I believe the correct answer is: high self-monitoring
Mark Snyder, American social psychologist, introduced the
concept of self-monitoring during the 1970s to show how much people monitor
their self-presentations, expressive behavior, and nonverbal affective displays.
He stated in his studies that self-monitoring can be:
1. high self-monitoring
2. low self-monitoring
High self-monitoring individuals closely monitor themselves
and behave in a manner that is highly responsive to social cues and their
situational context.
In this case, Sally is high self-monitoring as she examines
a situation for cues of how she should react, and then tries to meet the
demands of the situation rather than act on her own feelings, before she acts
or speaks.
Germany will be punished
thew are now values and
that's all I can remember
The native Americans were not immune to the disease <span />
Answer:
Sociocognitive.
Explanation:
As the exercise suggests, the sociocognitive theory of hypnosis states that the people being hypnotized is not actually being controlled, but rather they behave in ways that they think being hyonotized is. Just like in the example: Brandon got hypnotized and was told by the hypnotist to recite the Pledge of Allegiance in Martian. Afterward, his friends speculated that Brandon was not faking hypnosis but that he was behaving as he expected hypnotized people to behave.