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  2. Social cue - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_cue

    pitch; stress; inflection; Teachers and students develop ways of understanding the way the other party thinks, believes, acts and perceives things. [clarification needed] A teacher can use the gaze of their eyes and the position of their body to indicate where the student's attention should be held. Sometimes when students are stuck in a ...

  3. Levitin effect - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Levitin_effect

    The Levitin effect is a phenomenon whereby people, even those without musical training, tend to remember songs in the correct key.The finding stands in contrast to the large body of laboratory literature suggesting that such details of perceptual experience are lost during the process of memory encoding, so that people would remember melodies with relative pitch, rather than absolute pitch.

  4. Psychology of music - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Psychology_of_music

    The psychology of music, or music psychology, is a branch of psychology, cognitive science, neuroscience, and/or musicology. It aims to explain and understand musical behaviour and experience , including the processes through which music is perceived, created, responded to, and incorporated into everyday life.

  5. Foot-in-the-door technique - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Foot-in-the-door_technique

    Researchers thought that because both theories have to do with maintaining an attitude/agreement that one had in the first place that maybe the processes were similar. In 1999, Jerry M. Burger from Santa Clara University conducted a study to see what the process of this technique is and how it works, he found that there this is just a simple ...

  6. Nonverbal communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nonverbal_communication

    Prosodic properties such as tempo, volume, inflection, pauses, and pitch can combine to communicate emotion and attitude without using specific words. Vocalics also includes emblems, or sounds with specific meanings, like saying “brrr” when you are cold or “hmm” when you are thinking about something. [ 59 ]

  7. Social perception - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_perception

    Social perception (or interpersonal perception) is the study of how people form impressions of and make inferences about other people as sovereign personalities. [1] Social perception refers to identifying and utilizing social cues to make judgments about social roles, rules, relationships, context, or the characteristics (e.g., trustworthiness) of others.

  8. Social judgment theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_judgment_theory

    In social psychology, Social judgment theory (SJT) is a self-persuasion theory proposing that an individual's perception and evaluation of an idea is by comparing it with current attitudes. According to this theory, an individual weighs every new idea, comparing it with the individual's present point of view to determine where it should be ...

  9. Self-perception theory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-perception_theory

    Self-perception theory (SPT) is an account of attitude formation developed by psychologist Daryl Bem. [1] [2] It asserts that people develop their attitudes (when there is no previous attitude due to a lack of experience, etc.—and the emotional response is ambiguous) by observing their own behavior and concluding what attitudes must have caused it.