How people around us can create emotions and how ones emotions will impact people around is explained. Importance of emotional intelligence can be known from this.
The Lucifer Effect by Zimbardo httpwww.lucifereffect.commovi.docxcherry686017
The Lucifer Effect by Zimbardo
http://www.lucifereffect.com/movie.htm
The Stanford Prison Experiment
http://www.prisonexp.org/
Introduction
n The Lucifer Effect, we examined how social situations lead ordinary people to commit unimaginable acts of violence, discrimination, and indifference to the suffering of others. Many of us hope that if we were placed in such situations, we would be the courageous ones who resist unjust authority, who are immune to compliance tactics, and who never abandon our core beliefs and principles in the face of social pressures. However, the reality is we can never predict our actions without being placed in similar situations. This is one of the recurring themes of “The Lucifer Effect” and something that should not be lost on us as we make everyday decisions.
Indeed, even without being placed in the heat of war, the inhumanity of prisons, or the clutches of social psychologists, our daily lives are wrought with similarly compelling social tensions. This section of the website was created as a springboard for learning how unwanted and unjust influence can impact your daily life and to better equip you to resist these forces. By understanding the contexts of influence and social compliance, become familiar with significant experimental findings from social psychological research, along with some basic terminology, we hope you will become more proficient in identifying common social influence principles and the strategies that professional agents of influence may use to gain your compliance. Finally, we will take you through frameworks that prominent social psychologists have created to understand social influence and identify how you can apply these ideas to your own life. Furthermore, we will discuss ways to utilize your new understanding of the principles of social influence for positive social change, and finally close with some specific hints from Dr. Z on how to resist unwanted influences.
Varieties of Influence
We listen to a debate with each side presenting seemingly compelling reasons to endorse one or another point of view. We get messages from advertisers, from the government, from assorted authorities to take particular actions, like buy a product, vote for a candidate, give blood, avoid impending disasters, and more. Such attempts to influence our attitudes, values or actions are considered forms of persuasive communication. ”Do as I say,” is its motto. When they are politically motivated with a bias toward a politically relevant action such messages are considered propaganda.
Other times the influence comes not dressed up in words in persuasive messages or visually appealing ads, but simply when the members of a group you are in, or want to belong to, act in a particular way. They don’t have to tell you what to do; they simply exhibit the behavior or the style of action that is expected of “good team members.” That form of social influence is known as conformity. “Do as we do,” is the conformity mo ...
The Lucifer Effect by Zimbardo httpwww.lucifereffect.commovi.docxcherry686017
The Lucifer Effect by Zimbardo
http://www.lucifereffect.com/movie.htm
The Stanford Prison Experiment
http://www.prisonexp.org/
Introduction
n The Lucifer Effect, we examined how social situations lead ordinary people to commit unimaginable acts of violence, discrimination, and indifference to the suffering of others. Many of us hope that if we were placed in such situations, we would be the courageous ones who resist unjust authority, who are immune to compliance tactics, and who never abandon our core beliefs and principles in the face of social pressures. However, the reality is we can never predict our actions without being placed in similar situations. This is one of the recurring themes of “The Lucifer Effect” and something that should not be lost on us as we make everyday decisions.
Indeed, even without being placed in the heat of war, the inhumanity of prisons, or the clutches of social psychologists, our daily lives are wrought with similarly compelling social tensions. This section of the website was created as a springboard for learning how unwanted and unjust influence can impact your daily life and to better equip you to resist these forces. By understanding the contexts of influence and social compliance, become familiar with significant experimental findings from social psychological research, along with some basic terminology, we hope you will become more proficient in identifying common social influence principles and the strategies that professional agents of influence may use to gain your compliance. Finally, we will take you through frameworks that prominent social psychologists have created to understand social influence and identify how you can apply these ideas to your own life. Furthermore, we will discuss ways to utilize your new understanding of the principles of social influence for positive social change, and finally close with some specific hints from Dr. Z on how to resist unwanted influences.
Varieties of Influence
We listen to a debate with each side presenting seemingly compelling reasons to endorse one or another point of view. We get messages from advertisers, from the government, from assorted authorities to take particular actions, like buy a product, vote for a candidate, give blood, avoid impending disasters, and more. Such attempts to influence our attitudes, values or actions are considered forms of persuasive communication. ”Do as I say,” is its motto. When they are politically motivated with a bias toward a politically relevant action such messages are considered propaganda.
Other times the influence comes not dressed up in words in persuasive messages or visually appealing ads, but simply when the members of a group you are in, or want to belong to, act in a particular way. They don’t have to tell you what to do; they simply exhibit the behavior or the style of action that is expected of “good team members.” That form of social influence is known as conformity. “Do as we do,” is the conformity mo ...
What is impression formation? How does it contribute to sociability or social...Eric Wagobera Jnr
Impression formation is practically a part of our everyday life through which we endeavor to depict ourselves as worthy of other people's attention. This term paper explains in full detail what impression formation means and how this psychological process contributes to someone's sociability or social perception accuracy. The paper maintains that with the aid of several factors such as information from various sources and the emotional congeniality, we can form an impression of others – whether good or bad. There are some decisive issues such as social status, customs, gender, age, profession, personal attractiveness and attributes which determine the course of one's impression formation process and why those trying to impress should be attentive to some invisible but yet compelling forces that can either ruin or build up their impression before others. Quoting different authors in the field of psychology, the paper also highlights existing scholarly studies into impression formation which are necessary to understand the justified circumstances through which impression formation takes place. The two major theories of impression formation - Asch's theory of impression formation and the information integration theory are applied to explain the sharply contrasting scholarly views held about impression formation but one noteworthy concern is that they both offer accurate explanations of how both the externalities and internalities affect our impression before others. Furthermore, the paper explores the different ways through which impression formation contributes towards the sociability of someone or a group. Like the common saying ‘what you sow is what you reap', impression formation is a daunting task in which you have to portray the best version of you in order to yield the much-desired social perception accuracy. Also included are the practical recommendations for a positive impression formation which can prepare you appropriately for that critical moment when you all you have to do is putting up the most phenomenal impression to the job interview panel, product marketing or political debate. What needs to be acknowledged is that the kind of impression we create has the power to make us either socially acceptable or not and therefore, a well- planned impression formation will always contribute to a positive sociability while an unconvincing impression formation will definitely lead to a devastating sociability and its painstaking after effects.
A Complete Presentation of Attitude and behaviour. Difference and comparison of both is defined in it. Conclusion is also discussed in this presentation.
Deliberate focus to get better by knowing what to get better at and how to get better, by self, through others and making others better and to focus on improvement every hour.
What is impression formation? How does it contribute to sociability or social...Eric Wagobera Jnr
Impression formation is practically a part of our everyday life through which we endeavor to depict ourselves as worthy of other people's attention. This term paper explains in full detail what impression formation means and how this psychological process contributes to someone's sociability or social perception accuracy. The paper maintains that with the aid of several factors such as information from various sources and the emotional congeniality, we can form an impression of others – whether good or bad. There are some decisive issues such as social status, customs, gender, age, profession, personal attractiveness and attributes which determine the course of one's impression formation process and why those trying to impress should be attentive to some invisible but yet compelling forces that can either ruin or build up their impression before others. Quoting different authors in the field of psychology, the paper also highlights existing scholarly studies into impression formation which are necessary to understand the justified circumstances through which impression formation takes place. The two major theories of impression formation - Asch's theory of impression formation and the information integration theory are applied to explain the sharply contrasting scholarly views held about impression formation but one noteworthy concern is that they both offer accurate explanations of how both the externalities and internalities affect our impression before others. Furthermore, the paper explores the different ways through which impression formation contributes towards the sociability of someone or a group. Like the common saying ‘what you sow is what you reap', impression formation is a daunting task in which you have to portray the best version of you in order to yield the much-desired social perception accuracy. Also included are the practical recommendations for a positive impression formation which can prepare you appropriately for that critical moment when you all you have to do is putting up the most phenomenal impression to the job interview panel, product marketing or political debate. What needs to be acknowledged is that the kind of impression we create has the power to make us either socially acceptable or not and therefore, a well- planned impression formation will always contribute to a positive sociability while an unconvincing impression formation will definitely lead to a devastating sociability and its painstaking after effects.
A Complete Presentation of Attitude and behaviour. Difference and comparison of both is defined in it. Conclusion is also discussed in this presentation.
Deliberate focus to get better by knowing what to get better at and how to get better, by self, through others and making others better and to focus on improvement every hour.
Need of a standard is discussed in this; Interlinked the need of standards to products, requirements in products, functions of organization and how it is linked to money and different aspects around it.
Welcome to the Program Your Destiny course. In this course, we will be learning the technology of personal transformation, neuroassociative conditioning (NAC) as pioneered by Tony Robbins. NAC is used to deprogram negative neuroassociations that are causing approach avoidance and instead reprogram yourself with positive neuroassociations that lead to being approach automatic. In doing so, you change your destiny, moving towards unlocking the hypersocial self within, the true self free from fear and operating from a place of personal power and love.
Program Your Destiny eBook - Destiny University.pdf
Emotions to actions
1. Prepared By: Kranthi on 27-FEB-18; reference from Plutchicks Wheel
Emotions Actions
People around us create it Impacts people around us and
our self
Impact on us
That’s a process. Some trigger creates some set of emotions in us. And the
emotions we get will impact the actions we do. Impact can be positive or
negative. It depends on what kind of a person we are.
And the emotions we get depends on
1. what kind of thoughts (shared by people) are around us
2. What kind of a person are we to receive those triggers of emotions.
Choose YOUrself. Choose the people around YOU. (What I mean by choosing
people around is choosing their thoughts that are impacting us, we can not help
on choosing the people most of the times!)
Impact by us
“Because Emotions drive motivation, motivation drives behavior, Behavior drives
performance.”
Give triggers for emotional responses to be positive in the people around you.
Acting or triggering the way we want other people to respond is Manipulation.
Behaving with understanding of others is Emotional Intelligence.