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Test sobre Social Psych, creado por paulinomial el 29/09/2014.

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Social Psych

Pregunta 1 de 62

1

In order to test a hypothesis that the presence of others inhibits a person from intervening in an emergency situation, a fake smoke was introduced in a room where one or more unsuspecting experimental participants thought they were involved in a different experiment. The results showed that people were less likely to report the smoke when they were with others than when they were alone.

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • a) The results were consistent with the hypothesis, but the hypothesis needs to be tested in other emergency situations as well.

  • b) The results were consistent with the hypothesis, but there is an alternative explanation of the results

  • Both a and b.

  • Neither a nor b.

Explicación

Pregunta 2 de 62

1

According to the lecture, social factors are important for psychological processes because experiments have demonstrated that:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • a. People behave differently when even a minimal social relationship is present.

  • b. People feel and behave differently when their social relationship is removed from them.

  • Both a and b.

  • Neither a nor b.

Explicación

Pregunta 3 de 62

1

In a cyberball experiment, a participant is induced to feel he or she belongs in a group by being initially included in a cyber-version of a ball tossing game. When the participant is excluded from the group, he or she reports lower levels of ______ than when not excluded from the group.

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • a. Belonging

  • b. Control

  • c. Self-esteem

  • d. All of the above

Explicación

Pregunta 4 de 62

1

Social exclusion and rejection are said to “hurt.” Which of the following is TRUE about this statement?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Only the anterior cingulate area was shown to be activated.

  • People cannot regulate the pain of ostracism.

  • This is a figure of speech, and there is no reason to believe it actually hurts.

  • None of the above is true.

Explicación

Pregunta 5 de 62

1

According to the textbook, bystander intervention is a result of a decision making process involving five steps. Which of the following is FALSE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Becoming aware of someone’s need for help is an important step in this decision making process.

  • If a bystander does not experience arousal, he/she will not help.

  • Working out the rewards is an important factor, but working out the cost is not.

  • This model can explain why bystanders often fail to provide help.

Explicación

Pregunta 6 de 62

1

When people are involved in a systematic processing of information, they need:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • a. Enough cognitive resources to process the information systematically

  • b. Enough motivation to process the information systematically

  • c. Only a or b

  • d. Both a and b

Explicación

Pregunta 7 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about people’s judgments about personalities and abilities based on photos of others’ faces.

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Their judgments after 100 ms are often as accurate as their considered judgments.

  • Judgments about the personality of people after viewing their pictures for one second were very different from snap judgments after viewing the same pictures for 100 ms.

  • A political candidate who is evaluated to be more competent is more likely to win in a US election.

  • All of the other answers are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 8 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about people’s impressions about a target person?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Impressions are formed on the basis of the cues associated with the target person.

  • People rarely use the person’s group membership in forming impressions.

  • People often try not to form impressions about other people.

  • All of the other answers are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 9 de 62

1

After reading about an attorney who left an injured person in the hospital and went to the court, a participant in Miller’s study in the USA and India said, “It was his duty to be in court for the client he was representing.” Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • It is one of the typical US responses.

  • It is one of the typical Indian responses.

  • It tends to focus on the actor without considering the context of his action.

  • None of the above is TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 10 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about a correspondence bias (or fundamental attribution error)?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • It is a bias in people’s judgments about other’s intelligence.

  • It is a universal human bias based on the limitation of human rationality.

  • People from some cultural backgrounds show a greater extent of this bias than others.

  • It is unaffected by people’s stereotypes.

Explicación

Pregunta 11 de 62

1

Heider (1958) argued that people are like naïve scientists who try to make sense of an observable behaviour by inferring its cause. Beliefs about what caused a behaviour are called attributions. Internal attributions are:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Discretional attributions

  • Situational attributions

  • Beliefs that something inside the person who performed the behaviour has caused the behaviour.

  • Beliefs that something inherent in the situation where the behaviour was performed has caused the behaviour.

Explicación

Pregunta 12 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about Kelley’s co-variation theory of attribution?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The co-variation principle states that, “an effect is attributed to a condition that is present when the effect is present, and absent when the effect is absent.”

  • Distinctiveness indicates the extent to which others in the same situation behave in the same way.

  • Consistency indicates the extent to which the person usually behaves in the way he/she is currently behaving.

  • Low consensus, high consistency, and low distinctiveness results in dispositional attribution.

Explicación

Pregunta 13 de 62

1

Gilbert, Pelham, and Krull (1988) asked people to watch a videotape of a woman speaking about something anxiously. Although they could not hear what the woman was talking about, they were told that the topic of her speech was either anxiety provoking or fairly neutral. Half of the participants just watched the video, but the other half did so while remembering a list of topics (high cognitive load). Which of the following is FALSE about this study?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • People under high cognitive load rated the woman as anxious (i.e., dispositional attribution) regardless of the purported topic of her speech.

  • People without cognitive load rated the woman as anxious only when she was said to be talking about a neutral topic.

  • Their finding supported the idea that a dispositional attribution is automatic.

  • Their finding supported the idea that a correction process is automatic.

Explicación

Pregunta 14 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about impression formation?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • According to Solomon Asch, people’s impressions about a person are structured and integrated, and not a simple list of attributes.

  • Information encountered earlier tends to have stronger effects on person impressions than information encountered later.

  • When students were given false information about a lecturer’s warmth and coldness before the lecture, their impressions were rather different even if they sat through the same lecture.

  • All of the other answers are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 15 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • People’s impressions about a target person can generate the target person’s behaviour that is consistent with those impressions.

  • Teachers’ expectations about their students cannot influence the students’ performance and achievement.

  • People’s impressions about a target person rarely correspond with the target person’s personality.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 16 de 62

1

Impression cycles refer to:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • People’s tendency to make circular arguments about their impressions about others.

  • People’s circle of friends within which they share impressions about other people.

  • The cycles in which people’s impressions change over time.

  • The process by which a target person’s behaviour can give rise to an observer’s impression about the target person, which can then influence the target person’s behaviour, and so on, so that it can form a self-perpetuating loop.

Explicación

Pregunta 17 de 62

1

According to William James:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Me and I are physically different aspects of oneself.

  • Physical self is part of Me.

  • Me is a purely physical entity and does not have any social origin.

  • All of the other answers are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 18 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about the concept of looking glass self?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • It was developed by Charles Horton Cooley.

  • It implies that humans would not have a sense of oneself unless we grow up with other humans.

  • It implies that one’s self-presentation (i.e., activity to present oneself as having a certain characteristic) can affect one’s sense and perception of oneself when one believes that the self-presentation is believed by others.

  • It asserts the importance of mirrors in the formation of the social side of self-concept.

Explicación

Pregunta 19 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about self-awareness and self-recognition?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Human babies have the ability to be aware of oneself when they are born.

  • The ability to recognise the image of oneself in a mirror as a reflection of oneself (mirror self-recognition) develops in humans by about 2 years of age.

  • The ability for mirror self-recognition has been observed only among primates in captivity and humans.

  • None of the other answers are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 20 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about culture and self?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The notion of looking glass self suggests that self-concepts should differ between societies where people have different types of social interaction patterns.

  • Australians are more likely to have independent self-construal than Americans.

  • People with independent self-construal are more likely to try to distinguish themselves from others in a positive light.

  • East Asians with greater exposure to Western cultures tend to report higher levels of self-esteem.

Explicación

Pregunta 21 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The self is the deep underlying true sense of identity that is unlikely to be shaped by society.

  • The sense of one’s self is concerned with personal identity.

  • Social identity is a superficial aspect of one’s self-consciousness.

  • All of the above are false.

Explicación

Pregunta 22 de 62

1

Which of the following is THE BEST EXAMPLE of what social psychologists call attitudes?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • My politics are Marxist.

  • I don’t like custard.

  • I am angry.

  • I think the world is flat.

Explicación

Pregunta 23 de 62

1

According to the theory of reasoned action, which of the following BEST predicts people’s behaviour to go to a Rock concert in the city on this Saturday?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • attitudes toward Rock music

  • attitudes toward the Rock band playing at the concert on this Saturday

  • attitudes toward going to the concert in the city on this Saturday

  • attitudes toward going to the concert in the city on this Saturday by public transport

Explicación

Pregunta 24 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about attitude-behaviour consistency?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Attitudes tend to predict consistent behaviour when attitudes are accessible.

  • Attitude accessibility affects behaviour when people are using superficial processes.

  • Intention predicts behaviour when people are using systematic processes.

  • All of the above are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 25 de 62

1

According to the theories of reasoned action and planned behaviour, which of the following is FALSE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Both theories suggest that behaviour is influenced by people’s intention to perform the behaviour.

  • Both theories suggest that intention is influenced by attitudes and subjective norm.

  • Both theories suggest that attitudes are determined by behavioural beliefs about the consequences of the behaviour (and their evaluations).

  • Theory of reasoned action includes perceived behavioural control as its important component whereas the theory of planned behaviour does not.

Explicación

Pregunta 26 de 62

1

When John says, “I dislike X because it makes me feel bad about myself,” which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • This is an example of a social identity.

  • John’s attitude toward X is serving a self-esteem maintenance function.

  • This is a structural feature of John’s attitudes.

  • John is clearly a utilitarian who is unconcerned about social norms.

Explicación

Pregunta 27 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about attitude change?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • When people are forced to perform a behaviour non-voluntarily, their attitudes are likely to change.

  • When people are induced to perform a behaviour voluntarily in the absence of their prior attitudes, attitudes are unlikely to form, and they would go without attitudes.

  • Some form of emotional engagement is necessary for attitudes to change.

  • None of the above is true.

Explicación

Pregunta 28 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about cognitive dissonance theory?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Cognitive dissonance is a negative state, which motivates us to reduce it.

  • My belief that smoking causes cancer and my knowledge of my behaviour that I smoke one packet of cigarettes a day are consonant with each other.

  • Cognitive dissonance is less likely to be felt in modern societies because modern music uses discords more.

  • All strategies to reduce cognitive dissonance are irrational.

Explicación

Pregunta 29 de 62

1

La Piere’s famous study about attitudes and behaviour towards Chinese people (he observed people’s behaviour in hotels, motor camps, and so on)

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • showed how people go about concocting reasons for their actions.

  • was a landmark study because it measured behavioural intentions.

  • was a poorly designed study because La Piere was not Chinese.

  • was a good example of attitude failing to predict a specific behaviour.

Explicación

Pregunta 30 de 62

1

An attitude is accessible when it readily comes to mind. Which of the following conditions would produce accessible attitudes?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Attitudes are formed on the basis of direct experience with the attitude object.

  • Attitudes are learned when a person is very young.

  • Attitudes are suppressed and kept unconscious.

  • None of the above.

Explicación

Pregunta 31 de 62

1

According to the lecture, which of the following is TRUE about attitude-behaviour relationships?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • When people have the ability to think carefully about how to behave and are motivated to think carefully, accessible attitudes should predict a behaviour.

  • Attitudes rarely predict behaviour and therefore generally regarded as a useless concept in social psychology.

  • Attitudes and behaviour influence each other some of the time, and form a positive feedback loop.

  • Attitudes and behaviour are separate and parallel processes, which do not influence each other.

Explicación

Pregunta 32 de 62

1

In individual-level strategies for attitude change, a person whose attitudes you wish to influence is induced to behave in a way that is congruent with the attitude you wish him or her to have. Which of the following is TRUE about these strategies?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Attitudes are likely to change when the behaviour is forced, and is performed involuntarily.

  • Attitudes may change when the existing attitudes are already congruent with the behaviour and the behaviour is performed voluntarily.

  • Attitudes are unlikely to change if the induced behaviour is incongruent with the existing attitudes.

  • None of the above is TRUE

Explicación

Pregunta 33 de 62

1

Festinger and Carlsmith conducted an empirical test of cognitive dissonance theory. After establishing a negative attitude to a boring experiment, they induced their participants to perform a counter-attitudinal behaviour voluntarily. For this purpose, the participants were offered a large amount of reward ($20) or a small amount of reward ($1). Which of the following is TRUE about this experiment?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Cognitive dissonance should not occur under either condition.

  • Cognitive dissonance should be greater in the $20 condition than in the $1 condition.

  • A greater attitude change was observed in the $1 condition than in the $20 condition.

  • An attitude change occurred when the participants performed the counter-attitudinal behaviour involuntarily.

Explicación

Pregunta 34 de 62

1

According to the lecture, which of the following is true about the relationship between attitudes and behaviour?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Attitudes and behaviour always influence each other.

  • Attitudes and behaviour never influence each other.

  • Attitudes and behaviour influence each other under some circumstances.

  • None of the above is TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 35 de 62

1

According to the elaboration likelihood model of persuasion, when people change attitudes due to strong arguments, compared to when they change attitudes because an attractive person sent them the persuasive message, the resultant attitudes:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • are more enduring.

  • are more resistant to change.

  • show stronger attitude-behaviour relationships.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 36 de 62

1

The elaboration likelihood model suggests that:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • when people are busy doing other things, they tend to process TV commercials using their central route to persuasion.

  • when people are going through a peripheral route to persuasion, resultant attitudes are likely to be more enduring and more likely to predict their behaviour than when they are going through a central route.

  • when people have lots of cognitive resources, but unwilling to process information deeply, they tend to be persuaded by peripheral cues such as source attractiveness.

  • All of the above are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 37 de 62

1

When David says, “I don’t trust what Donald says because he might be motivated to mislead me,” and decides to disregard Donald’s persuasive message, which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • David is citing a reporting bias.

  • David is referring to a knowledge bias.

  • David is revealing his unconscious bias.

  • David is showing a fundamental attribution error.

Explicación

Pregunta 38 de 62

1

A norm that can be known to exist when it is violated is:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • a taken-for-granted background norm.

  • an injunctive norm.

  • a descriptive norm.

  • a shared frame of reference.

Explicación

Pregunta 39 de 62

1

According to the lecture, which of the following is TRUE about the definition of a group?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Any collection of two or more individuals is a group.

  • Group members should share a common definition about what their group is.

  • Group members do not need to behave in accordance with their definition of the group.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 40 de 62

1

Which of the following functions is MOST likely to be served by large-scale groups defined in terms of social categories such as nations?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • task performance function

  • socio-emotional function

  • social identity function

  • knowledge function

Explicación

Pregunta 41 de 62

1

According to the social brain hypothesis (e.g., Dunbar), which of the following is FALSE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Relative size of an individual person’s neo-cortex is associated with how sociable he or she is.

  • Among primates, a species’ average relative neo-cortex size is associated with average size of groups in which the species tends to live.

  • The “natural” human group size is estimated to be approximately 150.

  • Group living acted as a selective pressure for larger relative neo-cortex size.

Explicación

Pregunta 42 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about group cohesiveness?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • A group tends to be cohesive when its members like each other.

  • A group tends to be cohesive when its members’ goals are aligned with the group goals.

  • When a group is highly cohesive, its members tend to adhere to its norms.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 43 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about social networks?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Social networks are information technologies like Facebook and Twitter.

  • Highly centralised networks mean that everyone occupies a central position.

  • Centralization and central positions mean the same thing.

  • All of the above are FALSE.

Explicación

Pregunta 44 de 62

1

According to Steiner’s model of group performance, which of the following is FALSE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Group performance can never exceed the potential set by group members.

  • Group may perform worse than its potential due to coordination losses.

  • There is an element of social loafing in motivation losses in group settings.

  • A group can create synergies among its members, and perform better than the best of its members.

Explicación

Pregunta 45 de 62

1

If someone said, “I don’t want to do what she told me, but I have to,” which type of social influence would it be? Choose the BEST response.

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • majority social influence

  • minority social influence

  • normative social influence

  • informational social influence

Explicación

Pregunta 46 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about the Asch-type conformity situation?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • University students showed a lower level of conformity than non-students.

  • Japanese students showed a higher conformity rate when the pressure came from other students in the same sports club.

  • Korean advertisements emphasize conformity more than American advertisements.

  • The conformity rate is higher in individualist cultures than in collectivist cultures.

Explicación

Pregunta 47 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about Asch’s conformity studies?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • A naïve participant was asked to make a judgment about line lengths after some confederates made judgments in public.

  • Approximately 25% of the participants never conformed.

  • The rate of conformity kept rising as the number of confederates who made wrong judgments increased up to six.

  • Even when a number of confederates gave an erroneous judgment, if there was one person who gave the right judgment, this reduced the rate of conformity.

Explicación

Pregunta 48 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • According to Moscovici, in order to influence others, an opinion minority should use a tactic that differs from those used by an opinion majority.

  • The blue-green experiment showed that an opinion minority that expressed their opinion consistently could influence a majority’s opinion.

  • Consistent minorities can affect privately held opinions especially when they are indirectly related to the minority opinions.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 49 de 62

1

According to Moreland and Levine, most groups undergo dynamic changes as some people join the group and others leave it. Which of the following is FALSE about this process?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Their model of group dynamics is applicable to all groups.

  • The investigation phase is usually followed by the socialization phase.

  • In the maintenance phase, members engage in role negotiation.

  • Those group members who were led to believe that the other members of the group have been meeting before (i.e., experimental participants) increased their commitment to the group.

Explicación

Pregunta 50 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Group polarisation refers to groups’ tendency to make a more risky decision.

  • When confronted by an outgroup view that is riskier, an ingroup tends to become more risky.

  • Group polarisation may occur in part because group members change their opinions in line with other group members’ opinions.

  • People are more likely to discuss information that is unshared with others in group discussions.

Explicación

Pregunta 51 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about groupthink?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • It is a mode of thinking in which the desire to reach unanimous agreement overrides the motivation to adopt proper rational decision-making procedures.

  • There is no evidence that political considerations play a role in faulty decision making.

  • There is evidence that a strong leader and a high level of conformity tend to be present when groups exhibit group think.

  • Even successful groups showed some indicators of groupthink.

Explicación

Pregunta 52 de 62

1

Which of the following statements is TRUE about transactional and transformational leaderships?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Transactional leadership is not effective.

  • Transactional leadership is based on individualized consideration and contingent reward.

  • Transactional leadership involves providing one’s followers with inspiration, and persuading them to rise above their own self-interests to achieve the leader’s vision.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 53 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about Milgram’s experiments about electric shocks?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Approximately 30% of the participants administered the maximum shock (450 volts) to a learner.

  • Reducing the level of legitimacy of the authority can reduce the level of obedience.

  • Participants obeyed even more when the authority was not physically present.

  • A recent study has shown a significant reduction in obedience since Milgram’s original experiment.

Explicación

Pregunta 54 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about collective behaviour?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Le Bon argued that a person in a crowd is “a creature acting by instinct.”

  • Deindividuation is a weaker sense of, or a decreased focus on, personal identity.

  • Research suggests that deindividuation consistently results in aggression.

  • Social identity theory suggests that deindividuation strengthens group members’ tendency to adhere to their group’s situational norms.

Explicación

Pregunta 55 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about the Robbers Cave Experiment?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The boys who participated in the experiment had no psychological problems before they participated in the experiment.

  • Boys were more likely to choose their ingroup members as friends than outgroup members.

  • Cooperation between the groups to work towards a goal that cannot be achieved by each group alone reduced intergroup conflict.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 56 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about prejudice and discrimination?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Allport argued that extermination is the most extreme form of discrimination.

  • Aversive racism is attitudes toward members of a racial group that incorporate both egalitarian social values and negative emotions, causing one to avoid interaction with members of the group.

  • People who score high on rightwing authoritarianism tend to show stronger prejudice against outgroups.

  • All of the above are true.

Explicación

Pregunta 57 de 62

1

When people were categorised into two groups on the basis of some trivial criterion (e.g., preference of abstract paining) in a minimal group paradigm:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • they gave more resources to their ingroup members than outgroup members.

  • they spontaneously derogated their outgroup.

  • they felt a stronger sense of belonging, control, and self-esteem.

  • they spontaneously came up with their own group names.

Explicación

Pregunta 58 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • When their Australian social identity was salient, Indigenous Australians were more likely to endorse individualist values than when their Aboriginal social identity was salient.

  • Indigenous Australians have higher mortality rates than non-Indigenous Australians.

  • Indigenous Australians report that the level of racist incidents decreased in the 1990s.

  • High levels of self-reported discrimination have been found to be related to high levels of mental illness.

Explicación

Pregunta 59 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE:

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Berkman and Syme found that those who were more integrated in society (i.e., having a more diverse social network) have lower mortality rates.

  • People who are more socially integrated tend to be more susceptible to cold because they have more interpersonal contact.

  • Higher levels of emotional social support are often psychological burden for people, and do not buffer against negative effects of stress.

  • All of the above are TRUE.

Explicación

Pregunta 60 de 62

1

Which of the following is FALSE about the intergroup contact hypothesis?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • Intergroup contact always reduces stereotypes and prejudice.

  • For intergroup contact to reduce stereotypes and prejudice, the situation in which the groups contact each other should emphasize equal status.

  • Intergroup contact needs to be sufficiently frequent and long lasting for it to be effective.

  • The evidence for the effectiveness of real life intergroup contact in the United States in the 1980s has been somewhat mixed.

Explicación

Pregunta 61 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE about strategies to reduce stereotypes and prejudice?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • The decategorisation strategy encourages people to personalise a member of an outgroup.

  • The salient categorisation strategy encourages people to generalise positive experiences with a typical member of a negatively stereotyped outgroup.

  • The recategorisation strategy encourages people to categorise their ingroup and outgroup into a more inclusive social category.

  • All of the above are TRUE and these strategies have been found to reduce prejudice and stereotypes to some extent under some circumstances; however, there are some potential problems associated with each of them.

Explicación

Pregunta 62 de 62

1

Which of the following is TRUE?

Selecciona una de las siguientes respuestas posibles:

  • When people perceive racial discrimination, they tend to have poorer mental health.

  • There is no evidence for the idea that when people perceive racial discrimination, they tend to have poorer physical health.

  • Both a and b are TRUE.

  • Neither a nor b is TRUE.

Explicación