Examples of Social Interaction in the following topics:
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- In sociology, social interaction is a dynamic, changing sequence of social actions between individuals or groups.
- A social interaction is a social exchange between two or more individuals.
- Social structures and cultures are founded upon social interactions.
- Through this broad schema of social development, one sees how social interaction lies at its core.
- One being that they are both created through social interaction.
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- Social scientists have focused on social interactions in urban areas because cities bring together many cultural strands.
- Urban social structure differs in significant ways from rural life, which in turn affects the form of social interactions.
- Urban social structure differs in significant ways from rural life, which in turn affects the form of social interactions.
- The first set asks how social interactions are shaped by urban environments and how social interactions in urban environments are distinct from social interactions in other contexts.
- Clearly, questions about social interactions in urban areas cluster loosely and are quite broad.
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- A virtual world is an online community that takes the form of a computer-based simulated environment through which users can interact.
- Virtual worlds include multiplayer games like World of Warcraft and social networking sites like Facebook.
- Social interaction between users can range from communication via text, graphical icons, visual gesture, sound, touch, voice command, and balance senses.
- Another aspect of social interaction in virtual worlds is variation of interactions between participants.
- Although the social interactions of participants in virtual worlds are often viewed in the context of online games, other forms of interaction are common.
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- Social constructionism is a school of thought introduced into sociology by Peter L.
- Berger and Thomas Luckmann with their 1966 book The Social Construction of Reality.
- Social constructionism focuses on the description of institutions and actions and not on analyzing cause and effect.
- Berger and Luckmann argue that social construction describes both subjective and objective reality - that is that no reality exists outside what is produced and reproduced in social interactions.
- A clear example of social constructionist thought is, following Sigmund Freud and Émile Durkheim, religion.
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- Social deprivation, or prevention from culturally normal interaction with society, affects mental health and impairs child development.
- Social deprivation theory has had implications for family law.
- Humans are social beings, and social interaction is essential to normal human development.
- Social deprivation occurs when an individual is deprived of culturally normal interaction with the rest of society.
- Feral children are children who grow up without social interaction.
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- Evolutionarily, human beings are social creatures.
- We are programmed to live in some sort of group and interact with others.
- Social isolation is distinct from loneliness.
- Social isolation is objective and can be measured using observations of an individual's social interactions and network.
- Studies have demonstrated that socially isolated seniors use fewer health and social services.
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- Neighborhoods are often social communities with considerable face-to-face interaction among members.
- Neighborhoods are typically generated by social interaction among people living near one another.
- On another level, a community is a group of interacting people, living in some proximity.
- Community usually refers to a social unit—larger than a household—that shares common values and has social cohesion.
- The sense of community and formation of social networks comprise what has become known as social capital.
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- A social group is two or more humans who interact with one another, share similar characteristics, and collectively have a sense of unity.
- In the social sciences, a social group is two or more humans who interact with one another, share similar characteristics, and have a collective sense of unity.
- Society can also be viewed as people who interact with one another, sharing similarities pertaining to culture and territorial boundaries.
- It is a social unit consisting of a number of individuals interacting with each other with respect to:
- Contrast the social cohesion-based concept of a social group with the social identity concept
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- Most approaches to social positions define them relationally.
- Rather than relying on attributes of actors to define social roles and to understand how social roles give rise to patterns of interaction, regular equivalence analysis seeks to identify social roles by identifying regularities in the patterns of network ties -- whether or not the occupants of the roles have names for their positions.
- Actual patterns of interaction, in turn, are the regularities out of which roles and norms emerge.
- These ideas: interaction giving rise to culture and norms, and norms and roles constraining interaction, are at the core of the micro-sociological perspective.
- The identification and definition of "roles" by the regular equivalence analysis of network data is possibly the most important intellectual development of social network analysis.
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- The socialization process can be separated into two main stages: primary socialization and secondary socialization.
- Socialization is a life process, but is generally divided into two parts: primary and secondary socialization.
- Secondary socialization refers to the socialization that takes place throughout one's life, both as a child and as one encounters new groups that require additional socialization.
- Socialization is, of course, a social process.
- As such, it involves interactions between people.