Top 150+ Solved Social Psychology 1 MCQ Questions Answer

From 16 to 30 of 106

Q. Being in a good mood does not reduce our_______, but reducesour________.

a. motivation to do hard cognitive work, incentive for doing hard cognitive work

b. incentive to do hard cognitive work, motivation for doing hard cognitive work

c. motivation to do hard cognitive work, capacity for doing hard cognitive work

d. capacity to do hard cognitive work, motivation for doing hard cognitive work

  • d. capacity to do hard cognitive work, motivation for doing hard cognitive work

Q. Prejudice is:

a. the affective component of an attitude

b. a genetically-controlled emotional response to people

c. a belief usually acquired by contact with the attitude object

d. a pre-judgement based on a persons’ group membership

  • d. a pre-judgement based on a persons’ group membership

Q. Which stereotype-participant combination is likely to result inthe weakest rebound effect?

a. skinheads stereotype; high prejudice participant

b. gay stereotype; low prejudice participant

c. skinheads stereotype; low prejudice participant

d. gay stereotype; high prejudice participant

  • b. gay stereotype; low prejudice participant

Q. Which of the conditions below is MOST likely to producestereotype change following the bookkeeping model?

a. disconfirming information is concentrated on a few atypical group members

b. disconfirming information is concentrated on a few typical group members

c. disconfirming information is dispersed across many typical group members

d. the stereotype is dramatically disconfirmed

  • c. disconfirming information is dispersed across many typical group members

Q. According to social identity theory, which of the following strategies is LEAST likely to improve relations between socialgroups in an intergroup contact situation?

a. providing information about similarities between groups

b. providing information about differences between groups

c. acknowledging particpants’ group memberships

d. recategorising participants into a common group

  • a. providing information about similarities between groups

Q. Many findings suggest that intergroup contact improves attitudes among the people actually involved, but it does not generalise to the groups from which they were drawn. This islikely to follow from the fact that:

a. participants are affected by the acquiescent response bias

b. most intergroup contact is actually interpersonal contact

c. questionnaire measures are mostly used in this research

d. an insufficient number of cross-cultural studies have been carried out

  • b. most intergroup contact is actually interpersonal contact

Q. Which of the following is an example of using a ‘derived etic’approach to cross cultural research?

a. research that examines a single culture in its own terms

b. research that compares members of thirty cultures on a measure that has been well validated in one of the cultures

c. research that compares members of two cultures on a task that was developed jointly by researchers from both cultures

d. none of the above

  • c. research that compares members of two cultures on a task that was developed jointly by researchers from both cultures

Q. What is the ‘ecological fallacy’?

a. interpreting an individual-level finding as if it were at the ecological-level

b. interpreting an ecological-level finding as if it were at the individual level

c. failing to look after the environment

d. disbelief in global warming

  • b. interpreting an ecological-level finding as if it were at the individual level

Q. Social psychology is the scientific study of how people___________________________, ___________________________, and ___________________________ one another.

a. understand, feel about, act toward

b. perceive, think about, act toward

c. think about, influence, relate to

d. observe, influence, conflict with

  • c. think about, influence, relate to

Q. Social psychology began to emerge as the vibrant field it istoday during

a. the depression of the early 1930s when researchers examined the effects of deprivation on aggression and altruism

b. world war i when psychologists conducted studies of social conflict and cooperation

c. world war ii when researchers performed studies of persuasion and soldier morale

d. the korean war when psychologists examined the effects of brainwashing on prisoners of war

  • c. world war ii when researchers performed studies of persuasion and soldier morale

Q. In comparison to the sociologist, the social psychologist

a. is more likely to study the social causes of behavior

b. is more likely to study individuals than groups

c. gives less attention to our internal functioning

d. relies more heavily on correlational research

  • b. is more likely to study individuals than groups

Q. In comparison to personality psychology, social psychology

a. has a shorter history

b. is more concerned with the biological causes of behavior

c. is more likely to use case studies in theory development

d. has greater concern for differences between individuals

  • a. has a shorter history

Q. In comparison to personality psychology, social psychology

a. focuses more on our common humanity

b. has more famous, well-known theorists

c. is an older specialty within the discipline of psychology

d. provides more "grand" or comprehensive theories of human functioning

  • a. focuses more on our common humanity

Q. Most social-psychological research is conducted either in the field or in the ______________________ and is either correlational or________________________.

a. clinic; survey

b. laboratory; experimental

c. laboratory; survey

d. clinic; experimental

  • b. laboratory; experimental

Q. Survey researchers obtain a representative group

a. through random assignment

b. by selecting at least 2000 respondents to be interviewed

c. by taking a random sample

d. either through telephone books or automobile registrations

  • c. by taking a random sample
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