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PSY204 - Week 13 - Prosocial behaviour - Chapter 13 - Practice quiz

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PSY204 Prosocial behaviour

Questão 1 de 31

1

Acts that are positively viewed by society.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Prosocial Behaviour (p. 518)

  • Helping Behaviour (p. 518)

  • Altruism (p. 519)

  • Empathy (p. 522)

Explicação

Questão 2 de 31

1

Acts that intentionally benefit someone else.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Helping Behaviour (p. 518)

  • Prosocial Behaviour (p. 518)

  • Altruism (p. 519)

  • Kin Selection (p. 520)

Explicação

Questão 3 de 31

1

A special form of helping behaviour, sometimes costly, that shows concern for fellow human beings and is performed without expectation of personal gain.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Altruism (p. 519)

  • Mutualism (p. 520)

  • Helping Behaviour (p. 518)

  • Prosocial Behaviour (p. 518)

Explicação

Questão 4 de 31

1

Views complex social behaviour as adaptive, helping the individual, kin and the species as a whole to survive.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Evolutionary Social Psychology (p. 520)

  • Social Learning Theory (p. 528)

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

Explicação

Questão 5 de 31

1

Cooperative behaviour benefits the cooperator as well as others; a defector will do worse than a cooperator.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Mutualism (p. 520)

  • Kin Selection (p. 520)

  • Physiological Arousal (p. 523)

  • Evaluating the Consequences (p. 523)

Explicação

Questão 6 de 31

1

Those who cooperate are biased towards blood relatives because it helps propagate their own genes; the lack of direct benefit to the cooperator indicates altruism.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Kin Selection (p. 520)

  • Mutualism (p. 520)

  • Labelling the Arousal (p. 523)

  • Attachment Style (p. 538)

Explicação

Questão 7 de 31

1

Ability to feel another person’s experiences; identifying with and experiencing another person’s emotions, thoughts and attitudes.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Empathy (p. 522)

  • Altruism (p. 519)

  • Attribution (p. 529)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

Explicação

Questão 8 de 31

1

In attending to an emergency, the bystander calculates the perceived costs and benefits of providing help compared with those associated with not helping.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Bystander-Calculus Model (p. 522)

  • Physiological Arousal (p. 523)

  • Evaluating the Consequences (p. 523)

  • Attribution (p. 529)

Explicação

Questão 9 de 31

1

What are the three steps in Jane Piliavin's bystander-calculus model of helping?

Selecione uma ou mais das seguintes:

  • Physiological Arousal

  • Labelling the Arousal

  • Evaluating the Consequences

  • Attending to the Arousal

  • Insightful evaluation

Explicação

Questão 10 de 31

1

Empathetic physiological reaction response. Greater arousal leads to greater helping likelihood.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Physiological Arousal (p. 523)

  • Labelling the Arousal (p. 523)

  • Kin Selection (p. 520)

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

Explicação

Questão 11 de 31

1

The view championed by Bandura that human social behaviour is not innate but learnt from appropriate models.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Social Learning Theory (p. 528)

  • Modelling (p. 526)

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

Explicação

Questão 12 de 31

1

Tendency for a person to reproduce the actions, attitudes and emotional responses exhibited by a real-life or symbolic model. Also called observational learning.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Modelling (p. 526)

  • Attribution (p. 529)

  • Altruism (p. 519)

  • Empathy (p. 522)

Explicação

Questão 13 de 31

1

Acquiring a behaviour after observing that another person was rewarded for it.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Learning by Vicarious Experience (p. 528)

  • Just-World Hypothesis (p. 529)

  • Evaluating the Consequences (p. 523)

  • Competence (p. 540-541)

Explicação

Questão 14 de 31

1

According to Lerner and Miller, people need to believe that the world is a just place where they get what they deserve. As evidence of undeserved suffering undermines this belief, people may conclude that victims deserve their fate.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Just-World Hypothesis (p. 529)

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

Explicação

Questão 15 de 31

1

People who feel good are much more likely to help someone in need than are people who feel bad.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Mood (p. 535-536)

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

  • Attachment Style (p. 538)

  • Size of Home Town (p. 538-539)

Explicação

Questão 16 de 31

1

People who scored high on the attributes of agreeableness, self-transcendence values, empathic self-efficacy, ability to forgive, and capacity to feel embarrassed were more likely to engage in prosocial behaviour.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

  • Mood (p. 535-536)

  • Attachment Style (p. 538)

  • Size of Home Town (p. 538-539)

Explicação

Questão 17 de 31

1

Descriptions of the nature of people’s close relationships, thought to be established in childhood.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

  • Attachment Style (p. 538)

  • Mood (p. 535-536)

  • Competence (p. 540-541)

Explicação

Questão 18 de 31

1

People from small-town backgrounds were more likely to help than those from larger cities.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Size of Home Town (p. 538-539)

  • Attachment Style (p. 538)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

  • Diffusion of Responsibility (p. 532)

Explicação

Questão 19 de 31

1

Often involves an unusual event, can vary in nature, is unplanned and requires a quick response.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Emergency situation (p. 530)

  • Attend to Event (p. 531)

  • Assume Responsibility (p. 531)

  • Decide what can be done (p. 531)

Explicação

Questão 20 de 31

1

People are less likely to help in an emergency when they are with others than when alone. The greater the number, the less likely it is that anyone will help.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

  • Emergency situation (p. 530)

  • Bystander intervention (p. 529)

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

Explicação

Questão 21 de 31

1

The idea that we should help people who are dependent and in need. It is contradicted by another norm that discourages interfering in other people’s lives.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

  • Diffusion of Responsibility (p. 532)

  • Specific Personality Traits (p. 537-538)

Explicação

Questão 22 de 31

1

This occurs when an individual breaks out of the role of a bystander and helps another person in an emergency.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Bystander intervention (p. 529)

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

  • Emergency situation (p. 530)

Explicação

Questão 23 de 31

1

A theory proposing that the presence of others can inhibit people from responding to an emergency: the more people, the slower the response.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Latané and Darley’s Cognitive Model (p. 530)

  • Social Learning Theory (p. 528)

  • Bystander-Calculus Model (p. 522)

  • Evolutionary Social Psychology (p. 520)

Explicação

Questão 24 de 31

1

What are the four steps to Latane and Darley's cognitive model.

Selecione uma ou mais das seguintes:

  • Attend to event

  • Is event defined as an emergency?

  • Assume responsibility

  • Decide what can be done

  • Stand and wait for someone to act

  • Stare at the sky

Explicação

Questão 25 de 31

1

Do we even notice an event where helping may be required, such as an accident?

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Attend to Event (p. 531)

  • Event Defined as Emergency (p. 531)

  • Assume Responsibility (p. 531)

  • Decide what can be done (p. 531)

Explicação

Questão 26 de 31

1

How do we interpret the event?

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Event Defined as Emergency (p. 531)

  • Attend to Event (p. 531)

  • Assume Responsibility (p. 531)

  • Decide what can be done (p. 531)

Explicação

Questão 27 de 31

1

Do we accept personal responsibility for helping?

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Assume Responsibility (p. 531)

  • Decide what can be done (p. 531)

  • Event Defined as Emergency (p. 531)

  • Attend to Event (p. 531)

Explicação

Questão 28 de 31

1

What do we decide to do?

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Decide what can be done (p. 531)

  • Assume Responsibility (p. 531)

  • Event Defined as Emergency (p. 531)

  • Attend to Event (p. 531)

Explicação

Questão 29 de 31

1

Explanations for why people tend not to help when in a group.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

  • Diffusion of Responsibility (p. 532)

  • Bystander intervention (p. 529)

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

Explicação

Questão 30 de 31

1

Tendency of an individual to assume that others will take responsibility (as a result, no one does). This is a hypothesised cause of the bystander effect.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Diffusion of Responsibility (p. 532)

  • Bystander Apathy (p. 532)

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

Explicação

Questão 31 de 31

1

The dread of acting inappropriately or of making a foolish mistake witnessed by others. The desire to avoid ridicule inhibits effective responses to an emergency by members of a group.

Selecione uma das seguintes:

  • Fear of Social Blunders (p. 532)

  • Diffusion of Responsibility (p. 532)

  • Social responsibility norm (p. 548)

  • Bystander Effect (p. 530)

Explicação