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Behavior and attitudes

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Title: Behavior and attitudes


1
Behavior and attitudes
  • Chapter 4

2
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3
Behavior and attitudes
  • How well do our attitudes predict our behavior?
  • When does our behavior affect our attitudes
  • Why does our behavior affect our attitudes?
  • Postscript Changing ourselves through action

4
Behavior and attitudes
  • What is the relationship between what we are (on
    the inside) and what we do (on the outside)?
  • Connections between attitude action, character
    conduct, private word public deed
  • Assumption our private beliefs feelings
    determine our public behavior
  • Change behavior - change hearts minds first

5
Behavior and attitudes
  • Leon Festinger (1964) - evidence showed that
    changing peoples attitudes hardly affects
    behavior
  • Attitude
  • A favorable or unfavorable evaluative reaction
    toward something or someone(often rooted in ones
    beliefs, exhibited in ones feelings intended
    behaviors
  • Thus a person may have a negative attitude
    towards coffee, a neutral attitude towards the
    French a positive attitude towards their
    neighbor

6
Behavior and attitudes
  • Attitudes provide an efficient way to size up the
    world
  • E.g., a person who believes a particular ethnic
    group is lazy aggressive may feel dislike for
    such people therefore intentionally act in a
    discriminatory manner
  • Study of attitudes major concern for social
    psychology
  • Three dimensions as the ABCs of attitudes
  • Affect (feelings), behavior tendency, cognition
    (thoughts).

7
How well do our attitudes predict our behavior
  • Allan Wicker (1969) concluded that attitudes
    hardly predicted varying behavior
  • Students attitude to cheating bore little
    relation to likelihood of their actually cheating
  • Attitudes toward the church were only modestly
    linked with church attendance
  • Self-described racial attitudes provided little
    clue to behaviors in actual situations

8
Do our attitudes predict our behavior?
  • moral hypocrisy appearing moral while
    avoiding the costs of being so (D. Batson
    colleagues, 1997,2002)
  • Studies presented people with appealing task
    raffle tickets toward 30.00 prize dull task
    with no positive consequences.
  • Participants had to assign themselves supposed
    other participant to one or the other tasks
    only 1 in 20 believed that assigning themselves
    to positive task was moral
  • But! 80 did so when morality greed were put
    on collision course, greed won!

9
Do our attitudes affect our behavior?
  • We are it seems a population of hypocrites
  • What controls behavior
  • Emphasis on external social influences others
    behavior expectations played down internal
    factors such as attitudes personality
  • Original thesis that attitudes determine actions
    was countered in 1960s by the antithesis that
    attitudes determine virtually nothing

10
When attitudes predict behavior
  • Behavior our expressed attitudes differ because
    both are subject to other influences
  • Might attitudes accurately predict behavior if we
    neutralize other influences?
  • We measure expressed attitudes
  • We say what we think others want to hear
  • Late 2002 many US legislators, sensing
    countrys post9/11 fear, anger patriot fervor
    publicly voted support for Bushs planned war
    against Iraq (privately having reservations)
  • On roll-call vote, strong social influences
    fear of criticism had distorted true sentiments

11
When social influences on what we say are minimal
  • There are some clever ways to minimize social
    influences on peoples attitude reports
  • Measure facial muscle responses to various
    statements
  • Bogus pipeline to the heart wire people to
    fake lie detector which participants are told is
    real (show them how well it displays previous
    attitude results then ask new questions
  • Irony in deceiving to elicit truthfulness
  • Implicit association test (IAT) reaction times
    to measure how quickly people associate concepts

12
When other influences on behavior are minimal
  • Not only inner attitudes that guide but also
    situations
  • Would averaging many occasions enable us to
    detect more clearly impact of attitudes?
  • Knowing the players (baseball, cricket) we can
    predict their approximate batting averages
  • Religious attitudes predict quite well he total
    quantity of religious behaviors over time
  • Effects of attitude become more apparent when
    looking at persons average behavior rahter than
    isolated acts

13
When attitudes specific to behavior are examined
  • Attitudes do predict behavior in which the
    measured attitude was directly pertinent to
    situation
  • Attitudes toward general concept of health
    fitness poorly predicts exercise dietary
    practices
  • But individuals attitudes about costs benefits
    of jogging are strong predictors of whether
    he/she jogs regularly
  • To change habits through persuasion alter
    peoples attitudes towards specific practices
  • An attitude predicts behavior better when the
    attitude is potent

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When attitudes are potent
  • Much of behavior is automatic
  • Acting without reflecting
  • Such mindlessness is adaptive frees mind to
    work on other things
  • In novel situations behavior less automatic,
    attitudes become more potent
  • We think before we act
  • If prompted to think about our attitudes before
    acting, would we be truer to ourselves? Yes! Our
    attitudes become potent if we think about them
  • Self-conscious people are usually in touch with
    their attitudes

16
When attitudes are potent
  • Make them self-aware! Perhaps by having them act
    in front of a mirror promotes consistency
    between word deed
  • Nearly all students say cheating is morally wrong
  • Students to work on anagram problem related to IQ
    told to stop when bell rang left alone 71 of
    students did not stop
  • Among students made self-aware by working in
    front of mirror while hearing own tape-recorded
    voices only 7 cheated
  • Batson colleagues (1999) found that mirrors did
    bring behavior into line with espoused moral
    attitudes
  • Our attitudes predict our actions if
  • Other influences are minimal
  • The attitude is specific to the action
  • The attitude is potent, as when we are reminded
    of it or made self-conscious

17
When does our behavior affect our attitudes?
  • Behavior determines attitudes
  • True that we sometimes stand up for what we
    believe
  • Also true that we come to believe what we stand
    up for
  • Sarah hypnotized told to remove shoes when book
    dropped when asked why se removed shoes? She
    replied that feet were hot tired
  • The act produces the idea

18
Role playing
19
Role Playing
  • Role
  • Set of norms that defines how people in a given
    social position ought to behave
  • Zimbardo experiment (1971)
  • to find out
  • Is prison brutality a product of evil prisoners
    malicious guards?
  • Do the institutional roles of guards prisoner
    embitter harden even compassionate people?
  • Do the people make the place violent?
  • Or does the place make the people violent?

20
Zimbardo experiment
21
Role Playing
  • Flipped coin for who played guards prisoners
  • Gave guards uniforms, reflective sun glasses,
    clubs whistles instructed them to enforce
    rules
  • Guards began to disparage prisoners
  • Some devised cruel degrading routines
  • Prisoners broke down, rebelled or became
    apathetic
  • Growing confusion between reality illusion,
    between role playing self-identity
  • Forced to stop after only 6 days
  • Deeper lesson of role-playing concerns how what
    is unreal can subtly evolve into what is real
  • In new career, as teacher, soldier, we enact a
    role that shapes our attitudes

22
Abu Ghraib degradation of prisoners
23
When saying becomes believing
  • People often adapt what they say to please the
    listener
  • Quicker to tell good news than bad
  • Adjust messages to listeners position
  • When induced to give spoken or written support to
    something they doubt, will often feel bad about
    deceit
  • But begin to believe what they said
  • When there is no compelling external explanation
    for ones words, saying becomes believing
  • Impression management in expressing our thoughts
    to others, we sometimes tailor our words to what
    we think the others will want to hear.

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25
The foot in the door phenomenon
  • If you want people to do a big favor for you
    effective strategy is to get them to do a small
    favor first
  • Foot-in-the-door phenomenon
  • 46 TO suburbanites willing to give to C cancer
    Society when approached directly others asked a
    day ahead to wear a lapel pin (which all agreed
    to do) were nearly twice as likely to donate
  • In these experiments, the initial compliance
    wearing a lapel pin, stating ones intention,
    signing a petition was voluntary
  • When people commit themselves to public behaviors
    perceive those acts as their own doing, they
    come to believe more strongly in what they have
    done

26
Foot-in-the-door
27
The foot in the door phenomenon
  • Low-ball technique
  • A tactic for getting people to agree to
    something. People who agree to an initial request
    will often still comply when the requester ups
    the ante. People who receive only the costly
    request are less likely to comply with it

28
Low-ball technique
29
The foot in the door phenomenon
  • Cialdini (1978) trained for three years in sales,
    fund-raising advertising agencies to better
    understand why one person says yes to another
  • He discovered how they exploit the weapons of
    influence
  • Low-ball technique tactic used by car dealers
  • After customer agrees to buy because of bargain
    price, starts completing sales forms
    salesperson removes price advantage by charging
    for options or checking with boss who disallows
    deal wed we losing money
  • Folklore has it that the low-balled customer now
    sticks with higher priced than would have agreed
    at the outset
  • Airlines hotels also used tactic by attracting
    inquiries with great deals, then hoping customer
    will agree to higher price option

30
Evil and moral acts
  • Evil sometimes results from gradually escalating
    commitments
  • A trifling evil act can whittle down ones moral
    sensitivity making it easier to perform a worse
    act
  • Evil acts influence attitudes paradoxical fact
    that we tend not only to hurt those we dislike
    but also to dislike those we hurt
  • Several studies found that harming an innocent
    victim by uttering hurtful comments or
    delivering electric shocks typically leads
    aggressors to disparage their victims thus
    helping them justify their cruel behavior
  • This is especially so when we are coaxed into it
    not coerced
  • When we agree to a deed voluntarily, we take more
    responsibility for it

31
Evil and moral acts
  • A group that holds another in slavery will likely
    come to perceive the slaves as having traits that
    justify their oppression
  • The more one harms another, adjusts ones
    attitudes, the easier harm-doing becomes
  • Evil acts shape the self but so do moral acts
  • Our character is reflected in what we do when we
    think no one is looking
  • Moral action, especially when chosen rather than
    coerced, affects moral thinking
  • Positive behavior fosters liking for the person
  • Doing a favor for an experimenter or tutoring a
    student usually increases liking of the person
    helped
  • If you wish to love someone more, act as if you do

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Interracial behavior racial attitudes
  • If moral action feeds moral attitudes will
    positive interracial behavior reduce racial
    prejudice?
  • Much as mandatory seat belt use has produced more
    favorable seat belt attitudes
  • Social scientists testimony in 1954 before
    Supreme court decision to desegregate schools
  • If we wait for the heart to change through
    preaching teaching we will wait for a long time
    for racial justice
  • If we legislate moral action, we can, under the
    right conditions indirectly affect heartfelt
    attitudes
  • Following Supreme Court decision the of White
    Americans favoring integrated schools jumped
  • Interracial behavior increased

34
Social Movements
  • Societys laws therefore its behavior can have
    a strong influence on its racial attitudes
  • Danger lies in possibility of employing same idea
    for political socialization on a mass scale
  • Participation in the Nazi rallies, displaying the
    Nazi flag, public greeting Heil Hitler
    profound inconsistency between behavior belief
    for Germans
  • German greeting was a powerful conditioning
    device
  • Prevented from saying what they believed tried
    to establish psychic equilibrium by consciously
    making themselves believe what they said
  • This practice not limited to Totalitarian regimes
  • Political rituals daily flag salute, singing
    National anthem- use public conformity to build a
    private belief in patriotism

35
Social movements
36
Social movements
  • 1950s Korean war prisoners (POW) went through a
    thought control program
  • Captors methods included gradual escalation of
    demands
  • Starting with trivial requests gradually
    working up to more significant ones
  • Once a prisoner had spoken or written a
    statement, felt an inner need to make beliefs
    consistent with acts
  • Start small and build big tactic was an effective
    application of the foot-in-the-door technique
  • Continues to be so today in socialization of
    terrorists torturers

37
Summing-up When does our behavior affect our
attitudes?
  • The attitude-action relation works in reverse
    direction not only to think ourselves into
    action but also to act ourselves into a way of
    thinking
  • Similarly, what we say or write can strongly
    influence attitudes that we subsequently hold
  • Research on the foot-in-the-door phenomenon
    reveals that committing a small act later makes
    people more willing to do a larger one
  • Actions also affect our moral attitudes that
    which we have done even if its evil, we tend to
    justify
  • Similarly our racial political behaviors help
    shape our social consciousness
  • Political social movements may legislate
    behavior designed to lead to attitude change on a
    mass scale

38
Why does our behavior affect our attitudes
  • What theories explain the attitudes-follow-behavio
    r phenomenon?
  • How does the contest between these theories
    illustrate the process of scientific
    explanations?
  • Why does action affect attitudes?
  • Three possible sources suspected
  • Self-presentation theory for strategic reasons
    we express attitudes that make us appear
    consistent
  • Cognitive dissonance theory to reduce
    discomfort we justify our actions to ourselves
  • Self-perception theory our actions are
    self-revealing (when uncertain about our feelings
    or beliefs we look to our behavior)

39
Self-presentation Impression management
  • Who among us does not care what people think?
  • Spend on cosmetics, clothes, plastic surgery,
    diets
  • See making a good impression as a way to gain
    social material rewards
  • To feel better about ourselves
  • To become more secure in our social identities

40
Self-presentation impression management
  • No one wants to look foolishly inconsistent
  • To avoid this we express attitudes that match our
    actions
  • We may pretend those attitudes
  • Even if it means displaying a little insincerity
    or hypocrisy it can pay off
  • People exhibit much smaller attitude change when
    a fake lie detector inhibits them from trying to
    make a good impression
  • But there is more to attitude changes than
    self-presentation

41
Self-justification cognitive dissonance
  • Our attitudes change motivated to maintain
    consistency among cognitions
  • Leon Festingers (1957) cognitive dissonance
    theory
  • Assumes that we feel tension, or lack of harmony
    (dissonance) when 2 simultaneously accessible
    thoughts or beliefs (cognitions) are
    psychologically inconsistent (i.e., when we
    decide to say or do something we have mixed
    feelings about)
  • To reduce this unpleasant arousal, we adjust our
    thinking
  • Mostly to discrepancies between behavior
    attitudes
  • British survey 50 of smokers disagreed with
    nonsmokers who nearly all agreed that smoking is
    really as dangerous as people say

42
Cognitive dissonance insufficient justification
  • Famous experiment by Festinger for 1 hour you
    perform dull tasks (such as turning wooden knobs
    again again)
  • Then you are persuaded to tell next participant
    (who is accomplice to experimenter) that it was
    interesting
  • Accomplice tells you that previous friend found
    it boring
  • Oh, no, you reply saying how interesting it
    really is what good exercise you get from
    turning knobs
  • Someone else gets you to fill in questionnaire
    asking you how much you actually enjoyed your
    knob-turning
  • Now for the prediction under which condition are
    you most likely to believe your little lie say
    that experiment was interesting? When paid only
    1 for fibbing or when paid 20 as others were?

43
Insufficient justification
  • Those paid just 1 (hardly justification for a
    lie)would be most likely to adjust their
    attitudes to their actions
  • Having insufficient justification for their
    actions experience more discomfort (dissonance)
    motivated to believe in what they had done
  • Those paid 20 had sufficient justification for
    what they had done hence experienced less
    dissonance
  • Cognitive dissonance theory focuses not on
    relative effectiveness of rewards punishments
    after the act but rather on what induces a
    desired action
  • Students who perceive their required community
    service as something they would have chosen to do
    are more likely to anticipate future volunteering
    than those who feel coerced

44
Dissonance after decisions
  • When faced with important decision what college
    to attend, whom to date, which job to accept
    torn between 2 equally attractive alternatives
  • You may recall a time when having committed
    yourself painfully aware of dissonance
    cognitions
  • The desirable features of what you had rejected
    the undesirable features of what you have chosen
  • After making important decisions usually reduce
    dissonance by upgrading chosen alternatives
    downgrading unchosen option
  • Jack Brehm (1956) experiment on dissonance had
    women rate 8 products - then showed 2 products
    women rated closely told them they could have
    whichever they chose
  • When rerating products, women increased their
    evaluation of the product they chose decreased
    evaluation of the unchosen one

45
Self-perception
  • Consider how we make inferences about other
    peoples attitudes
  • How a person acts in a particular situation
    then attribute behavior either to persons traits
    attitudes or to environmental forces
  • Self-perception theory (Daryl Bem, 1972) assumes
    that we make similar inferences when we observe
    our own behavior
  • The acts we freely commit are self-revealing
  • Self-perception theory the theory that when we
    are unsure of our attitudes, we infer them much
    as would someone observing us, by looking at our
    behavior circumstances under which it occurs

46
Self-perception
  • Do people who observe themselves agreeing to
    small requests come to perceive themselves as
    helpful sorts who respond positively to requests
    for help?
  • Perhaps this is why in the foot-in-the-door
    experiments people will later agree to larger
    requests
  • Yes indeed, behavior can modify self-concept

47
Self-expressions attitude
  • Experiments on facial expressions Laird (1974)
    induced college students to frown while attaching
    electrodes to their faces contract these
    muscles, pull your brows together students
    reported feeling angry
  • Induced students to smile they felt happier
    found cartoons more humorous
  • Those induced to repeatedly practice happy
    expressions may recall more happy memories find
    happy mood lingering
  • Viewing ones face in the mirror magnifies
    self-perception effect
  • Its tough to smile feel grouchy
  • When we are afraid just whistle a happy tune

48
Expressions attitudes
  • Want to feel better? Walk for a minute taking
    long strides with your arms swinging your eyes
    straight ahead
  • If our expressions influence our feelings then
    would imitating others expressions help us know
    what they are feeling?
  • Experiment by K. Vaughan J. Lanzdetta (1981)
    suggested that it would
  • Students observed someone getting electric shock
  • Told some of observers to make a pained
    expression whenever the shock come on
  • Compared with students who did not act out
    expressions these students perspired more had
    faster heart rates
  • Acing out persons emotion enabled observers to
    feel more empathy
  • The implication to sense how other people are
    feeling, let your own face mirror their
    expressions

49
Expressions attitudes
  • We synchronize our movements, postures, tones
    of voice with others
  • Doing so helps tune in to what theyre feeling
  • Makes for emotional contagion which helps explain
    why its fun to be around happy people
    depressing to be around depressed people

50
Over justification intrinsic motivations
  • Insufficient justification effect smallest
    incentive that will get people to do something
    usually most effective
  • They get to like activity keep doing it
  • Cognitive dissonance offers 1 explanation for
    this
  • When external inducements are insufficient to
    justify behavior we reduce dissonance by
    justifying behavior internally
  • Self-perception theory offers different
    explanation
  • people explain behavior by noting conditions
    under which it occurs
  • we observe our uncoerced action infer our
    attitude

51
Over justification intrinsic motivation
  • Contrary to notion that rewards always increase
    motivation unnecessary rewards can have a
    hidden cost
  • Rewarding people for doing what they already
    enjoy may lead them to attribute action to the
    reward
  • Thus undermining their self-perception that they
    do it because they like it
  • Experiments have confirmed this over
    justification effect
  • Pay people for playing with puzzles, they will
    later play with puzzles less than those who play
    for no pay
  • Over justification effect the result of bribing
    people to do what they already life doing they
    may then see their actions as externally
    controlled rather than intrinsically appealing

52
Over justification intrinsic motivations
  • Self-perception theory implies an unanticipated
    reward does not diminish intrinsic interest
  • People can still attribute actions to their own
    motivation
  • When rightly administered rewards can boost
    creativity
  • Over justification effect occurs when someone
    offers unnecessary reward beforehand in an
    obvious effort to control behavior
  • What matters is what reward implies
  • Rewards praise that inform people of their
    achievements make them feel, Im very good at
    this boost intrinsic motivation
  • Rewards that seek to control people lead them
    to believe it was a reward that cause their
    effort I did it for money diminish
    intrinsic appeal of an enjoyable task

53
Intrinsic extrinsic motivaion
  • When people do something they enjoy, without
    reward or coercion, they attribute their behavior
    to their love of the activity.
  • External rewards undermine intrinsic motivation
    by leading people to attribute their behavior to
    the incentive
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