This stage involves the desire to have lasting communication with your significant other Quizlet

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    Single young adults were asked to identify their own personality characteristics and the personality characteristics of their ideal romantic partners. Male and females thought their romantic ideal was someone very similar in personality to themselves.

    Couples were asked who were romantically involved for at least a year were asked to report their own personality characteristics. Romantic partners reported similar personality characteristics. However, romantic partners were not as similar in personality as the ideal partners described by single adults.

    Actual coupes were asked how harmonious and loving their relationships were. Harmonious and loving couples were SIMILAR to each other terms of warmth. Harmonious and loving couples were DISSIMILAR in dominance

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    Terms in this set (28)

    Empathy

    the ability to understand what other people feel, see things in their point of view.

    Social psychology

    The study of social relationships or interactions is called

    Lahey (2007)

    defines social psychology as the branch of psychology that studies individuals as they interact with others

    Plotnik and Kouyoumdjian (2014)

    state that social psychology is a broad field whose goal is to understand and explain how thoughts, feelings, perceptions, and behaviour are influenced by the presence of , or interactions with, others

    Gerrig and Zimbardo (2002)

    social psychology is the study of the effect of social factors on individual behaviour, attitudes, perceptions and motives.

    Interaction

    refers to the mutual and reciprocal exchange of communication or action between two or more persons or groups

    Relationship

    refers to a particular way in which two or more individuals, groups, or even countries talk to, behave toward, or deal with each other

    Person Perception

    Refers to forming impressions and making judgments about another person's likability after seeing or meeting him/her

    First impressions

    The assessment involves as well what kind of person one is, including his/her intentions, traits, and behaviours (Plotnick & Kouyoumdjian, 2014)

    Norms

    are patterns or traits characterized as typical or usual for a group.

    Conformity

    It refers to yielding to group pressure to act as everyone does, even when no direct request has been made (Lahey, 2009).

    It is the tendency to behave like others in the group do. Conformity is brought about by two motivations: to gain reward or avoid punishment; and to gain information.

    Family

    being comfortable with another person

    Attraction

    may lead to deeper relationships (Santrock, 2003) . One person may be drawn to another due to various reasons.

    Love

    is a special attachment one has for somebody else.

    Intimacy

    which involves feelings of closeness, connectedness, and bondedness

    Passion

    which involves feelings and desires that lead to physical attraction, romance, and sexual consummation

    Decision/commitment

    which involves feelings that lead a person to remain with someone and move toward shared goals

    Friendship

    This type of love is when the intimacy or liking component is present, but feelings of passion or commitment in the romantic sense are missing.

    this love can be the root of other forms of love.

    Infatuation

    is characterized by feelings of lust and physical passion without liking and commitment. There has not been enough time for a deeper sense of intimacy, romantic love, or consummate love to develop.

    These may eventually arise after the infatuation phase. The initial infatuation is often very powerful.

    Empty Love

    is characterized by commitment without passion or intimacy. At times, a strong love deteriorates into empty love. The reverse may occur as well.

    For instance, an arranged marriage may start out empty but flourish into another form of love over time

    Romantic Love

    bonds people emotionally through intimacy and physical passion. Partners in this type of relationship have deep conversations that help them know intimate details about each other.

    They enjoy sexual passion and affection. These couples may be at the point where long-term commitment or future plans are still undecided.

    Compassionate Love

    is an intimate, but non-passionate sort of love. It includes the intimacy or liking component and the commitment component of the triangle.

    It is stronger than friendship, because there is a long-term commitment, but there is minimal or no sexual desire.

    This type of love is often found in marriages where the passion has died, but the couple continues to have deep affection or a strong bond together. This may also be viewed as the love between very close friends and family members.

    Fatuous Love

    In this type of love, commitment and passion are present while intimacy or liking is absent.

    is typified by a whirlwind courtship in which passion motivates a commitment without the stabilizing influence of intimacy.
    Often, witnessing this leaves others confused about how the couple could be so impulsive.

    Unfortunately, such marriages often don't work out. When they do, many chalk the success up to luck

    Consummate Love

    is made up of all three components and is the total form of love.

    It represents an ideal relationship. Couples who experience this kind of love have great sex several years into their relationship.

    They cannot imagine themselves with anyone else.

    They also cannot see themselves truly happy without their partners.

    They manage to overcome differences and face stressors together.

    Attitudes

    Beliefs that predispose people to act and feel in certain ways towards people, objects, or ideas.

    Can be positive or negative attitude

    Stereotypes

    generalizations in which the same traits or characteristics are assumed to be possessed by all members of a group. (Gerrig & Zimbardo, 2002)

    Prejudice/Bias

    A preconceived negative judgment of a group and its individual members.

    Sexism

    An individual's prejudicial attitudes and discriminatory behavior toward people of a given sex, or (2) institutional practices (even if not motivated by prejudice) that subordinate people of a given sex.

    Ethnocentrism

    An individual's prejudicial attitudes and discriminatory behavior toward people of a cultural group other than one's own

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    Verified questions

    QUESTION

    When Kluver and Bucy surgically lesioned the amygdala of a rhesus monkey's brain, what was the impact on the monkey's behavior? a. Lost its ability to coordinate movement. b. Died because its heartbeat became irregular. c. Became less aggressive. d. Lost its memory of where food was stored e. Sank into an irreversible coma.

    Verified answer

    PSYCHOLOGY

    Do you think that most students work harder on projects they must complete alone for a grade or on team projects in which no individual grades are given? Explain your reasoning.

    Verified answer

    QUESTION

    George, a senior in high school, was reminiscing with his friends about their first homecoming dance. A. Explain how each of the following psychological terms could help George’s recollection or memory of his freshman-year homecoming dance. -Flashbulb memory. -Mood-congruent effect. B. Explain how each of the following psychological terms could hinder George’s recollection or memory of his freshman-year homecoming dance. -Serial position effect. -Retroactive interference.-Misinformation effect.

    Verified answer

    QUESTION

    Thomas fell and hit his head, so his parents brought him to the emergency room. Explain how the following scans would give doctors different information about the type of injury Thomas may have. • CT scan • MRI • fMRI

    Verified answer

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