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Chapter 14 Social Psychology

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Title: Chapter 14 Social Psychology


1
Chapter 14Social Psychology
2
Social Psychology
  • Social Psychologists study social behavior. They
    are interested in the ways people influence and
    are influenced by each other.
  • Social psychology is a diverse field
    incorporating the study of attitudes and
    perceptions, persuasion, and typical behaviors of
    relatively normal people in their relationships
    with others.

3
Module 14.1
  • Social Perception and Cognition

4
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Social perception and cognition are mental
    processes that help us to collect and remember
    information about others, and to make inferences
    and judgments based on that information.

5
Social Perception and Cognition
  • First impressions
  • The primacy effect is the principle that the
    first information learned about someone will be a
    more powerful influence on our perceptions than
    any later information will be.

6
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Stereotypes and Prejudices
  • A stereotype is a generalized belief or
    expectation about group of people.
  • We tend to remember unusual qualities or
    characteristics more readily than ordinary ones,
    so we form false stereotypes easily.
  • Some stereotypes are based on exaggerations of
    essentially correct observations.
  • This is not a justification for basing our
    behavior towards other people according to rigid
    stereotypes.

7
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Stereotypes and Prejudices
  • Prejudice is an unfavorable attitude toward a
    group of people.
  • Aversive racism refers to the behavior of
    unintentionally discriminating against some
    groups while expressing the belief that all
    people are equal.
  • People tend to acknowledge that prejudice is a
    serious problem in the world, but deny that they
    themselves are prejudiced.

8
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Implicit Measures of Stereotypes and Prejudices
  • Some research on prejudice has been done, but
    subtle, unintentional racism is difficult to
    measure.
  • The Implicit Association Test, used for
    personality assessment, can be used for the
    purpose of detecting subtle prejudice.

9
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Overcoming Prejudice
  • Just getting people from different groups to talk
    does not appear to be enough to solve this
    problem
  • Getting people from two different groups to work
    towards a common goal appears to be a more
    effective strategy.
  • Evidence for this was provided by the Robbers
    Cave experiment.
  • But the children in the experiment were from
    arbitrarily formed competitive groups, not two
    different racial or ethnic groups.

10
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Attribution
  • Attribution refers to the set of thought
    processes we use to assign causes to our own and
    others behavior.
  • Internal attributions are explanations based on
    an individuals perceived stable characteristics,
    such as attitudes, personality traits, abilities
  • These are called dispositional.

11
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Attribution
  • Attribution Theory
  • External attributions are explanations based on
    the current situation and events that would
    influence all people.
  • These are called situational.
  • Due to lack of familiarity with culturally
    determined responses in other societies, most
    people attribute externally influenced behaviors
    to dispositional qualities.

12
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Attribution
  • One psychologist, Kelley, proposed three sources
    of information when we make an internal or
    external attribution
  • Consensus information how one individuals
    behavior compares with other peoples.
  • Consistency information how the persons
    behavior varies over time.
  • Distinctiveness how the persons behavior
    varies between situations.

13
Concept Check
  • Internal or external attribution?
  • He went to the theatre to impress his new
    girlfriend.

External
14
  • Internal or external attribution?
  • He went to the theatre because it was a
    requirement for his English Literature class.

External
15
Social Perception and Cognition
  • The Fundamental Attribution Error
  • We commit the Fundamental Attribution Error when
    we make dispositional attributions for a persons
    behavior despite the presence of possible
    external influences.
  • Research suggests that Americans are more prone
    to commit the fundamental attribution error.
  • This may be because we emphasize individual
    responsibility and accomplishment in our society.

16
Social Perception and Cognition
  • The Actor-Observer Effect
  • Related to the fundamental attribution error, we
    also tend to make situational attributions for
    our own behaviors and dispositional ones for the
    behavior of others.
  • This is called the actor-observer effect.
  • It may be engendered in part because we are more
    acutely aware of how our own behavior varies from
    situation to situation.

17
  • Figure 14.3
  • Participants were asked whether certain people
    had certain traits, such as leniency, the
    opposite traits, such as firmness, or whether
    it depended on the situation. They were most
    likely to say that their own behavior depended on
    the situation and least likely to say it
    depends for Walter Cronkite, the person they
    knew the least. (Based on data of Nisbett,
    Caputo, Legant, Marecek, 1973)

18
Social Perception and Cognition
  • The Actor-Observer Effect
  • We also tend in general to attribute unusual
    behavior in people to internal causes.
  • We do not perceive ourselves as stable objects
    (because we are observing) but we see other
    people as such.
  • When we watch ourselves on videotape, we tend to
    make more dispositional attributions about our
    own behavior.

19
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Using Attributions to Control Perceptions of
    Ourselves
  • Attributions that we use to optimize our
    perception of ourselves are called self-serving
    biases.
  • You attribute your victory in a tennis match to
    your extraordinary skill.
  • You attribute your failing mathematics to unfair
    tests.

20
Social Perception and Cognition
  • Using Attributions to Control Perceptions of
    Ourselves
  • We also use self-handicapping strategies to
    protect our self-image.
  • We intentionally put ourselves at a disadvantage
    to provide an excuse for an expected defeat or
    failure.
  • For example, eating a whole pizza one half-hour
    before a swim meet with the current league
    champions.

21
Social Perception and Cognition
  • We are usually not fully aware of the reasons for
    others behavior, or our own.
  • We try to make good guesses about both.
    Understanding the theories of social perception
    and cognition can help us to improve our accuracy.

22
Module 14.2
  • Attitudes and Persuasion

23
Social Psychology
  • Attitudes and Their Influence
  • An attitude is a like or dislike that influences
    our behavior toward a person or thing.
  • Persuasion refers to any attempt to change your
    attitudes and thus your behavior.

24
Social Psychology
  • Attitudes and Their Influence
  • Measuring attitudes and the effectiveness of
    persuasive techniques is a challenging task.
  • People answer attitude questionnaires
    impulsively.
  • People answer attitude questionnaires depending
    on how they interpret the question.
  • People may hold conflicting or mixed attitudes
    about some subjects.

25
  • Figure 14.4
  • Likert scales, such as this one assessing
    attitudes toward labor unions, are commonly used
    in attitude research. Subjects rate the degree to
    which they agree or disagree with items that
    measure various aspects of a particular attitude.

26
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Routes of Attitude Change and Persuasion
  • When making serious decisions, people tend to
    invest time and effort in evaluating the evidence
    and logic behind the message.
  • This is the central route to persuasion.

27
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Routes of Attitude Change and Persuasion
  • When evaluating a message on a topic or decision
    of relatively little importance, people pay more
    attention to relatively superficial aspects such
    as the speakers appearance or the amount of
    evidence (instead of its quality.)
  • This is the peripheral route to persuasion.

28
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Highly Resistant Attitudes
  • Peoples attitudes tend to fall along a
    continuum. Some attitudes are strongly held and
    could only be changed using the central route to
    persuasion, others are less unshakable and could
    be easily changed using the peripheral route.
  • Some strongly held opinions are based on hardly
    any knowledge or evidence at all.
  • Facts? Dont try to confuse me with the facts!

29
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Delayed Influence of Messages
  • Messages may have no effect when we first
    encounter them, but change our attitudes later.
  • The Sleeper Effect - delayed persuasion by an
    initially rejected message.
  • Minority Influence - those who hold an unpopular
    opinion eventually change the attitudes of those
    who hold the majority opinion.

30
  • Table 14.1
  • The Political Platform of the U.S. Socialist
    Party, 1900

31
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Presenting Persuasive Messages
  • There are two broad categories of persuasive
    messages
  • Do what is asked of you to make something good
    happen.
  • Do what is asked of you and prevent something bad
    from happening (chain letters and some internet
    hoaxes work on this principle they almost always
    feature an implied threat.)

32
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Audience Variables in Persuasion
  • Person Variables
  • Level of cognitive abilities
  • Importance of message to person
  • Mood of person
  • Situation Variables
  • Perceived similarity between the audience and the
    speaker

33
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • People with Heightened Resistance
  • What if people know they are about to hear an
    argument with which they will most likely
    disagree?
  • Telling them that this is the case will increase
    the likelihood that they will reject the argument
    (the Forewarning Effect.)
  • Presenting a weak version of an argument and
    following it with a stronger version increases
    the chance that the strong one will be rejected
    also (the Inoculation Effect.)

34
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Strategies of Persuasion
  • Common techniques of persuasion to know and
    resist!
  • A modest request is followed by a larger one (the
    foot-in-the-door technique.)
  • An outrageous initial request is followed by a
    more reasonable one (the door-in-the-face
    technique.)
  • A very favorable deal is followed by additional
    demands after a commitment has been made (the
    bait-and-switch technique.)
  • The offer is improved before any reply is given
    (the thats-not-all technique.)

35
Concept Check
  • Name that form of persuasion
  • A friend asks you to watch her kid brother one
    afternoon when she has an after school date.
    When her mother gets home, she asks you if you
    would come back every Tuesday and Thursday and
    baby-sit.

Foot-in-the-door
36
  • Name that form of persuasion
  • The person you are madly in love with wants you
    to take him/her to the Hullapalooza Rock Festival
    next month. You agree to treat to the tickets.
    You are then informed that he/she wont go
    without two good friends who also cant afford
    the tickets.

Bait-and-Switch
37
  • Name that form of persuasion
  • The infomercial MC says that if you call within
    the next 30 minutes to buy one jar of Lard-off
    Miracle Fat Burning Cream, he will throw in two
    more jars at the same low price of 59.99.

Thats-not-All!
38
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Cognitive Dissonance
  • Cognitive Dissonance Theory suggests that an
    individuals behavior can change his or her
    attitudes.
  • Cognitive dissonance refers to a state of tension
    that exists when an individual realizes that they
    hold contradictory attitudes on an issue, or has
    exhibited behavior that is inconsistent with an
    expressed attitude.

39
  • Figure 14.6
  • Cognitive dissonance is a state of tension that
    arises when people perceive that their attitudes
    do not match their behavior. Theoretically, they
    could resolve this discrepancy by changing either
    their attitudes or their behavior or by
    developing a new attitude or excuse to explain
    the discrepancy. Most of the research, however,
    has focused on how cognitive dissonance leads to
    a change of attitude

40
Attitudes and Persuasion
  • Cognitive Dissonance
  • The classic study on cognitive dissonance was
    done by Festinger and Carlsmith in 1959.
  • A variety of interesting experiments have shown
    that cognitive dissonance has effects on our
    attitudes.
  • The effect of cognitive dissonance on attitudes
    varies cross-culturally.

41
  • Figure 14.7
  • In a classic experiment demonstrating cognitive
    dissonance, participants were paid either 1 or
    20 for telling another subject that they enjoyed
    an experiment (which was actually boring). Later
    they were asked for their real opinions. Those
    participants who were paid the smaller amount
    said that they enjoyed the study more than the
    others. (Based on data from Festinger
    Carlsmith, 1959)

42
Persuasion and Manipulation
  • Throughout your life you will make decisions
    about matters. Some will be important and some
    will be trivial.
  • It is important to understand and remember the
    techniques of persuasion that you have learned
    about in this module, for those who try to change
    your attitudes or behavior may not necessarily
    have your best interests at heart.

43
Module 14.3
  • Interpersonal Attraction

44
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Established Lasting Relationships
  • How do we choose the people who become our
    friends?
  • We are likely to become friends with people who
    live near us and become familiar to us. This
    effect is called proximity.
  • The more often we see someone or something the
    more likely we are to start to like the person or
    thing this is called the mere exposure effect.
  • The mere exposure effect will not change our
    feelings if we hate the person and thing.

45
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Established Lasting Relationships
  • We also tend to be drawn to those who are like
    ourselves in background, attitudes, interests and
    other important ways.
  • We choose people who tend to confirm our
    self-concept and level of self-esteem.
  • We seek people with whom we feel we can make
    equitable transactions of goods and services
    according to exchange or equity theories, which
    view social relationships as transactions.

46
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Special Concerns in Selecting a Mate
  • Physical Attractiveness
  • Though people are reticent to admit it, it is
    important to both sexes.
  • Attractive people are generally treated better
    than others, creating a self-fulfilling prophecy
    that confirms their good self-evaluation.

47
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Special Concerns in Selecting a Mate
  • Physical Attractiveness.
  • Comparative psychology research suggests that in
    other species attractiveness may be interpreted
    as an indicator of good health and good genes.
  • What is considered attractive in most cultures
    is roughly synonymous with what is considered
    normal or average-looking.
  • Research evidence for these hypotheses is mixed
    and should be interpreted with caution.

48
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Special Concerns in Selecting a Mate
  • Marriage is valued in our society as a crucial
    social institution and source of fulfillment, but
    a disturbing number of marriages end in divorce.
  • What is so difficult about achieving a satisfying
    and lasting marriage?

49
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Special Concerns in Selecting a Mate
  • Characteristics of successful marriages
  • Partners have similar attitudes and
    personalities.
  • Both partners find the relationship sexually
    satisfying.
  • They earn an adequate income for their lifestyle.
  • The husband feels pride in his job.
  • The wife was not pregnant before the couple
    married.
  • The couples parents also had successful
    marriages.

50
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Special Concerns in Selecting a Mate
  • Trying to save a troubled marriage
  • The results of marriage counseling are not
    encouraging.
  • Usually one partner has given up before the
    counseling starts.
  • Marriage counselors often give well-meaning
    advice that does not work.
  • Couples need encouragement to treat each other
    with respect during periods of stress and
    turmoil.
  • Every marriage has troubled times, and it is
    important to try to repair problems quickly when
    they arise.

51
Interpersonal Attraction
  • Humans tend to crave contact with others even
    mediocre company is better than none.
  • In our important relationships, we need to know
    more about our companions. To achieve fulfilling
    relationships requires choosing our friends and
    intimates wisely.

52
Module 14.4
  • Interpersonal Influence

53
Interpersonal Influence
  • Other people influence us in two major ways
  • They give us information about situations.
  • They set the norms (the rules that establish
    expected behavior) by which we conduct ourselves
    in situations.

54
  • Figure 14.11
  • In Aschs conformity studies, subjects were asked
    to match one line with one of three other lines
    on another card. They were surrounded by people
    who gave obviously wrong answers.

55
Interpersonal Influence
  • Conformity
  • Conformity is the maintenance or the alteration
    of ones behavior to match the behavior and
    expectations of others.
  • At first it was believed that people were most
    likely conform in ambiguous situations where it
    is common to be unsure of ones own judgment.
  • Aschs classic experiment demonstrated that
    conformity was also likely even when one could be
    fairly sure that his or her judgment was correct.

56
Interpersonal Influence
  • Conformity
  • Apparently the need to conform is likely to
    overwhelm our need to be correct or feel right in
    our judgments.
  • Size of group did not have much of an impact it
    was as hard for a subject to disagree in a group
    of 3 as in a group of 13.
  • Two people had an easier time disagreeing with
    the majority than one person did.

57
  • Figure 14.14
  • In Aschs experiments participants who were faced
    with a unanimous majority giving wrong answers
    conformed to the majority view on 32 of trials.
    Participants who had one ally giving the
    correct answer were less likely to conform.
    Evidently, it is less difficult to be in a
    minority of two

58
Interpersonal Influence
  • Conformity
  • Aschs experiment has been done in other
    cultures.
  • Cross-culturally the behaviors were the same.
  • The motivations expressed were somewhat different
    (Asian subjects, for example, said they did not
    wish to embarrass the others in the group.)

59
Interpersonal Influence
  • Responsibility Toward Others
  • Bystander Helpfulness or Apathy
  • Why do people fail to intervene sometimes during
    a crime or accident?
  • The presence of many people during a crime may
    create a sense of diffusion of responsibility.
  • We may convince ourselves that if there are many
    other people present, someone else will help, so
    we need do nothing.

60
Interpersonal Influence
  • Responsibility Toward Others
  • Bystander Helpfulness or Apathy
  • Pluralistic ignorance is another explanation for
    this disturbing lack of action.
  • People will sometimes assume in the absence of
    information that others have a different and
    better-informed opinion.
  • They will decide therefore to say or do nothing.

61
Interpersonal Influence
  • Responsibility Toward Others
  • Social Loafing
  • Social loafing refers to the tendency to loaf
    or to do less work when we are with other people.
  • The extent of the loafing sometimes depends on
    group members perceptions of each others
    ability levels.
  • The effects are most pronounced when the task is
    considered unimportant.
  • Social loafing is less commonly observed in
    cultures with a more collectivist mentality.

62
Interpersonal Influence
  • Group Decision-Making
  • Although there are some advantages to appointing
    committees to review evidence and make decisions,
    there are also some special pitfalls to group
    decision-making processes.
  • Since all of us will probably be part of group
    decision-making processes during our lives, it is
    useful to understand how these problems can occur.

63
Interpersonal Influence
  • Group Decision-Making
  • Group Polarization
  • If most members of a group already have a strong
    opinion on a matter they will lean even more
    strongly in that direction after discussing the
    issue.
  • Under such circumstances discussion serves the
    purposes of making the group more extreme in its
    views rather than opening a dialog on differing
    opinions.

64
Interpersonal Influence
  • Group Decision-Making
  • Groupthink
  • Group members may suppress doubts about an issue
    or decision for fear of making trouble or being
    ostracized.
  • Groupthink is the term invented for this
    tendency.
  • Sometimes dominant members will silence
    dissenters, but sometimes dissenters will silence
    themselves.

65
Interpersonal Influence
  • Group Decision-Making
  • Groupthink
  • The decisions to invade the Bay of Pigs and to
    launch the space shuttle Challenger are famous
    historical examples of groupthink.
  • Groupthink is a tendency that emerges in groups
    regardless of the level of cohesion.
  • One way to guard against groupthink is to appoint
    an official devils advocate whose job it is to
    present opposing viewpoints.

66
Interpersonal Influence
  • Conformity Good and Bad
  • Conformity to rules that benefit the members of
    society in general is necessary for our survival
    as a species.
  • It may be just as vital, however, for some of us
    to resist that urge in certain situations where
    the human need for conformity may override our
    ability to see the truth and take action where it
    is necessary to prevent destructive mistakes.

67
Module 14.5
  • The Power of the Social Situation

68
The Power of the Social Situation
  • Behavior Traps
  • We are often quite judgmental when we see people
    who have done something that seems senseless or
    foolish from our standpoint.
  • Under some circumstances, most of us are capable
    of the same behaviors we are judging.

69
The Power of the Social Situation
  • Behavior Traps
  • The situation sometimes influences, even coerces
    us, into self-defeating behaviors.
  • We refer to these situations as behavior traps
    because we often wander into them without
    realizing the danger until it is too late.
  • There are several categories of behavior traps.

70
Behavior Traps
  • Escalation of Conflict
  • Once a conflict is started, it is often very
    difficult for the participants to quit, even when
    the situation becomes harmful for us.
  • Psychologists have held auctions for 1.00 bills
    in which bidders were willing to pay 25.00 for
    the single dollar just to successfully outbid an
    opponent.

71
Behavior Traps
  • The Prisoners Dilemma
  • A prisoners dilemma is a situation in which a
    person must choose between a cooperative act and
    an act very beneficial only to him or herself and
    most likely hurtful to others.
  • In the many variants of the dilemma, people have
    great difficulty choosing the cooperative option,
    even in the face of the distinct possibility of
    the competitive or selfish strategy backfiring
    and being quite a costly choice.

72
  • Figure 14.16
  • In the prisoners dilemma, each person
    considering the choice alone finds it beneficial
    to confess. But when both people confess, they
    suffer worse consequences than if both had
    refused to confess.

73
Behavior Traps
  • The Prisoners Dilemma
  • In general, even our cooperative strategies
    require some degree of individual recognition.
  • We tend to engage in reciprocal altruism, helping
    others with the understanding that they are
    supposed to eventually help us.
  • We need to keep track of who holds up his or her
    end of the bargain, and who does not, so that we
    know with who it is in our best interest to
    cooperate.

74
Behavior Traps
  • The Commons Dilemma
  • The commons dilemma takes its name from a parable
    in which a common resource is overused by those
    who share it.
  • This is generally what happens when people must
    share such a resource.
  • Research on the commons dilemma shows that in
    some hypothetical situations, people can imagine
    themselves refraining in their use of a resource
    if their living depends upon it.

75
  • Figure 14.17
  • The commons dilemma Unless the users agree to
    moderate their use of a common resource, it will
    soon be used up. For example, years of
    overfishing off the coast of Newfoundland so
    thoroughly depleted the fish population that the
    Canadian government finally had to ban commercial
    fishing.

76
Behavior Traps
  • Obedience to Authority
  • The Nuremberg Trial, at which many Nazi war
    criminals took the stand and said in their own
    defense I was just following orders, provoked
    international outrage.
  • People all over the world said to themselves I
    would never follow such immoral orders.

77
Behavior Traps
  • Obedience to Authority
  • Stanley Milgram set up an experiment to find out
    how realistic that claim actually was.
  • In his classic experiment, he was able to show
    that, at least in the laboratory, almost
    three-quarters of experimental subjects would
    follow orders to hurt someone if the authority
    figure and the situation demanded it.
  • Variations of the original experiment were done,
    and although compliance could be lowered in some
    instances, some of participants still followed
    orders.

78
  • Figure 14.21
  • Milgram varied his procedure in many ways to find
    out what elements promoted or inhibited
    obedience. Division of responsibility increased
    obedience an implication of personal
    responsibility decreased obedience.

79
Behavior Traps
  • Obedience to Authority
  • Many experts predicted a different result when
    told about the plan for this experiment.
  • It was thought that only a very few, very
    abnormal people would agree to give the higher
    levels of shock.
  • Some scientists and others refused to believe
    these results. Milgrams career suffered because
    what he told us about ourselves was not very
    comforting.
  • Todays ethical standards for experimentation
    would probably have prevented this study from
    being done.

80
The Power of the Social Situation
  • We can teach people to cooperate and help each
    other in some instances.
  • But it is possible that in order to discourage
    destructive behavior in people, sometimes we
    would be well advised to consider changing the
    situation instead.
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