Chapter 6: Attitude and Social Cognition

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Social cognition includes:

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Reducing prejudice requires:

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Pro-social behaviour means:

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Schemas are:

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Halo effect is:

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Fundamental attribution error is:

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Attribution means:

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Stereotypes are:

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Discrimination refers to:

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Prejudice is:

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Behavioural intention is part of:

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Attitude-behaviour gap exists due to:

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Social norms influence:

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Expected positive outcome increases:

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Behaviour not evaluated leads to:

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Central attitudes influence:

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External pressure leads to:

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Behaviour matches attitude when:

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LaPiere’s study showed:

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Attitude always predicts behaviour:

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Repeated exposure leads to:

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Attitude change is stronger when attitude is:

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Fear appeal works when:

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Credibility of source increases:

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Persuasion depends on:

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Two-step flow model involves:

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P-O-X model represents:

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Balance theory is related to:

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Dissonance leads to:

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Cognitive dissonance refers to:

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Attitude formation is influenced by:

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Beliefs belong to:

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Values are:

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Media affects attitudes through:

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Family influences attitude mainly in:

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Group norms influence:

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Learning by observing others is:

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Reward and punishment method is:

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Learning by association means:

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Attitudes are mainly learned through:

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Simplicity vs complexity relates to:

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Extremeness refers to:

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Valence of attitude means:

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Attitude object means:

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Social cognition refers to:

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Behavioural tendency is also called:

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Emotional aspect of attitude is:

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The cognitive component includes:

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Attitudes have how many components?

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Attitude refers to:

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