Social Psychology by Smith, E, R (fourth edition) a summary
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Social psychology
Chapter 1
What is social psychology?
Social psychology: the scientific study of the effects of social and cognitive processes on the way individuals perceive, influence and relate to others.
The scientific study
Social psychologist gather knowledge systematically by means of scientific methods. These methods help to produce knowledge that is less subject to the biases and distortions that often characterize common-sense knowledge.
The effects of social and cognitive processes
The presence of other people, the knowledge and opinions they pass on to us, and our feelings about the groups to which we belong all deeply influence us through social processes, whether we are with other people or alone. Our perceptions, memories, emotions, and motives also exert a pervasive influence on us through cognitive processes. Effects of social and cognitive processes are not separate but inextricably intertwined.
Social processes: the ways in which input from the people and groups around us affect our thoughts, feelings and actions.
Affect us even when others are not physically present.
The processes that affect us when others are present depend on how we interpret those others and their actions.
Cognitive processes: the ways in which our memories, perceptions, thoughts, emotions, and motives influence our understanding of the world and guide our actions.
The way individuals perceive, influence and relate to others
Social psychology focuses on the effects of social and cognitive processes on the way individuals perceive, influence and relate to others. Understanding these processes can help us comprehend why people act the way they do and may also help solve important social problems.
Social psychology seeks and understanding of the reasons people act the way they do in social situations.
Social psychology is a product of its past.
Social psychology becomes an empirical science
Soon after the emergence of scientific psychology in the late 19th century, researchers began considering questions about social influences on human thought and action.
Social psychology splits from general psychology over what causes behavior
Throughout much of the 20th century, North American psychology was dominated by behaviorism, but social psychologists maintained an emphasis on the important effects of thoughts and feelings on behavior.
The rise of Nazism shapes the development of social psychology
In the 1930s and 1940s, many European social psychologists fled to North America, where they had a major influence on the field’s direction. Significant questions generated by the rise of Nazism and the second world war shaped research interests during this period.
Growth and integration
Since the 1950s and the 1960s, social psychology has grown and flourished, moving toward an integrated theoretical understanding of social and cognitive processes and toward further applications of social-psychological theory to important applied problems.
Integration of cognitive and social processes
The study of cognitive processes became a natural framework for integration both within and outside social psychology.
Integration with other research trends
As the world became more interconnected in the late 20th century and as social psychological research spread to many more regions of the globe, researchers were confronted with findings showing that even what had been regarded as ‘basic’ processes differed strikingly in different nations and cultures.
Other newer theoretical trends are also becoming incorporated into social psychology.
Integration of basic science and social problems
Social psychology regard issues that are important outside the laboratory as both source of theoretical ideas and a target for solutions.
Two fundamental axioms of social psychology
Two fundamental axioms of social psychology
Construction of reality
The axiom that each person’s view of reality is a construction, shaped both by cognitive process and by social processes.
Pervasiveness of social influence
The axiom that other people influence virtually all of our thoughts, feelings, and behavior, whether those others are physically present or not.
Three motivational principles
Three processing principles
Common processes, diverse behaviors
In combination, these eight principles account for all types of social behavior, including thoughts and actions that are useful and valuable as well as those that are misleading and destructive.
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This is a summary of the book Social Psychology by Smith. It is an introduction to social psychology and is about human behaviour in relation to groups and other humans. This book is used in the course 'Social psychology' in the first year of the study Psychology at the
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