identity and behaviour over time.

2.3.910 cards

Card 91definition
Question

What is the emic approach?

Answer

Studying behaviour from within a culture, on its own terms and meanings.

Card 92comparison
Question

Emic vs etic?

Answer

Emic = inside, on the culture's terms; etic = outside, to compare cultures.

Card 93concept
Question

What methods does emic research use?

Answer

In-depth methods — interviews, case studies, immersion.

Card 94concept
Question

How does emic reduce ethnocentrism?

Answer

It uses the culture's own concepts rather than imposing outside standards.

Card 95concept
Question

One strength of the emic approach?

Answer

Rich, context-sensitive understanding of what a behaviour means to people.

Card 96concept
Question

One limitation of the emic approach?

Answer

Findings are hard to generalise or compare across cultures.

Card 97concept
Question

Why combine emic with etic?

Answer

Emic gives depth/meaning; etic allows comparison — together they balance out.

Card 98example
Question

Give an example of an emic study.

Answer

Living alongside a community to understand what their mourning rituals mean to them.

Card 99concept
Question

Which concept does emic link to?

Answer

Perspective — it takes the insider's viewpoint.

Card 100concept
Question

Is emic research quick to do?

Answer

No — it is often time-consuming and immersive.

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