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Sociology
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Introduction to Sociology
Quiz 5: Social Interaction And Everyday Life In The Age Of The Internet
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Question 121
True/False
Maria has two e-mail accounts,two cell phone numbers,and two social media accounts She uses one set of accounts just for communication with her employer and her professors.By doing this,Maria is using the different media accounts to help to demarcate time-space regionalization.
Question 122
True/False
A middle-class white woman walks to the other side of the street when she sees a group of young black men approaching her.Her behavior can be linked to the compulsion of proximity.
Question 123
True/False
Students vandalizing campus property following a victorious football game is an example of interactional vandalism.
Question 124
True/False
Interactional vandalism can be defined as a situation in which a subordinate person breaks the tacit rules of interaction that are valued by the more powerful person.
Question 125
True/False
Research by Mitch Duneier and Harvey Molotch (1999)shows that a fundamental requirement for urban civility is time-space regionalization.
Question 126
True/False
Conversations are critical to the maintenance of stability in everyday social life.Research suggests that we are most comfortable when one person takes charge of the conversation and interaction.
Question 127
True/False
When a student texts his friends with familiar abbreviations and acronyms but e-mails his professors with carefully written and edited messages e-mails,he is using the media for interactional staging.
Question 128
True/False
In Carol Brooks Gardner's 1995 study Passing By: Gender and Public Harassment,the treatment of women was linked to male privilege in public spaces.
Question 129
True/False
Elijah Anderson's study of everyday life in two adjacent urban neighborhoods showed that tensions in social interaction are often based on stereotypes about the presumed statuses of the individuals involved.
Question 130
True/False
In a 1997 study of office workers,researchers Raymond friedman and Steven Currall found that respondents reported that sending abusive e-mails resulted in a breakdown in relations.
Question 131
True/False
The use of the Internet,e-mail,chat rooms,and social networking sites,such as MySpace and facebook,has not changed the way sociologists study interaction and everyday life.
Question 132
True/False
When we look at the micro and macro connections that shape social issues such as the harassment of women on the street,we see that the solution must be addressed at the individual level by the people involved in the time and space of the incident.
Question 133
True/False
One study (Nie et al.,2004)conducted at Stanford University found that the majority of Internet users communicate only with close friends and family.
Question 134
True/False
An MSN survey in 2001 reported that for the age group under 25,e-mail was fast replacing face-to-face contact and that most young people no longer desire face-to-face contact with friends.
Question 135
True/False
The technique used by Mitch Duneier and Harvey Molotch to compare interactions between street people and passersby in New York City was semiotics.
Question 136
True/False
Some claim that our rapid advances in communication technologies are creating a "devoiced" society,which suggests that there is a decrease in the differences between virtual and actual interaction.
Question 137
True/False
Interactional vandalism illustrates the connection between micro-level interactions and the larger society because it removes traditional stigmas in social interaction.
Question 138
True/False
In Elijah Anderson's (1990)research,time of day and activity were important cues because they could help people assess whether a stranger "passed inspection" and was considered to be safe.