Social Psychology Theory

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The central concepts following social psychology is that which dares to explain what makes people do what they do. Social psychology is the scientific analysis of how someone influences another’s thoughts, feelings, and behavior. Though considered to be a fairly young science, social psychology has endeavored to examine particular theories, concepts, and phenomenon that has shaped our society. As the centuries roll on, technology alongside social media, has evolved into something more sophisticated and has developed into a mechanism in which to entice and challenge social norms. In order to better comprehend and adjust to the dynamics of principles that are applicable to everyday life, we must consider that the reality of social influences …show more content…

The idea that people learn from one another through observations, modeling, and imitation has been identified as the theory of social learning. Psychologist, Albert Bandura, proclaims that human personality is an interaction between the environment and the mental processes of the individual. To test this theory, Bandura established that children can learn a social behavior such as aggression simply by observing the modeled behavior of another person. Physically aggressive children acquire aggressive tendencies by how their parents have disciplined them. If screaming, slapping, beating, etc., is evident, children are likely to mimic such behaviors and this has the potential for escalated abuse and essentially, violence begets violence. This theory also infers the influence media violence on …show more content…

The internet has been very instrumental in how society is engaging in many forms of social connections. Because of social network sites such as Facebook and Twitter, and video portals such as YouTube, the internet is among the most common activity of young people. Not only are children gaining access to other forms of communication, they can become devastated by it as well. Not all sites that children and adolescents have access to on the web are conducive to a healthy environment and therefore they become vulnerable to the perception of others. Because of a limited capacity to self-regulate and heightened susceptibility, children and adolescence allow social media to shape their image of self. The pressure of taking the right pictures, at the right place, at the right time, having hair and makeup flawless, with the right people, are pressures that individuals subject themselves to even more so in recent years. This occurrence is an application of

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