Title: Social Psychology
1Social Psychology
- Lecture 4
- Person Perception Deception
- Jane Clarbour
- Room PS/BOO7 email jc129 Tel (01904-43)-3168
2Objectives
- Specify the kinds of social situations in which
person perception is important. - Give an account of what is meant by the
self-fulfilling prophecy. - Describe the basic principles of the Profile of
Nonverbal Sensitivity (PONS). - Evaluate tests of person perception.
- Discuss the role of emotional control as a social
skill in deception ability
3Introduction
- Definition of person perception
- Forming of judgements about other people,
particularly in relation to their personality or
mood - Used in
- Job interviews can effect whole life
- Psychiatric classification
- Informal social contacts with others
- Judgements we make affect our behaviour towards
others
4Different approaches
- Person perception has been studied in a number of
different ways - Systematic biases in perception
- Attribution theory
- Implicit theories of personality
- Focus on Accuracy and Deception
5Impression Formation
- Our impressions of others are shaped by their
communication - Facial expressions.
- Body movements.
- Do people differ in using nonverbal cues?
- Can women "read" nonverbal cues better than men?
6Accuracy of person perception
- Accuracy of person perception in relation to the
social skills model - Interviewer ability to select right person for
the job - Accurate clinical diagnosis to select correct
treatment - Marital satisfaction
- happier marriages better perception of partners
non-verbal cues (Noller Feeney, 1994)
7Inaccuracy in person perceptionSelf-fulfilling
prophecy
- Self-fulfilling prophecy
- An initial false definition of the situation
which evokes a new behaviour which makes the
originally false conception come true
8Example of Self-Fulfilling Prophecy ROSENTHAL
JACOBSON (1968)
- Children given IQ test
- 20 randomly assigned to an experimental
condition - teachers told academic development exceptional)
- Retested at year end experimental group showed
sig. IQ improvement
9Tests of Person Perception
- Dates back to 1920s
- Based on tests of IQ
- If possible to measure Indiv. Diffs in cognitive
ability, also possible in social intelligence - But problems in the development of scales to
measure perceptual accuracy - How do you know when someone is accurately
perceiving others?
10The Profile of Non-verbal Sensitivity (PONS)
Rosenthal et al., 1979
- A measure of peoples accuracy in the perception
of non-verbal cues. - a 45-min bw film made up of 220 numbered
auditory and visual segments - Randomised presentation of 20 short scenes
portrayed by a young woman, each scene
represented in different channels of NVC - Facial expression
- Body from neck to knees
- Content filtered voice
- Randomised spliced voice and various combinations
of these cues
11The PONS (Rosenthal et al., 1979)
- Criterion
- All scenes were posed and 8 raters chose best
scenes for inclusion in PONS - Ss view the segments of the tape and are given
choice of 2 situations it might represent - The criterion is whether or not they agree with
the 8 raters.
12PONS Problems of criterion
- There are a number of difficulties relating to
the criterion for the PONS - Assumption that the original 8 raters are
themselves reasonably perceptive - Inter-observer agreement is no guarantee of
validity - Assumption of a particular model of NVC
13Assumptions
- If NV cues are learned, cultural specific code
- then the agreement of a number of representative
judges of that culture is a relatively good
criterion against which to evaluate peoples
performance. - But, if NV cues are part of innate, unlearned
responses to particular events - then inter-observer agreement may be totally
irrelevant
14PONS Construct validity
- The PONS does measure what it is supposed to
measure - Studies of occupational groups showed that people
supposed to do well at PONS tasks did perform the
best - actors
- students of visual arts
- students of NVC
- Comparison studies compared the PONS with
self-ratings and observer ratings of NV cues - Self-ratings do not correlate highly with PONS
- Observer ratings were highly sig. (r .22 plt.0001)
15PONS typical findings (1)
- Sex
- consistent advantage for women
- Development
- sig. main effects for age, with increasing
accuracy for older Ss. - Cultural variation
- Cross cultural samples performed worse than
Americans, but better than chance
16PONS typical findings (2)
- Intelligence
- No correlation with IQ, but does correlate with
other measures of NV coding ability - Psychiatric groups
- Both by psychiatric diagnosis or measures of
psychoticism, more seriously disturbed patients
do less well on PONS - Scores improved with practice
- Again, supports NVC as a social skill
17PONS evaluation
- PONS does have construct validity
- Does not use an objective criterion
- This raises some doubts about the validity of the
test - So, the PONS is not an objective measure of NVC
18Objective tests (1)
- LA RUSSO (1978) Tested the clinical assumption
that paranoid schizophrenics have special
sensitivity to NVC - both groups saw 2 videos of peoples facial
expressions as watched 2 lights in 2 conditions - Condition 1 encoders facial expression after
actually receiving electric shock after red
light, but no shock after white light - Condition 2 encoders posed expression after
both lights
192 x 2 Between Ss design
- Half Ss saw posed encodings
- Other half saw spontaneous encodings
-
- Paranoid schizophrenics sig. more accurate than
normal controls when judging posed encodings
20The Social Interpretations Task (1)(Archer
Akert, 1977)
- Comprises 20 unposed sequences of spontaneous
behaviour - paired with multiple-choice questions requiring
interpretation - unambiguous criterion of accuracy
- (e.g. In one scene, 2 men discuss a game of
basketball which they have just played, and the
viewer is asked to judge which man won the game
The game did happen, and the researcher knows who
won!)
21The Social Interpretations Task (2) (Archer
Akert, 1977)
- The SIT was given to students in 2 conditions
- Transcription of verbal content
- A full-channel version
- RESULTS
- Ss in the transcript condition actually did sig.
worse than chance - Ss in the video condition did sig. better than
chance.
22Interpersonal Perception Task (IPT Costanzo
Archer, 1989)
- The improved IPT now organised around 5 key areas
of social interaction (each having 6 scenes)
totalling 30 objective Qs with scores on 5
dimensions. - Status (6 scenes)
- Intimacy (6 scenes)
- Kinship (6 scenes)
- Competition (6 scenes)
- Deception (6 scenes)
23Predictive validityIPT (Costanzo Archer, 1989)
- IPT given to 18 students on same floor of a
dormitory - All Ss asked to complete a separate measure of
their peers social sensitivity - Peer rating scale comprised 4 items rated on a
9-point scale (not true at all very true) - Example items
- is sensitive to the feelings of others and
- is good at dealing with other people.
- RESULTS
- Ss rated as more socially sensitive got
significantly higher scores on the IPT.
24Other studies using IPT
- SMITH, ARCHER, COSTANZO (1991) using the IPT
found sex differences in non-verbal cues - Women perform better on the IPT than men
- Women sig. under-estimate the number of questions
they had correctly answered - Men sig. over-estimate
- These findings are similar to findings by BELOFF
(1992) in relation to IQ. - This suggests that women either underestimate
performance and men overestimate performance or
both!
25COSTANZO ARCHER (1991)
- Used the IPT to teach about non-verbal cues using
a mixed 2 x 2 design - Within-Ss variable
- multiple-choice questions
- essays
- Between Ss variable
- Taught using the IPT
- Taught using traditional lecture
26Results and Conclusions
- Results
- The IPT group got sig. better marks on the essay
question No diff. on the multiple-choice question - The IPT group also rated the presentation sig.
higher than did the lecture group - Conclusion
- The IPT can be used to both objectively assess
skill in non-verbal decoding but also to improve
non-verbal perceptiveness
27Criticisms of the IPT
- The tests of deception are somewhat misleading.
- Deception in naturally occurring situations may
have bad consequences if detected but no danger
in the clips recorded for the IPT - Detection apprehension may in itself give cues to
deceit. - Participants were TOLD to deceive lacks
motivation - No discussion of the possible implications of
camera awareness
28Deception as skilled social behaviour?
- Social Skills Inventory (SSI Riggio et al)
- 3 types of skill involved in deception
- Ability to send information (expressivity)
- Ability to receive information (encode)
- Ability to curtail spontaneous emotion, or pose
artificial emotion - Method
- Ratings on the SSI
- Ratings of social anxiety
- Video recordings of truthful/deceptive persuasive
message - Findings
- Socially anxious less believable (nervous cues?)
- Expressive Ss rated are more believable when
deceiving
29Summary
- Only recently have researchers compiled objective
criteria of accuracy - The PONS suffers from lack of objectivity
- Both the SIT and the IPT were developed using
objective criterion - People are very poor at detecting lies
- Development of cross-cultural measures