Nonconscious Processes - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

1 / 26
About This Presentation
Title:

Nonconscious Processes

Description:

Both of them have suffered a stroke, which has damaged portions of their ... after they spend a half hour in the professor's apartment, he escorts the two of ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

Number of Views:160
Avg rating:3.0/5.0
Slides: 27
Provided by: ocean3
Category:

less

Transcript and Presenter's Notes

Title: Nonconscious Processes


1
Nonconscious Processes
2
Lhermitte (1986)
  • Paris, 1986 Doctor Lhermitte accompanies two
    patients of his to various locations around the
    city. Both of them have suffered a stroke, which
    has damaged portions of their prefrontal cortex,
    areas critical for the planning and control of
    action. First, in his office, the woman gives Dr.
    Lhermitte a physical exam using the available
    equipment and utensils. Later, after they spend a
    half hour in the professors apartment, he
    escorts the two of them out to the balcony,
    casually mentions the word museum, and leads
    them back inside. Their behavior becomes suddenly
    different they scrutinize with great interest
    the paintings and posters on the wall, as well as
    the common objects on the tables, as if each was
    an actual work of art. Next, the man enters the
    bedroom, sees the bed, undresses, and gets into
    it. Soon he is asleep. Across these and several
    other situations, neither patient is able to
    notice or remark on anything unusual or strange
    about their behavior.

3
Bargh, Chen, Burrows (1996)
  • New York, 1996 University students take part in
    an experiment on the effects of behavior-concept
    priming. As part of an ostensible language test,
    participants are presented with many words. For
    some participants, words synonymous with rudeness
    are included in this test. For others, words
    synonymous with politeness are included instead.
    After finishing this language test, all
    participants are sent down the hall, where they
    encounter a staged situation in which is it
    possible to act either rudely or politely.
    Although participants show no awareness of the
    possible influence of the language test, their
    subsequent behavior in the staged situation is a
    function of the type of words presented in the
    test.

4
Do We Understand Our Own Behavior?
  • People are often unaware of the reasons and
    causes of their own behavior
  • There appears to be a fundamental dissociation
    between conscious awareness and the mental
    processes responsible for behavior
  • Social Psychology (e.g., Dijksterhuis Bargh,
    2001 Wilson, 2002)
  • Cognitive Psychology (e.g., Knuf, Aschersleber,
    Prinz, 2001 Prinz, 1997)
  • Neuropsychology (e.g., Frith, Blakemore,
    Wolpert, 2000 Jeannerod, 1999)
  • Two important principles
  • An individuals behavior can be directly caused
    by the current environment, without the necessity
    of an act of conscious choice or will
  • This behavior can unfold without the person being
    aware of its external determinant

5
Control and Automaticity
  • Conscious processes
  • Conscious intention of what the control will
    accomplish
  • A sense or feeling of control
  • An expenditure of effort in the control action
  • A closed-loop monitoring of the control output
  • Automatic processes
  • Lack one or more features of conscious processes
  • That is, automaticity is negative defined (i.e.,
    the absence of at least one key quality of
    conscious control)

6
Control and Automaticity Together Their Basic
Relations
  • Multitasking Control and automatic processes can
    run in parallel (e.g., when engaged in a boring
    conversation, I may listen mindlessly while
    preparing what I am going to say)
  • Delegation A control process can launch an
    automatic process (e.g., being told to render a
    social judgment can lead to the use of automatic
    stereotypes)
  • Orienting An automatic process can launch a
    control process (e.g., my friend is rude to me,
    so I use controlled processes to understand and
    fit this new piece of information into what I
    already think I know about my friend)
  • Intrusion An automatic process can override a
    control process (e.g., paradoxical rebound
    following thought suppression)
  • Regulation A control process can override an
    automatic process (e.g., inhibiting stereotypes)
  • Automatization A control process can be
    transformed into an automatic process (e.g.,
    learning to tie our shoes)
  • Disruption An automatic process can be
    transformed into a control process (e.g., paying
    attention to our bodily movements when being
    filmed)

7
Two Recent Examples of Nonconscious Processes
  • Chameleon effect the tendency to mimic, without
    realizing it, the posture and physical gestures
    of ones interaction partners (Chartrand Bargh,
    1999)
  • Nonconscious goal activation activation of
    social and interpersonal goals through external
    means (e.g., priming manipulations), with the
    individual then pursuing that goal in the
    subsequent situation without consciously choosing
    or intending to do so or even being aware of the
    purpose of his or her behavior (Bargh, 1990)
  • Ex. Being primed with cooperation primes led
    individuals to be more cooperative in a lab task
    even though their self-ratings of their desire to
    cooperate was unchanged

8
Example Studies from Nisbett and Wilson (1977)
  • Maier (1931) asked participants to tie two cords
    together. After seeing the experimenter start one
    of the cords in motion, they would usually solve
    the problem. The majority of the participants did
    not recognize the helpful cue.
  • Participants tended to prefer stockings on the
    right side of the table over identical stockings
    on the left side of the table

9
When Will We Be Wrong in Our Verbal Reports
(Nisbett Wilson, 1977)
  • Removal in time We are better at detecting
    recent causes than more distant causes
  • Mechanics of judgment The biases that make it
    difficult to understand our behavior (e.g.,
    preference for items on the right)
  • Context We tend to ignore the context when
    making decisions about an object
  • Nonevents The absence of friendly behavior is
    less salient than the presence of hostile
    behavior
  • Nonverbal behavior We rely heavily on nonverbal
    cues (e.g., posture, gaze) to form judgments but
    may have difficulty incorporating these behaviors
    into verbal reports
  • Discrepancies between the magnitudes of cause and
    effect We have trouble understanding that small
    causes can have large effects (and vice versa)

10
Choice Blindness(Johansson, Hall, Sikstrom,
Tarning, Lind, 2006)
  • Which is more attractive?
  • What would happen if the experimenter (using a
    bit of sleight of hand) gave you the card on the
    left and asked you why you chose her?

11
Choice Blindness(Johansson, Hall, Sikstrom,
Tarning, Lind, 2006)
  • Only 13 noticed the trickthis challenges our
    assumption that we notice when our intentions and
    the outcomes of our intentions do not match up
  • Change blindness
  • Experimenters received two sets of reports
  • Those from participants who were given the photo
    they chose
  • Those from other participants who were given the
    wrong photo
  • The two sets of reports were similar in terms of
    emotionality, specificity, and certainty
  • One concern is that they were predicting a null
    effect (i.e., predicting an absence) which is
    problematic given that it is impossible to show
    that something does not exist

12
Dual-Process Models
  • These models propose two qualitatively different
    forms of information processing operate
  • Implications for forming judgments, solving
    problems, and making decisions
  • The first form of information processing is a
    quick and easy processing mode based on
    effort-conserving heuristics
  • This process is often nonconscious and tends to
    involve automatic processing
  • Stronger affective component
  • The second form is a slow and more difficult
    rule-based processing mode based on
    effort-consuming systematic reasoning
  • This process is conscious and involves controlled
    processing
  • Stronger cognitive component

13
Experiential and Rational Systems(Epstein, 1994)
  • Experiential System
  • Holistic
  • Affective Pleasure-pain oriented
  • Associationistic connections
  • Behavior mediated by vibes from past
    experiences
  • Encodes reality in concrete images, metaphors,
    and narratives
  • More rapid processing
  • Slower to change
  • More crudely differentiated
  • More crudely integrated
  • Experienced passively and preconsciously
  • Self-evidently valid (Experiencing is believing)
  • Rational System
  • Analytic
  • Logical Reason oriented
  • Logical connections
  • Behavior mediated by conscious appraisal of
    events
  • Encodes reality in abstract symbols, words, and
    numbers
  • Slower processing
  • Changes more rapidly
  • More highly differentiated
  • More highly integrated
  • Experienced actively and consciously
  • Requires justification via logic

14
Cognitive-Experiential Self-Theory(Epstein, 1994)
  • A global theory of personality based on a
    dual-processing model
  • Four needs
  • Pleasure principle (Freud, 1920)
  • Maintain a stable, coherent conceptual system
    (Lecky, 1961 Rogers, 1959)
  • Relatedness (Bowlby, 1988 Fairbairn, 1954)
  • Enhance self-esteem (Adler, 1954 Allport, 1961
    Kohut, 1971)
  • CEST considers these motives to be equally
    important
  • Consequences of the four basic needs
  • Behavior is a compromise of the four needs
  • Needs serve as checks and balances against each
    other
  • Good adjustment is fostered by fulfillment of the
    four basic needs in a synergistic, harmonious
    manner

15
Dual Attitudes(Wilson, Lindsey, Schooler, 2000)
  • Bob is a White male who was raised in a racist
    environment. As an adult, Bob has adopted an
    egalitarian view with regard to race.
  • Have Bobs attitudes from his early life been
    replaced by his new attitudes?
  • Is it possible that both attitudes may still
    exist simultaneously?
  • Evidence suggests that we may have more than one
    evaluation of the same attitude object with one
    evaluation being more accessible than the other

16
Dual Attitudes(Wilson, Lindsey, Schooler, 2000)
  • Five hypotheses which have received empirical
    support
  • 1. Explicit attitudes and implicit attitudes
    toward the same object can coexist in memory
  • 2. When dual attitudes exist, the implicit
    attitude is activated automatically, whereas the
    explicit one requires more capacity and
    motivation to retrieve from memory
  • 3. Even when the explicit attitude has been
    retrieved from memory, implicit attitudes
    influence implicit responses (e.g., nonverbal
    behaviors) or responses that people do not view
    as expressions of their attitudes and do not
    attempt to control
  • 4. Explicit attitudes change relatively easily,
    whereas implicit attitudes (like old habits)
    change more slowly
  • 5. Dual attitudes are distinct from ambivalence
  • Analogy A tennis player who learns a new serve.

17
The Role of Automaticity in Classic Studies in
Social Psychology
  • Milgram (1963) Obedience
  • Asch (1952) Conformity
  • Schachter Singer (1962) Emotion
  • Festinger Carlsmith (1959) Cognitive
    Dissonance
  • Darley Latane (1968) Helping
  • Haney, Banks, Zimbardo (1973) Prison Simulation

18
What do these studies have in common?
  • Social psychology has often focused on
    situational determinants of thought, emotion, and
    behavior
  • It is best known for findings that highlight the
    power of situational forces
  • The classic studies focus on how the individuals
    behave when forced to
  • Respond in difficult circumstances
  • Act quickly
  • Act under extreme duress

19
Are we automatons?
  • Classic social psychology studies make people
    appear to be automatons
  • The situational influences examined were
  • Unintended on the part of the individual
  • Not something of which the person was aware
  • A response to the situation occurring before the
    individual had a chance to reflect on what to do
    (i.e., efficient)
  • Difficult to control or inhibit even when the
    person was cognizant of the influence
  • These are the elements of automaticity

20
Milgram (1963, 1974)
  • Obedience Studies
  • The behavior of participants was
    counter-intentional
  • Intention 100 psychiatrists, college students,
    and middle-class adults predicted they would stop
    administering shock before 300 volts
  • Reality Very few participants (in any variation)
    disobeyed the experimenter before 300 volts
  • Their behavior was efficient
  • People tend to obey on the spotbut if they had
    been given time to consider their actions, they
    may have been less likely to obey

21
Asch (1952)
  • Basic line-judgment paradigm
  • Will participants give obviously incorrect
    answers if everyone else does?
  • Individuals typically lack awareness that we draw
    our strength from the majority and that our
    behavior may change with situational demands

22
Schachter Singer (1962)
  • Physiological arousal produced by the situation
    is experienced as an emotion by virtue of
    cognitive interpretation of the situational
    meaning of the arousal
  • Men were given a learning drug (adrenaline)
  • Half of the participants were told about the
    excitatory effects of the drug
  • Participants were then exposed to a confederate
    who was either euphoric or angry
  • Uninformed participants were amused by the
    euphoric confederate and irritated by the angry
    confederate
  • If people were generally aware of the true
    reasons for their emotional states, it would not
    have been possible for Schachter and Singer to
    alter their subjective experiences

23
Festinger Carlsmith (1959)
  • Participant is asked to mislead another person
    into believing that a boring task is interesting
  • Participants come to believe the boring task is
    fun if paid 1 for their liebut not if paid 20
  • Later studies showed that attitude change only
    occurs when the participant believes he or she
    has free choice in lying to the other person
  • Thus, the original cognitive dissonance findings
    would not have emerged if individuals were aware
    of the power of the experimenters request

24
Darley Latane (1968)
  • Bystander effect Individuals are less likely to
    help if there are others present
  • Inspired by the murder of Kitty Genovese in 1964
  • Participants were aware of the presence of others
    but denied that their presence had any impact on
    their behavior
  • This lack of awareness was taken as a sign of
    hope that things could change if people
    understood the power of situational forces

25
Haney, Banks, Zimbardo (1973)
  • Prison simulation in the basement of Stanford
    psychology building
  • Mock prison became quite real for its occupants
  • Participants were unable to control or inhibit
    the powerful effects of their assigned roles
  • This behavior ran counter to the intentions of
    the participants as assessed during debriefing

26
Automaticity and Control
  • These classic studies highlight a basic conflict
    between the automaticity of behavior and the
    desire to control it
  • People behave in ways they do not seem to
    controlbut which clearly cry out for control
  • Each classic study is a morality play in which
    participants are led astray by susceptibility to
    situational factors and lapse into automatic
    processes at the exact moments that control seems
    so important
  • The suspicion that people should know better is
    what fuels interest in the nature of control and
    automaticity
Write a Comment
User Comments (0)
About PowerShow.com