Help seeking Flashcards
1
Q
questions about help seeking
A
- do people always want help
- will people who need it ask for it
- do some people constantly seek help
- are some people better able to elicit help
2
Q
threats to self esteem model of help seeking
A
- reaction to recieving help depends on effect on self esteem
- threats: e.g. lack of autonomy, unable to reciprocate (tyranny of the gift), negative impact on self-worth
- supports: good
3
Q
demographic of help seeking
A
- women seek more help: look to male alliances under stress (oxytoxin mediated) tend and befriend
- men tend to fight or flight (testosterone mediated)
- white people less likely to seek help
- younger and older people less likely to seek help
- relationship: family, self-help groups, communal (quality of relationship and care) vs exchange relationships (cost/benefits of an exchange)
- paradox of help seeking: threatened by a problem yet choose someone of high status or power to help you (impact on self-esteem)
- loss of control: need to re-establish control, you may give up help-seeking if the problem is uncontrollable
- if the problem relates to self worth: end of relationship: less likely to seek help. death of spouse: seek help
4
Q
help seeking and extraversion
A
- Ferguson et al 2001
- instrumental support: help solve problems
- emotional support: help dealing with emotions associated with the problem
- extraversion is correlated with help seeeking
- seeking support is associated with venting emotions
5
Q
are some people more likely to be helped?
A
- Zaki 2008
- phase 1: discussed emotional evets on video and rated their own emotions and emotional expressivity
- phase 2: second group rated index of empathy and rated emotion expressed in phase 1 vids
- correlation between emotions rated in phase 1 and empathy and emotonal expression in phase 2
- when the perciever is high in trait empathy and the expresser is high in the ability to express emotion the perciever is accurate in judging them
6
Q
empathy is important for….
A
low cost helping only
7
Q
bystander effect
A
- explained in terms of ocial roles and stereotypes
- but a more parsimonious explanation is an evolutionary one
- help in prescence of friend
- dont help in prescence of strangers
8
Q
cost-benefit analysis
A
- costs and benefits to both self and recipient
- how does helpig someone change your relationship or relationship to others
- e.g. if you help a friends enemy youll be hurting the friend
9
Q
SAVE model of pro-sociality
A
- sociocultural appraisals, values and emotions
- Keltner 2014
- ## 4 levels: intrapsychic, (bias, individual differences, guilt) dyadic (reciprocity, self-other similarity) , group (reputation, prosocial contagion, altruistic punishment), cultural (norms, values, religion)
10
Q
behaviour vs interaction
A
- behaviour: action selected by an individual in social isolation adn selected for
interaction: action influenced by previous experiences
11
Q
lifetime vs immediate consequeces
A
- lifetme: action that influeces direct life-time fitness consequences
- immediate: actions in the consequence of a social exchange