Self Test for Helping Note: These questions are part of a larger data base of questions on Chapter 12. The Questions are selected to represent the type of question you should expect on unit exam one. You can, in fact, expect to see many of these very same questions on that exam. Exam questions, however, may deal with topics not covered in the self tests or in lectures but are discussed in your textbook. You are responsible for the content of your text book plus the content of lectures, interactive activities, & material on the web site. ---- Use these sample questions to test yourself & to practice for the test. ---- 1. Two social norms that can motivate helping behavior are social exchange & reciprocity. kin selection & moral inclusion. reciprocity & social responsibility. social responsibility & kin selection. 2. According to social exchange theory, relationships are best understood by: applying evolutionary theory to social behaviour. assuming that others will treat us the way we treat them. realizing that people desire to maximize their rewards & minimize their costs. examining people's use of information gleaned by observing others in the situation. 3. The Bystander Effect can be defined as: - the attempt to help people regardless of what we have to gain. - the assumption that others will treat us the way we treat them. - the likelihood that people will perform impulsive & deviant acts increases as group size increases. - the likelihood that any one person will help decreases as the number of witnesses to an emergency increases. 4. Helping behavior that is performed even when it has a cost to the helper is altruism. reciprocity. kin selection. prosocial behavior. 5. Which of the following best illustrates the kind of thinking influenced by diffusion of responsibility throughout a group? "I hope I don't make things worse than they already are by trying to help." "Everyone seems to be reacting calmly. Maybe there's no real problem." "Why should I risk helping when others could as easily help?" "If no one else is offering help, I guess it's up to me." 6. Having identified a situation as a clear emergency requiring help, helping may still be inhibited by diffusion of responsibility. pluralistic ignorance. overjustification. distraction. 7. The vicarious experience of anothers feeling is egoism. altruism. empathy. voyeurism. 8. If you find a lost wallet, you ought to return it to its owner or turn it in to the proper authorities. Such a set of rules for how you ought to behave is called a norm. template. natural law. moral schema. 9. The social-responsibility norm refers to the expectation that people will help when necessary in order to receive help themselves later. to receive help, people have the responsibility to ask for it. leaders should help more than regular group members. people will help those who depend on them. 10. Darley & Latanι describe a sequence of decisions a bystander must make before he or she will intervene in an emergency. Which of the following is not one of the specific steps? noticing the incident assessing the victims desire for help interpreting the incident as an emergency assuming personal responsibility for intervening 11. A person selling memberships in a magazine club hands potential buyers a bookmark before beginning the sales pitch. This person is trying to boost sales by taking advantage of the: reciprocity norm. four-walls technique. foot-in-the-door technique. principle of cognitive dissonance. 12. A person who witnesses an emergency alone is ________ than a person who witnesses an emergency in the presence of others. likely to be much less frightened likely to be much more frightened less likely to come to the victim's aid more likely to come to the victim's aid 13. ________ most often follows the inadvertent violation of a social norm or the receipt of unexpected attention from others. guilt shame humility embarrassment 14. An example of pure altruism would be the providing for your children to ensure their survival. donating $5 million dollars to a university to name a building after yourself. removing a woman from a burning building because you are upset by her screams. doing of none of the above. 15. The dominant theory which explains "bystander apathy" say its due to modern city life. alienation in modern life. hostility toward strangers. less feeling of responsibility when there are many witnesses. people being afraid a criminal will find out they reported him & retaliate. 16. Which of the following is not an academic theory about how we seek to help other people? Love: there are several styles of love. Reciprocity Norm: we need to return another's favor. Equity Theory: we are happiest when give and take are equal. Terminating relationships: relationships break down in stages. Prosocial Behavior: we sometimes help without need for reward. Empathy-Altruism Hypothesis: if we feel empathy we are likely to help. Contact Hypothesis: bringing enemies together increases understanding. Politeness Theory: we act politely or rudely depending on whether we care. Social Exchange: perception of relationships depends on fairness perception. All of the above are academic theories about how we seek to help other people. -------------------------------------- Social Psychology Robert C. Gates