My EPPP Practice Questions: Social
This flashcard set covers Social Psychology concepts for the EPPP, focusing on the fundamental attribution bias. It explains the common tendency to overemphasize personality traits and underestimate situational factors when interpreting others’ behavior.
A salesperson at a department store treats you in a rude, unfriendly manner. If you, like many other people, are susceptible to the “fundamental attribution bias,” you will probably conclude that:
a. the salesperson is having a bad day.
b. you remind the salesperson of his mother.
c. the salesperson is essentially a rude person.
d. you acted in some way that elicited rudeness.
c. the salesperson is essentially a rude person
The fundamental attribution bias refers to the tendency to overestimate the effects of dispositional factors when making attributions about the actions of other people. Of the responses given, only this one reflects a dispositional attribution for the behavior of the salesperson.
Key Terms
A salesperson at a department store treats you in a rude, unfriendly manner. If you, like many other people, are susceptible to the “fundamental attribution bias,” you will probably conclude that:
a. the salesperson is having a bad day.
b. you remind the salesperson of his mother.
c. the salesperson is essentially a rude person.
d. you acted in some way that elicited rudeness.
c. the salesperson is essentially a rude person
The fundamental attribution bias refers to the tendency to overestimate the effects of dispositi...
When asked to answer a probabilistic question (e.g., “what is the probability that object X belongs to category Y?), people often rely on the __________ heuristic, which involves considering the similarity of X and Y.
a. framing
b. anchoring and adjustment
c. availability
d. representativeness
d. representativeness
The representativeness heuristic is the tendency to categorize a person or event based on the similarity of the person or ...
Social exchange theory predicts that:
a. when we do not have objective standards for evaluating our opinions and behaviors, we tend to do so by comparing our opinions and behaviors to those of others.
b. we are more likely to continue a relationship when the rewards of the relationship exceed its costs.
c. our liking for another person is maximized when that person’s initial evaluation of us is negative but subsequently becomes positive.
d. we prefer to interact with others who provide us with feedback that is consistent with our self-views.
b. we are more likely to continue a relationship when the rewards of the relationship exceed its costs.
Social exchange theory is one of several...
According to Bem’s self-perception theory, our:
a. attitudes and behaviors are unrelated.
b. attitudes shape our behaviors.
c. attitudes are inferred from our behaviors.
d. attitudes and behaviors are both shaped by our beliefs.
c. attitudes are inferred from our behaviors
According to Bem, people infer their own a...
R. Martin (1978) proposed that which of the following bases of social power are most important for the success of mental health consultation?
a. referent and informational
b. legitimate and expert
c. legitimate and informational
d. expert and referent
d. expert and referent
R. Martin proposes that expert and referent power are most important for consultation success ...
In a group decision-making situation, one of the seven group members holds a different opinion than the other six members. If that member continues to “stick to” his initial position in a consistent manner:
a. he will be ostracized or eventually expelled from the group.
b. members will attempt to “pacify” him by appearing to agree with his position.
c. the pressure for him to change his opinion will gradually increase.
d. he may eventually change the opinions of other group members.
d. he may eventually change the opinions of other group members
Work on minority influence has demonstrated that, if ...
Related Flashcard Decks
Study Tips
- Press F to enter focus mode for distraction-free studying
- Review cards regularly to improve retention
- Try to recall the answer before flipping the card
- Share this deck with friends to study together
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
A salesperson at a department store treats you in a rude, unfriendly manner. If you, like many other people, are susceptible to the “fundamental attribution bias,” you will probably conclude that: | c. the salesperson is essentially a rude person |
When asked to answer a probabilistic question (e.g., “what is the probability that object X belongs to category Y?), people often rely on the __________ heuristic, which involves considering the similarity of X and Y. | d. representativeness |
Social exchange theory predicts that: | b. we are more likely to continue a relationship when the rewards of the relationship exceed its costs. |
According to Bem’s self-perception theory, our: a. attitudes and behaviors are unrelated. | c. attitudes are inferred from our behaviors According to Bem, people infer their own attitudes and emotions from their behaviors. |
R. Martin (1978) proposed that which of the following bases of social power are most important for the success of mental health consultation? | d. expert and referent |
In a group decision-making situation, one of the seven group members holds a different opinion than the other six members. If that member continues to “stick to” his initial position in a consistent manner: | d. he may eventually change the opinions of other group members |
A message is likely to be most persuasive when: | c. the listener is in a good mood and the message is in the listener’s latitude of acceptance People are more likely to be persuaded when they are in a good mood and when the message targets an opinion that they find tolerable and are willing to consider (i.e., is in their latitude of acceptance). |
In the context of attitude change, “inoculation” is a method for: a. reducing the likelihood that a listener will be persuaded by a message. | a. reducing the likelihood that a listener will be persuaded by a message The purpose of inoculation is to reduce a listener’s susceptibility to a persuasive message. It involves three steps: warning the listener of the impending persuasive message; making a |
Festinger concluded that research participants paid $1 subsequently described a dull experiment as interesting because: | d. they made a dispositional attribution because the context did not provide them with an explanation for their behavior |
When making attributions about our own actions we ordinarily attribute actions that have positive outcomes to dispositional factors but those that have negative outcomes to situational factors. This tendency is referred to as the: | b. self-serving bias. |
Research on gender and crowding has found that, in laboratory (experimental) settings: | a. males are more stressed than females by crowded conditions |
The approach-avoidance conflict model predicts that as you get closer to a goal: | c. the positive and negative aspects of the goal both increase, but the negative aspects increase more. |