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276 results for "social comparison" — page 1 of 14
T_4_14 — Social Comparison Theory: Festinger, Upward/Downward Comparison, and Social Media
Social comparison theory, introduced by Leon Festinger (1954), proposes that humans have a fundamental drive to evaluate their abilities and opinions — and in the absence of objective, non-social standards, they do so by
ZC_1_14 — Social Media Psychology
Social media usage is now near-universal among adolescents and young adults in developed nations (95% of US teens, Pew 2023), making its psychological effects one of the most debated topics in contemporary psychology. Th
ZC_1_06 — Social Identity & Group Dynamics — Tajfel, Sherif
Social identity theory and its predecessor, realistic conflict theory, provide the dominant scientific frameworks for understanding how humans form group identities and how intergroup conflict arises.
U_1_07 — Music and Social Movements
Music and social movements have been inseparable throughout history — music serves as a vehicle for collective identity, emotional mobilization, coded communication, and cultural memory in struggles for justice, labor ri
C_1_14 — Dumézil's Trifunctional Hypothesis: Indo-European Social Structure in Myth
Georges Dumézil (1898–1986) was a French comparative mythologist and philologist who proposed that the mythologies, religions, and social institutions of Indo-European-speaking peoples share a common tripartite ideologic
K_4_13 — Mirror Neurons and Social Cognition
Mirror neurons are a class of neurons, first discovered in the early 1990s in the premotor cortex (area F5) of macaque monkeys by Giacomo Rizzolatti, Vittorio Gallese, and colleagues at the University of Parma, that fire
ZC_5_10 — Sociology of Disaster: Vulnerability, Resilience, and Social Amplification of Risk
The sociology of disaster studies the social dimensions of catastrophic events — earthquakes, floods, hurricanes, pandemics, industrial accidents, nuclear meltdowns, wildfires, and increasingly, climate-driven extreme ev
ZC_5_04 — Social Movements: Collective Action, Mobilization, and Protest
Social movements are sustained, organized collective efforts by non-institutional actors to promote or resist social, political, economic, or cultural change through unconventional means — including protest, civil disobe
ZC_5_07 — Sociology of Knowledge: Social Construction, Paradigms, and Epistemic Communities
The sociology of knowledge investigates how social conditions — class position, institutional setting, cultural context, historical period, and power relations — shape the production, content, validation, and distributio
ZC_5_02 — Sociology of Technology: Social Shaping, Actor-Networks, and Technological Determinism
The sociology of technology (a core subfield of Science and Technology Studies — STS) investigates how social, economic, political, and cultural factors shape the development, design, adoption, and consequences of techno
ZC_5_16 — Computational Social Science: Big Data, Agent-Based Models, and Digital Behavioral Analysis
Computational social science (CSS) is the interdisciplinary field that applies computational methods — machine learning, natural language processing, network analysis, agent-based modeling, and large-scale data mining —
ZC_1_01 — Social Psychology — Conformity, Obedience, and Group Dynamics
Social psychology examines how individuals think, feel, and behave in social contexts. Landmark experiments by Milgram (obedience to authority), Asch (conformity to majority opinion), and Zimbardo (situational power of r
ZC_4_10 — Mesoamerican Social Organization: City-States, Lineages, and Cosmological Order
Mesoamerican social organization — spanning the Classic Maya (~250–900 CE), Aztec/Mexica (~1325–1521 CE), Zapotec, Mixtec, and other civilizations across central Mexico through Honduras — represents one of humanity's mos
ZC_2_12 — Social Stratification and Class
Social stratification refers to the ranking of individuals and groups in hierarchies of wealth, power, and prestige. The two foundational approaches are Karl Marx (1818–1883) — class is defined by relationship to the mea
ZC_2_16 — Social Capital
Social capital — the networks of relationships, norms of reciprocity, and trust that facilitate collective action and cooperation within and between groups — emerged as one of the most influential and contested concepts
ZC_2_20 — Social Capital Theory — Putnam
Social capital — the networks of relationships, norms of reciprocity, and trust that facilitate cooperation among individuals and groups — became one of the most influential and contested concepts in social science follo
G_2_02 — Agent-Based Modeling and Social Simulation
Agent-based modeling (ABM) is a computational framework in which large numbers of autonomous "agents" — each following simple, individually specified rules — interact with one another and their environment, and complex c
T_4_07 — Social Identity Theory and Prejudice
Social Identity Theory (SIT) explains how individuals derive self-concept from group memberships and how this drives intergroup behavior — including prejudice, discrimination, and conflict. Developed by Henri Tajfel and
T_4_10 — Conformity and Obedience: Asch, Milgram, and the Social Psychology of Compliance
The study of conformity (adjusting one's behavior or beliefs to match a group) and obedience (following directives from an authority figure) produced some of the most famous — and disturbing — experiments in the history
T_4_17 — Parasocial Relationships: One-Sided Bonds with Media Figures
Parasocial relationships — the one-sided emotional bonds that audiences form with media personalities, fictional characters, and public figures — were first described by sociologists Donald Horton and Richard Wohl in the
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