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Perceiving Persons

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Chapter 4 Perceiving Persons Social Perception The process by which people come to understand one another. We ll look at: The raw data of social perception ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Perceiving Persons


1
Chapter 4
  • Perceiving Persons

2
Social Perception
  • The process by which people come to understand
    one another.
  • Well look at
  • The raw data of social perception
  • How we explain and analyze behavior
  • How we integrate our observations into coherent
    impressions of other persons
  • How our impressions can subtly create a distorted
    picture of reality
  • Were both perceiver and target

3
Observation The Elements of Social
PerceptionPersons
  • First impressions are often subtly influenced by
    different aspects of a persons appearance.
  • We prejudge people based on facial features.
  • We read traits from faces, as well as read traits
    into faces, based on prior information.
  • We judge baby-faced adults differently than
    mature-faced adults.
  • Why? Explain the explanation.

4
Silent Language of Nonverbal Behavior
  • Behavioral cues are used to identify a persons
    inner states, as well as his or her actions.
  • What kinds of nonverbal cues do people use?
  • Facial expressions of emotion and .

5
Distinguishing Truth from Deception
  • Freud No mortal can keep a secret betrayal
    oozes out of him at every pore.
  • Channels of communication differ in terms of ease
    of control.
  • Face is relatively easier for deceivers to
    control.
  • Nervous movements of our body are somewhat harder
    to control.

6
Why Do We Have Difficulty Detecting Deception?
  • Mismatch between the behavioral cues that
    actually signal deception and the ones used to
    detect deception.
  • Four channels of communication provide relevant
    information
  • Words Cannot be trusted
  • Face Controllable
  • Body Somewhat more revealing than face
  • Voice Most revealing cue
  • Perceivers tune in to the wrong channels

7
Attribution Theories
  • Dispositions stable characteristics, such as
    personality traits, attitudes, and abilities
  • Attribution theories describe how people explain
    the causes of behavior
  • Heider Explanations can be grouped into two
    categories
  • Personal Attributions (Internal disposition)
  • Situational Attributions (External)

8
Attributional Biases
  • Do we really analyze behavior in a rational,
    logical manner?
  • Do we really have the time, motivation, or
    cognitive capacity for such elaborate and mindful
    processes?
  • The answer?
  • Sometimes yesSometimes no.

9
Cognitive Heuristics
  • Cognitive heuristics are information-processing
    rules of thumb.
  • Enable us to think in ways that are quick and
    easy
  • Problem is that using cognitive heuristics can
    frequently lead to error.

10
Availability Heuristic
  • The tendency to estimate the likelihood that an
    event will occur by how easily instances of it
    come to mind.
  • Problems with relying on the availability
    heuristic
  • False-consensus effect

11
Fundamental Attribution Error
  • When we explain other peoples behavior we tend
    to
  • Overestimate the role of personal factors, and
  • Overlook the impact of situations

12
The Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
  • The process by which ones expectations about a
    person eventually lead that person to behave in
    ways that confirm those expectations.
  • Rosenthal Jacobsons (1968) Pygmalion in the
    Classroom study
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