Social Psychology
What is Social Psychology?
Social psychology
can be seen as a combination of psychology (an expansion of this
topic to the more general) and of sociology (a concentration of
on a certain area of the psychology discipline). The discipline
is based on the belief that social behaviour is governed by psychological
principles that can be discovered by observation and
experiment. It began as a part of the discipline of psychology
about 100 years ago, and it focused on concepts such as suggestibility,
crowd behaviour, social
movements, prejudice and group thinking. The discipline
grew quickly after World War 2 and concepts such as attitude measurement,
leadership, group dynamics and person perception were included
in the study of social psychology. By 1970, it had grown to include
concepts such as social images of ourselves, altruism, social
motives and interpersonal communication. Social psychology is
a source of ideas about interesting phenomena such as friendships,
love, advertising and politics. It adds a useful perspective on
human behaviour and experiences and provides an overall
understanding why people as groups behave as they do rather than
just how individuals act.
Related Links
Social Judgment
Norms
Attraction
Self Perception
False Consensus
& Uniqueness
Self-Monitoring
Self Esteem
Non-Verbal
Communications
Groups
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