Sociology Test #1 Flashcards

1
Q

Charles Wright Mills

A

Mills helped popularize the study of sociology in the US. (Divorce Rates)

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2
Q

Emile Durkheim

A

Key founder of the field of sociology, which he defines as the systematic (scientific) study of social facts.

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3
Q

John Darley + Bibb Latane

A

Oversaw a series of experiments to demonstrate the Bystander Effect

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4
Q

Robert Cialdini

A

Developed the concept of social proof and oversaw experiments on its power.

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5
Q

Solomon Asch

A

Oversaw experiments to demonstrate conformity through situational forces.

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6
Q

Dan Ariely

A

Dan Ariely who contributed significantly to behavioral economics, and after getting a major burn, decided to explore why people behave unethically, even when they consider themselves to be moral individuals.

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7
Q

The Sociological Imagination

A

Mills’ term for the relationship between personal experiences and broader societal systems. Developed through the interplay of structural, agential, and situational forces. Explores the dialectical relationship between people and society.

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8
Q

Social Facts

A

Durkheim’s term of patterns of though/behavior/belief that characterize a society and (1) are objectively real, (2) coercively imposed on an individual by society, that make behavior predictable

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9
Q

Collective Effervescence

A

Durkheim’s term to describe that which gave rise to religious worship in the elementary forms of religious life (currently, has to do with football)

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10
Q

Anomie

A

Breakdown of the influence of social norms on individuals in a society

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11
Q

Social Proof

A

Cialdini’s term to describe the internalization of a belief shared by the situational group. Has more impact due to (1) larger numbers, (2) novelty, and (3) affinity

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12
Q

Pluralistic Ignorance

A

inhibiting influence: a majority mistakenly believe that their internal feelings differ from others, even when everyone may be feeling the same way.

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13
Q

Collective Delusion

A

Objectively false beliefs that spread through a population

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14
Q

Mass-Hysteria

A

People begin taking action on collective delusion.

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15
Q

Mass-Sociogenic Illnesses

A

Physical effects begin to have an effect on people as a result of mass-hysteria

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16
Q

Independent Variable:

A

the “manipulated” variable, changed by the experimenter to examine results on the dependent variable

17
Q

Dependent Variable

A

the “resulting” variable that is being measured in an experiment.

18
Q

Operationalizing a Dependent Variable

A

quantifying a “resulting” variable through a unit of measurment.

19
Q

Ceteris Paribus

A

Latin for “all things being equal.” In valid experiments, all conditions should be controlled except for those being measured.

20
Q

Extraneous Variables

A

not controlled; yet has no impact in the relationship between the IV and DV

21
Q

Confounding Variables

A

an uncontrolled factor that affects the relationship between the IV and DV

22
Q

Structural Forces

A

Stable arrangement of systems, which characterize and give shape to society

23
Q

Angential Forces

A

free-will and the personality of individuals

24
Q

Situational Forces

A

features of one’s immediate social environment and circumstances

25
Q

Divorce rate is an example of a social fact because

A

1) a societies is a straight line
2) different societies have different lines

26
Q

Darley + Latane
Diffusion of Responsibility Expierements

A

1) A group of NYU students were sitting in respective rooms aside from each other (to simulate an apartment building), connected by microphones and headsets. Although the students being tested believed they were talking to other students, they were really just talking to recordings—one of which begins to have a seizure.
Dependent: Time
Independent: Group Size

Results: When only one other person, everyone got up before the speech was over. When it was a group of 3, 80% of people responded. When it was a group of 6, 62% of people responded.

27
Q

Darley and Latane wondered if results would be different if people could talk to each other freely…

A

2) Group of Columbia students filled out forms in rooms that filled with smoke.
Dependent: Time
Independent: Group Size

Results: 75% of solo individuals reported the smoke. Yet only 1 of 8 individuals in groups of 3 reported the smoke.

28
Q

Darley and Latane… someone falling off ladder

A

70% of lone subjects, as well as those paired with a group acted when a guy fell off a ladder, while only 40% reacted as a stranger pair, and 7% of those with passive confederates acted.

29
Q

Cialdini Towel Usage

A

Cialdini and colleagues tested the impact of different messages on hotel guests’ towel reuse. Some signs asked guests to save the environment, while others informed them that the majority of guests reused their towels.

30
Q

Cialdini Rocks Expierment

A

In a U.S. national park, signs were posted to discourage visitors from stealing petrified wood. One sign warned against theft, stating that many people had been stealing wood (implying it was common), while another sign simply asked visitors not to steal.

31
Q

Dan Ariely Experiment

A

Control Group:

32
Q

Solomon Asch Line Conformity Expierment

A

Participants were shown two lines: one standard line and three comparison lines. They had to choose which comparison line matched the standard. When actors in the group (who were in on the experiment) deliberately chose the wrong line, many real participants also conformed, choosing the wrong line despite knowing the correct answer.
Demonstrates situational forces.

33
Q

Solomon Asch Diagnosis Bias

A

Half were told the lecturer was “warm,” and the other half were told he was “cold.” After the lecture, participants rated the lecturer. Those who were told he was “warm” gave more favorable ratings, describing him as friendly and approachable, while those told he was “cold” rated him less favorably.