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Related Concept Videos

Impression Management Techniques III: Aligning Actions01:29

Impression Management Techniques III: Aligning Actions

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Aligning actions are communicative strategies individuals employ to maintain social harmony and preserve personal identity in the face of potential disruptions to social norms. These actions are particularly important in managing social impressions when one's behavior might be seen as inappropriate, incompetent, or morally questionable.Types of Aligning ActionsThe three principal types of aligning actions are disclaimers, accounts, and apologies.DisclaimersDisclaimers are preventive; they are...
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Humans are very diverse and although we share many similarities, we also have many differences. The social groups we belong to help form our identities (Tajfel, 1974). These differences may be difficult for some people to reconcile, which may lead to prejudice toward people who are different. Prejudice is a negative attitude and feeling toward an individual based solely on one’s membership in a particular social group (Allport, 1954; Brown, 2010). Prejudice is common against people who...
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Typically, when alkenes react with halogens at low temperatures, an addition reaction occurs. However, upon increasing the temperature or under reaction conditions that form radicals, providing a low but steady concentration of halogen radicals, allylic substitution reaction is favored. This is because allylic hydrogens are very reactive as the formed intermediate is resonance stabilized. For example, when propene is treated with chlorine in the gas phase at 400 °C, it undergoes allylic...
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Radical Substitution: Allylic Bromination01:27

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In organic synthesis, the formation of products can be altered by changing the reaction conditions. For example, a dibromo addition product is formed when propene is treated with bromine at room temperature. In contrast, propene undergoes allylic substitution in non-polar solvents at high temperatures to give 3-bromopropene. In order to avoid the addition reaction, the bromine concentration must be kept as low as possible throughout the reaction. This can be achieved using N-bromosuccinimide...
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Attitudes01:54

Attitudes

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Attitude is our evaluation of a person, an idea, or an object. We have attitudes for many things ranging from products that we might pick up in the supermarket to people around the world to political policies. Typically, attitudes are favorable or unfavorable: positive or negative (Eagly & Chaiken, 1993). And, they have three components: an affective component (feelings), a behavioral component (the effect of the attitude on behavior), and a cognitive component (belief and knowledge;...
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Halo Effect01:27

Halo Effect

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The halo effect is a cognitive bias in which an individual's overall impression influences judgments about their specific traits. This psychological phenomenon leads people to associate positive characteristics with those they perceive as generally good and negative characteristics with those they view as bad. This effect is particularly influential in social perception, professional evaluations, and decision-making processes.The Psychological Basis of the Halo EffectThe halo effect is rooted...
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Related Experiment Video

Updated: Nov 17, 2025

Continuous Theta Burst Stimulation of the Posterior Medial Frontal Cortex to Experimentally Reduce Ideological Threat Responses
06:42

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Moving From Allyship to Antiracism.

Rebecca Smith

    Creative Nursing
    |February 12, 2021
    PubMed
    Summary

    This article reframes allyship as a lifelong journey toward antiracism for white individuals. It encourages self-reflection to dismantle racist thinking and embrace emotional maturity in supporting people of color and Indigenous people.

    Area of Science:

    • Social Sciences
    • Psychology
    • Sociology

    Background:

    • Allyship is often defined as white people supporting people of color and Indigenous people.
    • This concept is evolving beyond an identity or action into a continuous process.

    Purpose of the Study:

    • To reframe allyship as a lifelong journey toward antiracism for white individuals.
    • To encourage critical self-reflection and emotional maturity in dismantling racist systems.

    Main Methods:

    • The article addresses white individuals, particularly white Americans.
    • It is structured in three parts: acknowledging a whiteness-centered world, using reflection to understand motives and reduce defensiveness, and maintaining presence during triggered trauma.

    Main Results:

    Keywords:
    George Floydallyshipantiracismcall-out culturewhite fragilitywhite supremacy

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    Related Experiment Videos

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    • The author proposes moving from 'ally' as an identity to 'antiracism' as a continuous journey.
    • This involves confronting the centrality of whiteness and managing emotional responses.

    Conclusions:

    • Antiracism requires growing emotional maturity to move beyond racist ways of thinking, being, and doing.
    • This lifelong journey is essential for genuine support of people of color and Indigenous people.