Title: INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY
1INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY CHAPTER 5 - PERCEPTION
2 WHAT ARE 6 FEATURES OF PERCEPTION?
- knowledge-based - we interpret sensations based
on what we already know - inferential- we form perceptual hypotheses based
on incomplete information - categorical- put sensations in categories based
on common features
36 Features of Perception (continued)
- relational- features can be related in a
consistent, coherent way - adaptive- allows focusing on most important
information to handle a situation - automatic-does not depend on necessarily on
conscious processes
42. WHAT ARE 2 APPROACHES TO PERCEPTION?
- constructionist- emphasizes knowledge basis and
inferential character of perception - ecological- source of information sensed
directly from the environment incoming stimuli
give necessary information.
53. WHAT ARE 2 PRINCIPLES OF PERCEPTION?
- figure/ground figure has meaning, stands out,
seems to be in front, and has contours or edges
ground is meaningless, shapeless and seems to be
in back of the figure. - grouping includes proximity or closeness,
similarity, continuity, closure, orientation,
simplicity.
64. WHAT ARE 4 ASPECTS OF PERCEPTUAL CONSTANCY?
- definition objects seem to remain constant in
size, shape and color regardless of changing
retinal image. - size constancy we believe objects stay the same
size even though their images on the retina get
bigger or smaller
7Perceptual constancy
- shape constancy objects are seen as being the
same shape regardless of changing shape of
retinal image. - color constancy perceived color stays the same
regardless of amount of light shining on it.
85. WHAT ARE 3 ASPECTS OF DEPTH PERCEPTION?
- definition interpretation of how close or far
away an object is allows perceiving the world in
3 dimensions.
9Aspects of depth perception (continued)
- 6 stimulus cues include
- relative size,
- height in visual field,
- .
10Stimulus cues
- interposition,
- linear perspective,
- reduced clarity,
- light and shadow
11Aspects of depth perception (continued)
- 3 properties of visual system accommodation
(eye muscles tighten or relax to focus visual
image) - convergence (rotation of eyes inward or outward
to focus on close object) - binocular disparity (difference between retinal
images as in view master example)
126. WHAT ARE 3 ASPECTS OF PERCEIVED MOTION?
- looming rapid expansion in size of retinal
image, filling available space on the retina. - movement gradient objects appear to move away
from horizon as you move forward. - info from vestibular and tactile senses when
accelerate in a car, sense pressure from back of
seat head tilts back.
137.WHAT ARE 4 ASPECTS OF PERCEPTUAL ILLUSIONS?
- definition distorted or false perceptions of
reality. - stroboscopic motion series of images each
slightly different, presented quickly one after
the other give the illusion of motion - movies, for example.
14Perceptual Illusions (continued)
- induced motion
- when there is relative motion in figure and
ground, we perceive motion in the figure - example moon and clouds (small image of moon and
large cloud image - moon perceived as figure and seems to be moving).
15Perceptual Illusions (continued)
- distortions of shape Poggendorf (diagonal line
intersect vertical or horizontal lines)
16Perceptual illusions (continued)
- Ebbinghaus (small circle surrounded by large
circles seems smaller than same size circle
surrounded by small circles dieter example)
17Perceptual illusions (continued)
- Ponzo (two horizontal lines between two
converging lines seem to be different in length
even though they are actually the same length
because of linear perspective).
188. TOP DOWN PROCESSING AND BOTTOM UP PROCESSING
IN PERCEPTION
- top down guided by higher level cognitive
processes and by psychological factors - shows effect of motivation and expectation
19Top down and bottom up processing (continued)
- bottom up depends on information from stimulus
to brain by way of senses - (inspect abstract painting
-
20Top down and bottom up processing (continued)
- listen to unfamiliar language)
219. WHAT ARE 2 FACTORS INFLUENCING TOP DOWN
PROCESSING?
- expectancy context of stimulus creates
expectation - can bias perception by creating a perceptual set
can make recognition easier.
22Factors affecting top-down processing (continued)
- motivation for example, if hungry more likely
to see eating places - influences perception and recognition.
-
23- ARE THERE ANY QUESTIONS AT THIS POINT?
24INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY CHAPTER 9
251. WHAT IS CONSCIOUSNESS?
- mental process of being aware of own thoughts,
feelings, actions, perceptions -
- involves self reference.
262. HOW HAS CONSCIOUSNESS BEEN STUDIED?
- subjective structuralists
- introspection to identify individual sensations
unreliable.
27Studying consciousness (continued)
- objective
- eeg, additional eeg information
- pett, additional pet scan information
28Objective measures of consciousness
- cat scans additional cat scan information
- records of electrical activity in the brain
29Studying consciousness (continued)
- animal responses to seeing own image in a
mirror - shows consciousness results from social
interaction.
303. WHAT ARE 3 LEVELS OF CONSCIOUSNESS?
- a)unconscious totally inaccessible to conscious
experience e.g. blood pressure - requires special methods such as biofeedback
31Levels of Consciousness (continued)
- b)cognitive unconscious/preconscious not
conscious of - may easily become aware of
- "cocktail party" phenomenon
32Levels of Consciousness (continued)
- conscious what you are presently aware of
- lasts about 3 seconds
334. WHAT ARE FEATURES OF STATES OF CONSCIOUSNESS?
- range from deep sleep to alert wakefulness
-
- may be active or passive
34- active manipulating mental activity
- passive daydreaming
- may result from natural processes or from choice
35States of Consciousness (continued)
- may experience altered states of consciousness
36States of consciousness (continued)
- 3 possible characteristics
- a)shallow careless, uncritical cognitive
processes -
- b)changed self/other perception
-
- weakened self-control or normal inhibition.
375. WHAT ARE FEATURES OF DAYDREAMING?
- altered state of consciousness attention to
internal events - may be fantasy oriented or realistic
- can interfere or may be harmless or helpful
relief from boredom
38why do we daydream
- 1)may be constant/ongoing and become apparent
when other mental activity ceases - 2)may maintain desirable level of activity when
stimulation from outside is too low.
396. WHAT ARE ASPECTS OF SLEEP?
- stage 0relaxed, eyes closed, awake, tension in
body muscles, normal eye movements, eeg mixed
with some alpha - stage 0-1 slow, rolling eye movements, eeg
irregular, increased alpha
40Stages of sleep
- stage 2 eeg shows pointed "spindles"
k-complexes - stage 3 eeg shows spindles k-complexes delta
waves (slower and stronger than alpha) - stage 4 more than 50 delta waves, deepest
sleep.
41- IN GENERAL 1 1/2 HOURS FROM STAGE 1 TO STAGE 4.
- REM sleep rapid eye movement or active sleep
- eeg similar to being active and awake
42REM sleep
- heart rate, respiration, blood pressure resemble
active waking state - muscle tone decreased almost to paralysis
- 80 awakenings result in reported dreaming.
43- SINGLE NIGHT'S SLEEP 4-6 CYCLES through stages
1-4 - each cycle about 90 min (1 1/2hrs),
- first half mostly deep sleep (stages 3 4)
- second half mostly stage 2 and REM
447. WHAT ARE 7 SLEEP DISORDERS?
- a)insomnia - problems getting to sleep or staying
asleep - results in fatigue during the day
- related to mental distress, including depression
and anxiety
45- Insomnia treatment
- temporary and dangerous/sleeping pills and
alcohol - more effective
- biofeedback, relaxation training, stress
management, psychotherapy, associate bed with
sleeping, avoid caffeine .
46- (b) hypersomnia
- sleep longer than is necessary
- fatigue
- daytime naps may contribute to this problem
47- (c) narcolepsy
- experience sudden switch into several minutes of
REM sleep - decreased muscle tone
- may collapse
- naps may help
48- (d) nightmares
- frightening dreams
- sometimes recurring
49- (e) night terrors
- occur in quiet (non-REM) sleep
- may be associated with frightening dreams
- may result in wakening into state of intense
fear
50- (f) sleep-walking
- mostly starts in non-REM sleep
- especially stage 4
- usually not remembered
51- (g) REM behavior disorder
- similar to sleep-walking
- in REM sleep
- lack usual near paralysis and lack of muscle
tone - may appear to act out dreams
- most common in men older than 50.
528. WHAT ARE REASONS FOR SLEEPING?
- sleep is part of circadian rhythm
- cycle of waking and sleeping over a period of 24
hours - linked to environmental signals, such as light
and dark - cycle continues in absence of external time cues
53- maintenance suggests internal biological clock
- may be located in brain (hypothalamus receives
signals from eyes, relays signals to other parts
of brain, helps to maintain 24 to 25 hour
rhythm)
54- disruption is related to depression and jet lag
- jet lag fatigue, irritability, sleep
difficulty - similar to effects of changes in work habits
(shift work)resulting in low efficiency and more
accidents
55- less disruption if sleep is shifted to later time
because underlying rhythm is 24 to 25 hours - this is reason that traveling west is less
disrupting to sleep patterns than traveling east
- also less disrupting if exposed to properly timed
bright light and outdoor activity.
56- FUNCTIONS OF SLEEP
- a)sleep may allow body to rest and restore
itself - b)may allow for certain amounts of REM sleep
which may help to maintain certain nerve cells in
the part of the brain important to mood and
alertness and allow restoring the sensitivity of
those cells
57- c)REM sleep may be used to check and expand nerve
connections in the brain (babies experience about
REM sleep about 80 pf the time spent sleeping) - d) helps imprint what is learned during the day
- e)possibly assists in thinking about and
adjusting to day's events.
589. WHAT FEATURES OF DREAMING?
- dreams story-like sequences of images,
sensations, and perceptions - last from a few seconds to many minutes may
occur in REM sleep and non-REM sleep. - Dream memory recall more likely if wake abruptly
and lie quietly while writing or taping dream
recollections.
59- WHY DREAM
- psychological events containing information about
mental processes - dreams may influence organization and recall of
mental activity.
60- LUCID DREAMING
- aware of dreaming while dream is happening
- during this state,
- dreamer directs content of dream
- uses content of dreams to work through problems.
6110. WHAT ARE ASPECTS OF HYPNOSIS?
- DEFINITION altered state of consciousness
resulting from special techniques - characterized by responsiveness to suggested
changes in experience and behavior. - Has been used in past to treat paralysis and
other mental and physical disorders
62- INDUCTION PROCEDURE
- focus attention on restricted set of stimuli and
imagine certain feelings. - can focus on breathing
- involves relaxing muscles
63Hypnosis
- AS A RESULT experience 6 types of changes
a)reduced planning - do not initiate actions
- wait for instructions
- b)redistributed/redirected attention
- form of selective attention
- c)enhanced ability to fantasize or imagine
64Hypnosis
- d)reduced reality testing
- do not question whether stated facts are true
- e)increased role-taking ability
- f)may experience post-hypnotic amnesia and not
remember what occurred during hypnosis.
65- USES OF HYPNOSIS
- a) control pain
- b)reduce nausea and bleeding
- c)decrease use of tobacco and alcohol
66- 4 SIGNS OF SUSCEPTIBILITY
- a)more active imagination
- b)prone to fantasy
- c)ability to concentrate on single activity for a
longer time - d)if willing and interested, will think favorably
and practice
67- THEORIES TO EXPLAIN HYPNOSIS
- a)role acting in a special social role
68- b)state altered state, results in difference in
how suggestions are carried out -
69- c)dissociation
- blend of role and state,
- reorganize how behavior is controlled,
- split in consciousness,
- relaxing of central control.
7011. WHAT ARE CHARACTERISTICS OF MEDITATION?
- DEFINITION
- set of techniques to create altered state
- characterized by inner peace and tranquility.
71Meditation
- METHOD
- usually focus or narrow attention to one thing
long enough to experience pure awareness.
72Meditation
- 4 COMPONENTS
- a)quiet environment,
- b)comfortable position
- c)mental device to organize attention
- d)passive attitude.
73Meditation
- EFFECTS
- a)decreased respiration, heart rate, muscle
tension, blood pressure and oxygen use - b)increased alpha brain waves (relaxed, awake,
eyes closed) - c)enhanced mental health, self-esteem, social
openness.
74Meditation
- use in moderation
- excessive use may result in dizziness, anxiety,
confusion, restlessness and depression.
7512. WHAT ARE FEATURES OF PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS?
- DEFINITION
- chemical substances acting on the brain to create
different psychological effects.
76CONSEQUENCES OF DRUG USE
- a)drug abuse - self administering in ways which
are socially or medically unacceptable - use too much or for too long a time
77- b)psychological dependence
- act as if drug is needed for sense of well-being
- preoccupied with getting the drug
78- c)physical dependence or addiction - altered
physical state as well as psychological effects - continued use is necessary to prevent withdrawal
symptoms - is associated with developing a tolerance to the
substance used (more of the drug is required to
experience the desired effects). - drug use is compulsive and uncontrollable.
79CAUSES
- casual use - usually from social influences
- abuse - associated with individual psychological
processes and self-protection - may experience changes in consciousness,
including racing thoughts, euphoria,
hallucinations, anxiety, coma, death.
804 TYPES OF PSYCHOACTIVE DRUGS
- depressants - include alcohol, sedatives,
anxiolytics/tranquilizers - reduce central nervous system (CNS) activity and
excitability - b)stimulants - include amphetamines, cocaine,
caffeine - result in increased behavioral and CNS activity
and excitability
81- c)narcotics - include opium, morphine, heroin
result in increased sleepiness decreased
sensitivity to pain - d)psychedelics - include LSD, PCP, marijuana,
psilocybin - result in decreased reality contact
- alters emotions, perceptions, and thinking
patterns.
8213. WHAT ARE TWO WAYS IN WHICH LEARNING IS
ASSOCIATED WITH DRUG USE?
- INVOLUNTARY RESPONSES
- a)opposite to response associated with the drug
- occurs outside of awareness
- depends on pairing stimuli and responses
- associated with developing tolerance to drug
(takes more drug to overcome conditioned response
(increased sensitivity to pain) - susceptibility to accidental overdose is
increased (unfamiliar setting "not ready") - b)similar to response associated with drug
- cues associated with drug remind person of
pleasurable aspects.
83- INTRODUCTORY PSYCHOLOGY
- REVIEW
- SOCIAL COGNITION - CHAPTER 17 - BERNSTEIN
841. How do social psychology and social cognition
relate to social comparison and social norms?
- Social psychology study of how an individual's
behavior and mental processes are influenced by
experiences with other people. - Social cognition mental processes associated
with how people perceive and react to each other.
- Example of mental process affected by other
people social comparison, in which we use other
people as a basis for comparison - use reference groups (categories of people to
which you see yourself belonging and to which you
compare yourself) as a basis of comparison
85- reference groups influence satisfaction with
life - may result in relative deprivation (sense that
your not doing well compared to your reference
group).
86- Social norms are products of mental processes
- norms are learned, socially based rules
prescribing what to do and what not to do in
certain situations - are transmitted by agents of culture
87- sometimes followed automatically
- make social situations less ambiguous and more
comfortable - example reciprocity or tendency to respond to
others as you perceive they have acted toward
you.
882. What is social perception?
- process through which we interpret information
about others, draw inferences about people and
develop representation about them - influences how we perceive others
- influences how we explain why people act in
certain ways.
89- First impressions
- easily formed
- hard to change
- have long-lasting influences on how you respond
to other people).
90Social Perception
- based on schemas
- coherent organized set of beliefs and
expectations - basic unit of knowledge
- generalization based on your experience
- influences your perception of others
- we use pre-existing schemas to integrate
individual bits of information
91Schemas
- allow looking at meaningful information and fill
in missing information using knowledge stored in
long-term memory). - Forming impressions (usually done using schemas
to infer information about a person)
automatically on the basis of limited
information
92- two general tendencies which influence whether a
first impression is positive or negative - (1)give others benefit of doubt and form positive
impression, assuming the person is similar to
yourself - (2)negative information is given more weight than
positive information
93- may assume negative information results from
being unfriendly or other undesirable
characteristics.
944 REASONS FOR STABILITY OF FIRST IMPRESSIONS
- (A)we tend to be confident of our judgments
- (B) we tend to interpret new information and
events in a way to support the first impression - (C) we remember a general impression or schema
better than later added informational details - (D)we tend to act in ways which elicit behavior
consistent with our first impression.
95First impressions
- SELF-FULFILLING PROPHECIES
- idea that initial impression/belief/hypothesis
elicits behavior which ultimately confirms it - can have positive or negative effects.
96Attributions
- EXPLAINING BEHAVIOR USING ATTRIBUTION
- we tend to rely on implicit personality theories
to judge the behavior of those around us - these implicit theories are based on intuition
- attribution is the process we use to explain why
a person behaves in a certain way
97Attributions
- the explanation we choose helps to understand
behavior, - or predict how someone will act in the future
- or decide how to control or influence the
situation should it occur again - we tend to attribute behavior to either internal
or external causes
98Attributions
- internal causes reflect characteristics of the
person - external causes reflect characteristics of the
situation
99Attribution Example
- difference between males and females in
explaining failure in academic situation - males tend to attribute failure to external
causes - females tend to attribute cause to internal cause
(ability)
100- result is females experience lower
self-confidence and increased pessimism about
academic experience.
101TWO ATTRIBUTIONAL BIASES
- tendencies to distort view of behavior
systematically include - (1)fundamental attribution error (general
tendency to attribute behavior of others to
internal causes - consequences may result in confidence in one's
impressions of other people - may lead to underestimating variability in
person's behavior created by external causes may
lead person to blame victims of unfortunate
circumstances)
102- (2)actor-observer bias (we tend to avoid the
fundamental attribution error when explaining our
own behavior - may attribute our own failure to external causes
- differences in social information available when
explaining your own and other people's behavior
103Attribution biases
- degree to which we attribute our behavior to
internal or external causes may depend on whether
the outcome is positive or negative - associated with self-serving bias
- (tendency to take credit for success and blame
failure on external causes.
1043. What are the self-protective functions of
social cognition?
- These include the self-serving bias which results
partly from avoiding negative information - attributing failure to lack of ability threatens
self-esteem
105- we prefer to think in ways that protect ourselves
from threat - may be associated with unrealistic optimism
(good things will happen to me bad things will
happen to other people
106Self-protective biases
- feelings of unique invulnerability
- illusion of control.
- associated with situations in which we are
responsible for a particular outcome, such as
studying for a test - may use self-handicapping strategies if we
anticipate the loss of self-esteem
107Self-protective bias
- arrange for failure to be attributed to an
external cause - use self-defeating behavior to explain failure
not reflecting on internal characteristics - may use when unsure past success can be
maintained
108Self-protective bias
- actions allow short-term relief from pain
- distort reality and causing additional problems
- prevent achievements
- eliminate possibility of receiving useful
information about strengths and weaknesses.
1094. What are the major ideas relating to
interpersonal attraction?
- 3 KEYS TO ATTRACTION
- (A)environment includes physical proximity or
nearness important because enhances familiarity
- we tend to like someone if we are around them
often - leads to increased comfort and decreased
fear/dislike/anxiety situation of first contact
influences attraction - reflects principles of
classical conditioning, in which pleasant
associations increase likelihood of attraction. -
110- (B)similarity of attitudes
- we like people whom we believe are similar to
ourselves more than those we believe to be
dissimilar - strong, positive relationship between proportion
of shared attitudes and amount of liking
111- strong influence of similar attitudes within a
social network - if we like each other, we develop a norm to like
and dislike the same people) - we prefer balanced relationships to unbalanced
ones
112- (C)physical attractiveness
- especially in beginning friendships
- at first, we prefer people who are more
attractive than we are - later we prefer people who are similar to
ourselves in attractiveness.
113DEVELOPMENT OF INTIMACY
- attraction may lead to interdependence mutual
influence of thoughts, emotions, and behaviors
between two people - is a defining characteristic of intimate
relationship and - What is intimacy?
114- intimacy
- can be predicted from the presence of
- symmetry,
- self-disclosure,
- empathy.
1155 KEY INGREDIENTS TO SATISFACTORY RELATIONSHIPS
- - (A)affection - important to reinforce
self-disclosure - (B)emotional expressiveness - important for
enhancing feelings of closeness and commitment -
supports expression of strong emotions - (C)support - helps us to cope with daily hassles
and increases morale
116- (D)cohesiveness - feelings of closeness derived
from joint activities - (E) sexuality - important component of lasting
adult relationships - by itself won't support
satisfaction in lasting relationships - requires presence of other components.
117 ANALYSIS OF LOVE
- - 3 components
- sexual passion,
- intimacy,
- commitment
1184 types of love
- resulting from different combinations of the
components - (1)passionate (high in intimacy and sexual
passion, low in commitment) - (2)fatuous (high in sexual passion and
commitment, low in intimacy)
119- (3)companionate (high in intimacy and
commitment, low in sexual passion) - (4)consummate (optimal levels of sexual passion,
intimacy, and commitment).
1205 COMPONENTS CONTRIBUTING TO STRENGTH OF
MARRIAGES -
- (A)reciprocal self-disclosure
- (B)perception of equitable/balanced relationship
- (C)mutual trust
- (D)complementary or compatible personality
styles - (E)mutual liking and respect which affects how
couple handles anger and conflict.
1215. What are attitudes? How are they formed and
changed?
- DEFINITION
- tendency to respond to experiences with
particular thoughts, feelings, and actions.
1223 COMPONENTS
- - (A)cognitive - set of beliefs about experience
- (B)emotional - positive or negative evaluation
toward experience - (C)behavioral - how you act in response to an
experience.
123DISCREPANCIES AMONG COMPONENTS -
- may occur for 3 reasons
- (1)competing motives and attitudes
- (2)many ways to express attitudes
- (3)because of social pressure from norms, we may
suppress behavioral component while experiencing
other aspects.
1242 THEORIES ABOUT SITUATIONS IN WHICH BEHAVIOR
CONFLICTS WITH BELIEFS OR FEELINGS
- - (A)cognitive dissonance - people prefer that
beliefs and thoughts be consistent with behavior
- when act in a way that conflicts with our
thoughts, we feel uneasy and are motivated to
decrease the conflict
125Cognitive Dissonance
- experiment involving boring task
- offered 1 or 20 to say "this is exciting and
interesting" - more likely to change private expression of
attitude if paid 1 than if paid 20.
126Self-perception
- (B)self-perception
- situations arise in which we may be unsure of our
attitudes - we may look back to how we acted and speculate
about what our attitude must have been - requires no tension and dissonance.
127ATTITUDE FORMATION
- affected by principles of learning, including
modeling and social learning in childhood - learn from parents what experiences are and how
to feel, think and act toward experiences - affected by classical conditioning which
influences positive and negative attitudes
128Attitude formation
- operant conditioning affects attitudes as a
result of various rewards and punishments we
receive after acting in certain ways - also form attitudes based on direct experience -
exposure effect results in more positive attitude
with increased contact.
129ATTITUDE CHANGE AND PERSUASIVE COMMUNICATION - 3
FACTORS -
- (A)communicator characteristics increased change
if communicator is seen as - credible,
- knowledgeable,
- trustworthy,
- similar to audience
130- (B)message characteristics
- can present one or both sides of a message
depending on prior attitude of audience - if sympathetic, present one side to reinforce
belief - if unsympathetic, present both sides to show
respect for audience attitudes and give arguments
for change)
131Message
- best to state explicit conclusions for increased
attitude change - how extreme or moderate to state conclusions
depends on credibility of source. - if high credibility, use extreme conclusions to
reinforce attitude change - if low credibility, use more moderate conclusions
to make change more likely)
132Message
- fear message is most effective if message is
moderately frightening (not excessive) - accompanied by information on how to avoid the
feared consequences.
133Audience
- (C)3 audience characteristics
- (1)intelligence
- highly intelligent audience is better able to
understand message and also better able to refute
your message
134Audience
- (2)self-esteem
- audience with low self-esteem less confident of
their own attitudes - may change in response to a persuasive message
- may also be inattentive
- may show little interest in new information
135Audience
- audience with high self-esteem do attend to
message but are seldom persuaded to change - most likely to change attitude if moderate
self-esteem - give reasonable amount of attention and
sufficiently unsure of attitude to allow
persuasion to work
136Audience
- (3)psychological involvement with issue
- high involvement results in attention to message
and may lead to increased or decreased change - high involvement with issue that is central to
the individual's self-concept will result in
decreased change
137Audience
- high involvement description of achieving
desirable outcome will result in increased
attitude change.
138Reactance
- (D) reactance
- state of psychological arousal motivating
individual to restore lost sense of freedom by
resisting, opposing, or contradicting perceived
cause of loss - explains why when we are told "you can't do that"
, we may be motivated to do just that.
1396. What are prejudice and stereotypes and how may
they be explained?
- PREJUDICE - positive or negative attitude based
on perception of group membership - has cognitive, emotional, and behavioral aspects
- involves stereotyped thinking, positive or
negative feelings, and behavioral discrimination
- treating people in different groups
differently.
140- STEREOTYPES - impressions or schemas (sets of
beliefs and perceptions about entire groups of
people - more powerful and potentially more dangerous than
individual impressions - often involves false assumptions and beliefs -
that all members of the groups have the same
characteristics - most commonly involve observable personal
characteristics.
1413 THEORIES OR SOURCES OF EXPLANATION FOR PREJUDICE
- (A)motivational
- involves personality of the individual
- authoritarian personality is a cluster of traits
associated with belief in strict social hierarchy
and the right to expect obedience from
individuals who have lower status
142Motivational theory
- motivates prejudiced individual to identify other
people's social status relative to
himself/herself, - may result in negative stereotype of people who
have perceived lower status prejudice
discrimination
143Learning
- (B)learning theories
- people may have negative attitudes toward groups
they have little contact with - single negative experience may create general
negative attitude toward an entire group - prejudice may be learned from the experience of
others through social learning - by watching and
listening
144Cognitive
- (C)cognitive theories
- based on beliefs and how we think
- stereotypes may be inevitable because of
complexity of social world - effective way to cope with complexity is to form
social categories based on detectable
differences
145Cognitive
- we form in-groups and out-groups based on
perceived group membership - in-group members are seen as more attractive,
- having more desirable personality
characteristics, - showing more desirable behavior, and are given
more preferential treatment.
1467. How may prejudice be decreased using contact
with a group?
- If prejudice and stereotyping result from lack of
information about a group, - these responses may be changed with increased
contact.
147Decreasing prejudice
- How are prejudice and stereotyping decreased?
- receive information contrary to the stereotype
- realize we are more similar to the out-group
members than we thought - recognize that not all group members are the
same. -
1488. How do emotional reactions influence how
people think of themselves?
- develop beliefs/cognitions/mental representations
about ourselves throughout life. - beliefs may be unified or differentiated.
- Unified beliefs indicate we have generally the
same characteristics in every situation and every
role we have. - Differentiated beliefs indicate we see ourselves
as having different attributes depending on the
role or situation.
149Self-perception
- Having unified or differentiated self-beliefs
influences our emotional responses. - Example, failure on an exam has a more negative
effect if we have a unified self-schema than if
we have a differentiated self-schema.
150Self-perception
- Self-schemas contain information about various
aspects of our self-concept
151Self-perception
- actual- how we actually are
- ideal - how we would like to be
- ought to be - how we think we should be
152- Discrepancies among these components may cause
discomfort and distress - difference between actual and ideal results in
feelings of sadness, dissatisfaction, and
disappointment - difference between actual and should be results
in guilt, fear, anxiety
153Self-perception
- treatment of anxiety and depression often
involves analyzing how and why a person thinks
about these discrepancies.
154IN CONCLUSION
- ARE THERE ANY QUESTIONS ABOUT ANYTHING WE HAVE
DISCUSSED SO FAR? - REMEMBER THE CONTENT FOR THE FINAL STUDY GUIDE
QUIZ AND EXAM WILL COME FROM CHAPTERS 5, 9 AND 17
WITH A FEW ITEMS FROM THE FIRST THREE EXAMS