ITSP Topic 1
ITSP Topic 1
ITSP Topic 1
Social Psychology
Definition: The scientific study of the way in which people’s thoughts, feelings, and behaviours are
influenced by the real or imagined presence of other people. (Allport, 1985)
Meaning: Influenced by friends, family (people around us) to our thoughts, feelings and behaviours
Social influence
Definition: The effect that the words, actions, or mere presence (right in front of you; physically or in
mind) of other people have on our thoughts, feelings, attitudes, or behaviour.
- To understand social influence, we need to understand how people perceive and interpret
the social world than understand the world objectively.
Construal
Definition: The way in which people perceive, comprehend, and interpret the social world.
Meaning: How you analyze, processing your social world (everything around us)
These motives pull us in opposite directions - where to perceive the world accurately requires us to
face up to the fact that we have behaved foolishly or immorally.
Example: As society undergoing pandemic, people are compulsory to wear face mask in public
(construal)
Individual will tend to wear face mask to protect ourselves and others, to boost self-esteem by
protecting others so I wear face mask. (feel good)
Individual will wear face mask because other people are wearing it as well (accurate)
Individual sometimes will forget to wear face mask and realised everyone is wearing face mask so
individual have to pull up their shirt to cover their face. (foolishly and immorally)
The need to feel good about ourselves: The self-esteem approach. (it’s more to protecting our own
feeling; blame others instead of ownself because if it’s wrong, own self will feel bad)
Meaning: Even though you try to control the situation as good as you want, but sometimes it can
backfire you and make you behave immorally, where you distort the reality.
People have strong need to maintain high self-esteem – that is the extent to which they view
themselves as good, competent and decent (people’s evaluation of their own self-worth)
The fact that people distort their interpretation of reality so that they feel better about themselves is
not surprising.
The need to be accurate: The social cognition approach. (relate to our brain function that going to
process things to be accurate), how they think about themselves and social world.
All people try to view the world as accurately as possible – social cognition (how people think about
themselves and the social world)
Our expectations can even change the nature of the social world.
- Fear
- Desire for rewards
Example: scold person who never wear mask (trying to control their behavior) – construing situation
- Observe human nature like human behavior and start to ask question
The creativity and analytical thinking of philosophers are a major part of the foundation of present-
day psychology.
Social psychologists address many of the same questions that philosophers address, but we attempt
to answer them scientifically.
Sociologists are more concerned with why a particular society or group within a society produces
behavior in its members.
Example: aggression
Sociology is concerned with topics such as social class, social structure, and social institutions.
- To make sense of vast amounts of data and communicate their conclusions to other
investigators
Observational method
- Focus on description
- Describe phenomenon by asking why is this happening
- What is the nature of the phenomenon? (question answered)
Naturalistic observations
- Observer objectively records the behavior of a participants in their natural environment
- It can be humans and also animals
- People not expecting to behave in certain ways and they behave naturally
Participant: The observer has direct contact with the group of people they are observing
Non- participant: The researcher does not have direct contact with the people being observed.
Correlational method
- Relationship
- Predict whether there is a relationship or not
- From knowing X, can we predict Y?
Experimental method
- Causation
- Try to find the cause
- Is variable X a cause of variable Y
Correlation – relationship
Observational – describing
Problems – question
Hypothesis
Method – observe
Outcome
Theory
Don’t want their researchers going haywire, going chaotic. Hence, they want to be in control but not
control the result and participants, but more likely to let research going smoothly and not going
offtopic.
Informed consent
Deception
Misleading participants about the true purpose of a study or the events that will actually transpire.
- Having an Institutional Review Board approve their studies in advance. The American Psychological
Association has published a list of ethical principles that govern all research in psychology.
- Treat information about the individual participants confidentially (e.g. personal questions)
- Debriefing participants afterwards about the purpose of study and what transpired, especially if
there was any deception involved.
- Be truthful. Use deception only if essential and justified by a significant purpose and not “about
aspects that would affect their willingness to participate".
- People do not object to the kinds of mild discomfort and deceptions typically used in social
psychological research.
- Most who participated in deception experiments said they had learned more and enjoyed
the experiments more than those who participated in no deception experiments did.