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Perceiving

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Title: Perceiving


1
Perceiving evaluating other people
  • Why do we evaluate others?
  • all of us are naïve psychologists
  • Are we accurate?
  • often
  • however, our judgments can suffer from a number
    of biases
  • when not using all our resources
  • e.g., cognitively loaded
  • when we have limited information
  • when we have hidden motives/goals
  • e.g., our self-esteem is threatened

2
Attributions from behavior
  • Attribution
  • a claim about the cause of someones behavior
  • seeking a reason for the occurrence of
    events/behaviors
  • Heider
  • early researcher
  • we intuitively attribute others actions to
    personality characteristics

3
Person vs. Situation Attributions
  • Have to decide whether behavior is due to
    something about personality, or whether anyone
    would do same thing in that situation
  • Kelleys 3 questions in making an attribution
  • does this person regularly behave this way in
    this situation?
  • do others regularly behave this way in this
    situation?
  • does this person behave this way in many other
    situations?
  • Example Susan is angry while driving in a
    traffic jam

4
Kelleys Attributional Logic
5
Person bias in attributions
  • People give too much weight to personality and
    not enough to situational variables
  • Known as person bias
  • a.k.a. fundamental attribution error
  • Conditions promoting person bias
  • when task has goal of assessment of personality
  • when person is cognitively loaded
  • Conditions promoting a situation bias
  • when goal is to judge the situation

6
Two-stage Model of Attributions
  • First stage is rapid automatic
  • bias according to goal (person/situation)
  • Second stage is slower controlled
  • wont occur if cognitively loaded
  • we correct our automatic attribution

7
Two-stage Model of Attributions
Book example Joe laughs hysterically while
watching a TV comedy. What can we conclude?
8
Cross-cultural differences
  • Western culture
  • people are in charge of own destinies
  • more attributions to personality
  • Some Eastern cultures
  • fate in charge of destiny
  • more attributions to situation

Attributions to internal disposition
Age (years)
9
Actor-Observer Discrepancy
  • Attribute personality causes of behavior when
    evaluating someone elses behavior
  • Attribute situational when evaluating our own
    behavior
  • Why?
  • hypothesis 1
  • we know our behavior changes from situation to
    situation, but we dont know this about others
  • hypothesis 2
  • when we see others perform an action, we
    concentrate on actor, not situation -- when we
    perform an action, we see environment, not person

10
Prior Information Effects
  • Mental representations of people (schemas) can
    effect our interpretation of them
  • Kelleys study
  • students had a guest speaker
  • before the speaker came, half got a written bio
    saying speaker was very warm, half got bio
    saying speaker was rather cold
  • very warm group rated guest more positively
    than rather cold group

11
Effects of Personal Appearance
  • The attractiveness bias
  • physically attractive people are rated higher on
    intelligence, competence, sociability, morality
  • studies
  • teachers rate attractive children as smarter, and
    higher achieving
  • adults attribute cause of unattractive childs
    misbehavior to personality, attractive childs to
    situation
  • judges give longer prison sentences to
    unattractive people

12
Effects of Personal Appearance
  • The baby-face bias
  • people with rounder heads, large eyes, small
    jawbones, etc. rated as more naïve, honest,
    helpless, kind, and warm than mature-faced
  • generalize to animals, women, babies

13
Stereotypes
  • What is a stereotype?
  • schemas about a group of people
  • a belief held by members of one group about
    members of another group
  • how can we study stereotypes?
  • early studies just asked people
  • todays society is sensitized to harmful effects
    of stereotyping
  • need different ways of studying

14
Studying stereotypes
  • 3 levels of stereotypes in todays research
  • public
  • what we say to others about a group
  • private
  • what we consciously think about a group, but
    dont say to others
  • implicit
  • unconscious mental associations guiding our
    judgments and actions without our conscious
    awareness

15
Implicit Stereotypes
  • Use of priming subject doesnt know stereotype
    is being activated, cant work to suppress it
  • Bargh study
  • have subjects read word lists, some lists include
    words like gray, Bingo, and Florida
  • subjects with old word lists walked to
    elevators significantly more slowly
  • another study
  • flash pictures of Black vs. White faces
    subliminally
  • give incomplete words like hos_____, subjects
    seeing Black make hostile, seeing White make
    hospital

16
Implicit Stereotypes
  • Devines automaticity theory
  • stereotypes about African-Americans are so
    prevalent in our culture that we all hold them
  • these stereotypes are automatically activated
    whenever we come into contact with an
    African-American
  • we have to actively push them back down if we
    dont wish to act in a prejudiced way.
  • Overcoming prejudice is possible, but takes work

17
Self-fulfilling Prophecies
  • When our beliefs and expectations create reality
  • Beliefs expectations influence our behavior
    others
  • Pygmalion effect
  • person A believes that person B has a particular
    characteristic
  • person B may begin to behave in accordance with
    that characteristic

18
Studies of the Self-fulfilling Prophecy
  • Rosenthal Fode
  • tested whether labeling would affect outcome
  • divided students into 2 groups and gave them
    randomly selected rats
  • 1 group was told they had a group of super
    genius rats and the other was told they had a
    group of super moron rats
  • all students told to train rats to run mazes
  • genius rat group ended up doing better than the
    moron rat group b/c of the expectations of the
    students

19
Studies of the Self-fulfilling Prophecy
  • Rosenthal Jacobson
  • went to a school and did IQ tests with kids
  • told teachers that the test was a spurters test
  • randomly selected several kids and told the
    teacher they were spurters
  • did another IQ test at end of year
  • spurters showed significant improvements in their
    IQ scores b/c of their teachers expectations of
    them

20
Attitudes
  • What is an attitude?
  • predisposition to behave in a certain way toward
    some people, group, or objects
  • can be negative or positive
  • Cognitive dissonance theory
  • Festinger
  • we we need our attitudes to be consistent with
    our behavior
  • it is uncomfortable for us when they arent
  • we seek ways to decrease discomfort caused by
    inconsistency

21
Dissonance-reducing Mechanisms
  • Avoiding dissonant information
  • we attend to information in support of our
    existing views, rather than information that
    doesnt support them
  • Sweeney Gruber (1973) Watergate study
  • Firming up an attitude to be consistent with an
    action
  • once weve made a choice to do something,
    lingering doubts about our actions would cause
    dissonance, so we are motivated to set them aside

22
Dissonance-reducing Mechanisms
  • Changing an attitude to justify an action
  • when a person does something counter to their
    stated beliefs, then justify the deed by
    modifying their attitude
  • Insufficient-justification effect
  • change in attitude that occurs because person
    cannot justify an already completed action
    without modifying attitude
  • optimizing conditions include external
    justification, free choice, when action would
    cause harm

23
Insufficient-justification effect
  • Festinger Carlsmith (1959)
  • gave subjects a boring task, then asked subjects
    to lie to the next subject and say the experiment
    was exciting
  • paid ½ the subjects 1, other ½ 20
  • then asked subjects to rate boringness of task
  • 1 group rated the task as far more fun than the
    20 group
  • each group needed a justification for lying
  • 20 group had an external justification of money
  • since 1 isnt very much money, 1 group said
    task was fun

24
Using Attitudes as Ways to Justify Injustice
  • Just-world bias
  • a tendency to believe that life is fair
  • it would seem horrible to think that you can be a
    really good person and bad things could happen to
    you anyway
  • Just-world bias leads to blaming the victim
  • we explain others misfortunes as being their
    fault
  • e.g., she deserved to be raped, what was she
    doing in that neighborhood anyway?

25
Summary
  • Perceiving evaluating others
  • when were accurate, when were not
  • Attributions
  • person vs. situation attributions
  • the person bias
  • actor-observer discrepancy
  • effects of prior information
  • effects of physical appearance

26
Summary
  • Stereotypes
  • what are they?
  • how do we study them?
  • Implicit stereotypes
  • Self-fulfilling prophecy effects
  • Attitudes
  • cognitive dissonance theory
  • dissonance-reducing mechanisms
  • the insufficient-justification effect
  • the just-world bias blaming the victim
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