Title: Social Psychology
1Social Psychology Dr. Will Reader w.reader_at_shu.ac.
uk
2Overview
- Theory of mind
- Attitudes
- Making attributions
- Cognitive dissonance
- Aggression
- Affiliations
- Power, obedience and conformity
- Stereotypes, stigma and scapegoating
- Group conflict and influence
3Theory of Mind
4Theory of mind
- Underpins most social behaviour
- The ability to understand other peoples
- Thoughts
- Emotional states
- Perceptual states (see, hear etc.)
- And the understanding that these can be different
from your own (and that your own can change) - That beliefs can be false
5Unexpected Transfer (Maxi) Task
6Unexpected Transfer (Maxi) Task
Test Where will Maxi look for his chocolate?
Memory Where did Maxi put his
chocolate? Reality Where did Mum put his
chocolate?
7Autism Spectrum Disorder
Triad of Impairment (Wing Gould, 1979)
8Autism Spectrum Disorder
Socialisation - indifference to other people,
difficulty making friends - difficult to
understand other people's thoughts and emotions
- seem to be 'in a world of their
own Communication - don't develop the usual
verbal or non-verbal (eg pointing) skills of
other children the same age (protodeclarative and
protoimperative pointing) - unable to understand
jokes or sarcasm - difficulty to read body
language and facial expressions (Temple
Grandin) Interest - inability to play
imaginatively with objects or toys (pretend play)
or others - may be overly interested in
repetitive activities, resistance to novel topics
9Sally-Anne problem
Baron-Cohen, Leslie, and Frith (1985) Social and
emotional problems secondary to cognitive problem
10 Baron-Cohen, Wheelwright, Hill, Raste Plumb
(2001)
11Attitudes
12What is an Attitude?
- Attitude is defined as tendencies to evaluate an
entity attitude object into some degree of
favour or disfavour, ordinarily expressed in
cognitive, affective and behavioural responses
(Eagly Chaiken, 1993) - Different from beliefs which are things held to
be true and often do not have an evaluative side
13Attitude Definitions
- Attitudes involve associations between attitude
objects and evaluations of these objects (Fazio,
1989) - Attitudes are evaluations of various objects that
are stored in memory (Judd et al., 1991) - Attitude is a psychological tendency that is
expressed by evaluation of a particular entity
with some degree of favour or disfavour (Eagly
Chaiken,1993).
14Component Theories of Attitude
- Unitary model. Attitudes are a single positive or
negative evaluation of an attitude object - Dual model. A mental state of readiness and
therefore guides some evaluation or response
towards and object - Tripartite model. Include feeling (affective),
action (behavioural), and thought (cognitive)
components ABC
15Tripartite Model?
Attitude object Beer
16What are Attitudes Used for?
- Attitudes serve as conscious and unconscious
motives and have four functions (Katz, 1960) - They assist in helping us make sense of our
world and to organize the information we
encounter (c.f. cognitive economy) (KNOWLEDGE
FUNCTION) - They help us make behave in socially acceptable
ways to gain positive and avoid negative outcomes
(UTILITARIAN/ADJUSTIVE FUNCTION) - They act as a guide to behaviour in social
situations and help us in self- and social-
categorization (SOCIAL IDENTITY/VALUE-EXPRESSIVE
FUNCTION) - They allow use to preserve a positive sense of
self (EGO-DEFENSIVE FUNCTION)
17Attitude-Behaviour Relationship
- Of principle concern - if attitudes dont guide
behaviour then their efficacy and utility as a
construct is greatly reduced - Classic study LaPiere (1934) restaurateur's
attitudes towards Asians in 1930s USA-
questioned validity of the attitude-behaviour
link - Wicker (1969) attitudes were very weakly
correlated with behaviour across 45 studies
(average r .15) - Gregson and Stacey (1981) only a small positive
correlation between attitudes and alcohol
consumption - Stimulated study into the personality,
contextual, temporal and methodological
influences on the attitude-behaviour relationship
18Attitude-behaviour relationship
- Reasons for lack of a relationship
- Unreliability and low validity of attitude and/or
behavioural measures - People sometimes don't care about their attitudes
- Often it is difficult to put attitudes into
practice (perceived behavioural control or
self-efficacy) - Recent research includes the latter two (e.g.
Armitage and Conner, 2001) stronger
attitude-behaviour relationships Theory of
Planned Behaviour (TPB)
19Measuring Attitudes
- Thurstone (1928) check all items that apply (can
be weighted) - Likert (1932) scale n (usually 5)- point scales
- Semantic differential scale (Osgood et al., 1957)
uses word pairs - All above can be used to derive numerical values
relating to attitudes
20Thurstone scale
21A 7-Point Likert-Type Self-Rating Scale
Are you favour of having nuclear power plants in
Britain?
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
STRONGLY APPROVE
STRONGLY DISAPPROVE
NEUTRAL
22(No Transcript)
23Rating The Concept of Nuclear Power on a
7-Point Semantic Differential Scale
SEMANTIC DIFFERENTIAL SCALE Nuclear power
GOOD BAD STRONG WEAK FAST
SLOW
24Issues with scales
- Scales must be reliable all items must measure
the same thing (e.g. depression) in order for
them to be added up - This can be computed statistically
- Scales must be valid they must measure what they
are supposed to measure - E.g. by comparing scale results with objective
measures (e.g. of depression)
25Measuring Implicit Attitudes
- Attitudes may be explicit (conscious awareness),
or implicit (unconscious/automatic) - Implicit attitudes may exert effects on behaviour
outside of conscious awareness - May show unbiased attitudes (may not)
- Measured with Implicit Association Test
(Greenwald, McGhee, Schwartz, 1998)
26(No Transcript)
27Attribution
Attribution is the process of assigning causes
for our own behaviour to that of others Hogg
Vaughan (2005)
28Heiders Naïve Scientist
- Suggests that people create theories of other
people based on observation of behaviour - Inferring unobservable causes from observable
behaviour or other perceived information
29Everyone is a naïve scientist
- Internal (dispositional) attributions
- personality characteristics
- beliefs
- External (situational) attributions
- situational pressure/influence
- Example Student turns in papers late
- Internal lazy, partying all the time
- External family problems, working,
boy/girlfriend problems
30Self-serving bias
Take credit for success (attribute
internally) But not for failure (attribute
externally) Maintains control and
consistence E.g. student will take credit for
doing well in an exam Student will blame test
difficulty or lecturers tough marking policy for
failure
31Self serving bias
- Harré, Brandt Houkamau (2004)
- The attributions of young drivers for their own
and their friends' risky driving - Dispositional attributions e.g., "Showing off,
acting cool" used more for friends than self - Situational attributions e.g., "In a hurry, late"
used more for self than friends - Participants also rated their friends as taking
more risks than themselves
32The myth of pure evil
- Tendency to interpret wrong-doers as depraved
psychopaths Baumeister (1997) - E.g. demonising leaders of 'rogue' states
- (part of fundamental attribution error see later)
33Baumeister's narratives
- People asked to describe a situation in which
they were the angered someone and which they were
angered - Found two distinct types of narrative that of
the perpetrator and that of the victim
34Perpetrator's narrative
- The story begins with the harmful act. At the
time I had good reasons for doing it. Perhaps I
had been responding to extreme provocation. Or I
was just reacting to the situation in a way that
any reasonable person would. I had a perfect
right to do what I did, and it's unfair to blame
me for it. The harm was minor, and easily
repaired, and I apologised. It's time to get over
it, put it all behind us, let bygones be bygones
35Victim's narrative
- The story begins long before the harmful act,
which was just the latest incident in a long
history of mistreatment. The perpetrators
actions were incoherent, senseless,
incomprehensible. Either that or he was an
abnormal sadist, motivated only by a desire to
see me suffer, though I was completely innocent.
The harm he did is grievous and irreparable, with
effects that will last forever. None of us should
forget it.
36The moralisation gap
- (Part of the self-serving bias)
- We see ourselves as more moral than others and
our reasons more justified and coherent - 'Why everyone (else) is a hypocrite' (Kurzban,
2011)
37The Fundamental Attribution Error
- Ross (1977) when observing behaviour people tend
to - Overestimate the significance of DISPOSITIONAL
factors - Underestimate the significance of SITUATIONAL
factors - Jones and Harris (1967) classic experiment
illustrated this bias - Participant's had to rate people pro-Castro
biases based on some writing they did
38Jones and Harris (1967) Study Design
IV2 Writers Position
Pro-Castro Anti-Castro
Chosen Choice, Pro-Castro Choice, Anti-Castro
Not Chosen No Choice, Pro-Castro No Choice, Anti-Castro
IV1 Writers Ability to Choose position
39Hypothesised Summary of Results
40Summary of Results
41Reasons for these attributions
- Self serving bias
- We wish to appear competent to other people (to
influence them, gain their trust, gain their
cooperation, etc) - Generally believing we are can encourage them to
believe this - Fundamental attribution error
- Focus on individuals other influence is just
'background' - Less prominent in collectivist culture (Miller,
1984)
42Self-deception
- We sometimes believe our own lies
- Participants asked to plan a study in which half
of them have a pleasant and half an unpleasant
task - Ran in pairs participants asked to decide who
did which task - Could choose themselves OR use a number generator
- Most chose the easy task and said that this was
fair - HOWEVER if they were asked while doing a memory
span test they judged themselves harshly - Valdesolo DeSteno (2008)
43 44Cognitive dissonance
45When prophecy fails (Festinger, Riecken,
Schachter, 1956)
Studied an American cult called 'the
seekers' Believed that the world would end on
December 21st 1954 They would be rescued by a
flying saucer just before They had given up their
jobs, money, possessions and families The flying
saucer never came The world didn't end What
happened to their beliefs?
46When prophecy fails
Festinger noted that rather than giving up their
beliefs the seekers redoubled their efforts to
recruit new followers They concluded that their
piety had been recognised and their actions had
saved humanity ! Why?
47Cognitive dissonance
- When there is conflict between a belief or
attitude and an event or behaviour this produces
dissonance - This is uncomfortable so to maintain consistency
people are motivated to alter one of the elements - They can
- Change their attitudes
- Change their behaviour
- Cognitively reappraise the situation
48Examples of Cognitive Dissonance Theory
Attitudes Dissonant Element Source of Dissonance Strategy
Seekers believe that the world is going to end The world does not end Conflict between what was thought to happen and what happened Behavioural Fake the end of the world Attitudinal recognise that they were wrong Add consonant elements the world didn't end because of our efforts
A student believes hes intelligent and that intelligent people perform well at school He gets bad grades all the time Discrepancy between belief in intelligence and performance Behavioural Tries harder to get good grades Attitudinal Believes hes not that intelligent Add consonant elements I dont have time to study My teacher is rubbish and unfair Grades arent a good indicator of intelligence, anyway
49Induced dissonance
Festinger Carlsmith (1954) participants had to
perform a dull task (turning pegs for an
hour) They paid either 1 or 20 for this They
were then asked to tell a potential participant
(stooge) that it was interesting They then rated
the interestingness of the task Who found the
task more interesting?
50Induced Compliance
Rating of liking for the task
Payment
Source Festinger, L. Carlsmith, J.M. (1959).
Cognitive consequences of forced compliance.
Journal of Abnormal and Social Psychology, 58,
203-210.
51Explaining this
- Belief 'This is a dull task'
- Behaviour 'This is an interesting task'
- Therefore DISSONANCE
- 20 group had a motivation for lying, 1 had none
so had to internalise the attitude - ALSO if it is dull, why did I do it? Payment of
20 give justification, 1 did not - Unpaid dull jobs seem less boring than paid ones
52Aggression
53What is Aggression?
- Definitions have some commonality Intent to
harm (Carlson et al., 1989) - Means used in previous research to measure
aggression - Punching a inflatable plastic doll (Bandura et
al., 1963) - Pushing a button to ostensibly deliver an
electric shock (Buss, 1961) - Pencil-and-paper ratings by teachers and
classmates of a childs aggressiveness (Eron,
1982) - Self-report of prior aggressive behaviour (Leyens
et al., 1975) - Verbal expression of willingness to use violence
(Geen, 1978) - Ethical considerations in level of aggressive
acts people can be induced to do in experiments - The above measures are an analogue for measuring
real aggression
54Evolutionary/ethological theories
- Aggression is natural and sensible (Lorenz, 1966
Ardrey, 1966 Morris, 1967) - Innate aggression triggered by situation
(releasers) - Individual protects itself and its offspring from
harm - Competition for resources (including mates)
- In many mammalian species male-male aggression
greater than other forms
55Evolutionary/ethological theories of aggression
- Aggression often doesn't lead to violence
- Aggression 'displays' in animals and humans
- Hope one animal backs down without risking costly
fights (but this is principally intrasexual
aggression) - When personal risk is lower, violence is more
common across the animal kingdom (e.g. chimps,
Goodall see later)
56Theories of Aggression
- Frustration-Aggression Hypothesis (Dollard et
al., 1939) - Aggression the product of an anger response to
the frustration of goals and desires - Aggression directed to perceived source of
frustration - e.g. terrorism might be spawned by chronic and
acute frustration over the ineffectiveness of
other means (e.g., negotiation) to achieve
socio-economic goals - However, limited because frustrating events
(e.g., job loss, refereeing decisions, traffic
jams) lead to lots of frustration but seldom
aggression (Berkowitz, 1993)
57Theories of Aggression
- Social Learning Theory (Bandura, 1977, 1997)
- Observational learning (imitation and vicarious
experience) during childhood may contribute to
violent actions
- Bobo doll experiments
- Bandura et al. (1961) 4 year olds watched an
adult playing with Bobo doll (5-foot inflated
plastic doll) - Children exposed to the violent model displayed
significantly more aggression toward the doll
58Theories of Aggression
Social Learning Theory (Bandura, 1977, 1997)
Source Bandura Walter (1963)
59Factors Influencing Aggression
- Sex, Evolution and Socialisation
- Men are more likely to engage in aggressive
behaviour (Wrangham Peterson, 1996) - Men are also more likely to display aggressive
attitudes and beliefs (Eagly Chaiken, 1993) - This may be due to
- Elevated levels of androgens (e.g., testosterone)
- Evolutionary benefit to aggression in terms of
status and dominance - Socialisation of aggressive tendencies during
development
60Affiliation
61Human relationships
- Fiske (1991) four basic types of human
relationship - Communal sharing
- Share with no counting of cost (friendships,
families) - Authority ranking
- Dominance and hierarchies
- Equality matching
- Reciprocation, payment 'in kind'
- Market pricing
- As above but a 'token' economy (money)
62Affiliation
- Affiliation The urge to form connections and
make contact with other people - The need to affiliate is powerful and pervasive
across people and determine the formation of
important interpersonal relationships (Baumeister
Leary, 1995) - Affiliative behaviour Acts that indicate that a
person (or organism) chooses to engage in social
relationships with others - Governed by rules of Communal Sharing (Fiske,
1991)
63With whom do we affiliate?
- Generally people that are similar to us
- Homophily (McPherson, Smith-Lovin Cook, 2001)
- Also exists for social media where physical
proximity isn't a requirement (Murthy, 2012) - Similarity reduces conflicts of interest and
increases shared interest (important in
cooperation, Tooby Cosmides, 1996)
64Power, dominance, obedience and conformity
- To what extent are we 'wired' for dominance (c.f.
Fiske's authority ranking)? - Obedience and authority
- Conformity to group norms
65Dominance
- Most non-human primate societies organised into
dominance hierarchies (male and female) - Brain regions associated with dominance
(periacquaductal gray, hypothalamus, amygdala) - All contain testosterone receptors (Panksepp,
2010) - Anterior preoptic hypothalamus twice as large in
men as women
66Testosterone and male dominance
- Testosterone associated with violence (Dabs
Dabs, 2000) - Principle focus is on male dominance violence not
violence per se - Higher in high status men, both a cause and an
effect of status (Dabs Dabs, 2000) - Increases following a win in sport, decreases
following a loss (Johnson et al, 2006) - Similar results for women but less pronounced
67Social influence
68Being influenced
- Obedience explicitly complying with
instructions usually from an authority figure - Conformity implicit compliance, usually to
group norms or high-status people - Compliance can describe both of the above
69Social influence processes
Obedience
- Milgram (1963) Classic but controversial study
of compliance under duress from an expert
experimenter - In Milgrams study, participants were asked to
deliver different voltages (0-450 volts) as a
punishment
- to the learner in a mock learning experiment
- Milgrams question was at what point would
subjects refuse to deliver shock to another
person?
70Social influence processes
Obedience
- Results Near lethal electric shocks applied to
stooge connected to apparatus in the mock
learning trial (65 administered the full 450v) - Milgram (1974) explained that subjects felt under
pressure but did not believe that the
experimenter would allow harm to come to
stooge. - Nothing is bleaker than the sight of a person
striving yet not fully able to control his own
behaviour in a situation of consequence to him
(Milgram, 1974, pp. xiii) .
71Milgrams studies
- Sample to participants at 45 Volts
- 75V Ugh!
- 150V Get me out of here! My hearts starting to
bother me! I refuse to go on! Let me out! - 180V I cant stand the pain!
- 220V Let me out! Let me out!
- 270V Agonised screams
- 300V Refuse to answer and agonised screams
- 315V Intensely agonised screams
- 345V on Silence
- Throughout if the participant was hesitating,
the experimenter told him/her to go on.
72Social influence processes
Obedience
- Milgrams study replicated in both male and
female groups - Replicated in many countries
- Spain and Holland 90 compliance rate (Meeus
Raaijmakers, 1986) - Italy, Germany, Austria 80 (Mantell, 1971)
- Australian men 40, Australian women 16
(Kilham Mann, 1974)
73Social influence processes
Obedience Explanations
- One explanation is that people have committed
themselves to an action that was difficult to
overturn - Immediacy is an influential factor how close a
person is to the learner - Unseen and unheard 100 compliance
- Pounding on the wall 62.5
- Visible during experiment 40
- Holding hand to electrode 30 (!)
74Obedience 40 years on
- Burger (2008) replicated (as much as he could)
the Milgram study - 70 still went up to 150 Volts
- But twice as many (30) disobeyed the
experimenter - Things are changing but not as much as we might
like
75Remember
- All of these people were inexperienced in torture
!, well educated, and clinically normal - Psychopathy, sadists and torturers tend to
habituate to their particular role (Baumeister,
1997) - They can come to enjoy it following repeated
exposure
76Conforming to the group
- Stanford prison experiment (Haney, Banks,
Zimbardo, 1973) - UG students volunteered to participate in the
study 2-week study - Randomly assigned to roles of prisoners and
guards - Guards given power over prisoners control of
resources, mete out rewards and punishment
77Power and Influence
- Entire basement of Stanford University Psychology
Department used to set up a mock prison - Prisoners were arrested at their residences,
made to wear prison issue uniforms (dresses),
placed in cells, limited freedom to exercise,
interact - Guards observed to resort to tyranny
- and anti-social behaviours to keep
- prisoners in line
78Power and Influence
- Brutality of the guards and suffering of the
prisoners resulted in the experiment being
abandoned after only 6 days - Suggestion that guards were depersonalised in the
group and their role losing their individuality - Therefore tyranny was embedded in the
psychology of powerful groups group of people
in social roles create group norms and comply
with them - Group norms acceptable beliefs and behaviours
in a group
78
79Social influence processes
Conformity Asch (1952) Classic experiment
examining normative influence effects.
Estimation of line lengths by individual in group
comprised of experimenters confederates
80Social influence processes
- Conformity
-
- Results 37 gave erroneous errors compared to
0.7 in control group. Powerful effects of
conformity but dependent upon a number of
factors - The ambiguity of the task
- The group structure (one or more deviants)
- Individual differences
- Cultural expectations of conformity
- Bond and Smiths (1996) meta-analysis of 133
studies using Aschs paradigm found that
conformity was significantly higher in
collectivist cultures.
81Pro and anti-social behaviour
- The bystander effect
- The case(?) of Kitty Genovaise murdered following
a 30 minute attack - No one helped, no one called the police
- Lataney Darley (1979) 80 failed to respond
when stooge also failed, when alone only 30
failed to respond
82Research on Prosocial and Altruistic Behaviour
- Research into prosocial behaviour and altruism
was stimulated by the Kitty Genovese murder - Despite a horrific attack lasting 30 minutes not
one of her neighbours assisted or called the
police - The story became the journalistic sensation of
the decade. Apathy, cried the newspapers.
Indifference, said columnist and commentators.
Moral callousness, dehumanisation, loss of
concern for our fellow man added preachers,
professors and sermonisers. Movies, television
specials, plays and books explored this incident
and many like it. Americans became concerned with
their lack of concern (Latané Darley, 1976, p.
309)
83Bystander effect
- Diffusion of responsibility
- People use others as a source of information (if
they don't respond, maybe everything is OK) - Often fear of putting oneself in danger (why
should I be the first to stand up to the
attacker?) - People (usually) more likely to help when alone
84Pluralistic ignorance
- An explanation for why people engage in some
anti-social behaviour - Everyone does something because they assume
everyone expects them to (and often incorrectly) - Similar to Asch's conformity studies
- A few true believers can cause an idea to spread
among non-adherents (Centola, Willer Macy, 2005)
85PI and the false consensusWiller, Kuwabara
Macy (2005)
- Participants sampled wine (one spiked with
vinegar) - An 'expert' pronounced the spiked wine the best
- Everyone agreed except a stooge who pronounced it
awful - Everyone rated everyone else in public or private
- Those rating in public derogated the stooge's
taste - Those rating in private praised his honesty
86Increasing pro-social behaviour
- Reduce anonymity
- People are concerned about their reputation
- Permit punishment
- Sounds odd but if there is a comeback people are
nicer (Fehr Gachter, 1999) - Education about the lives and feelings of others
- Need to see the consequences of action (Pinker,
2011)
87 88Stereotypes and stigma
- Greek stereos solid, typos impression
- A cognitive shortcut enabling us to think about
categories of individuals without the (important)
clutter of individual variation - Think of a bird
- How big is it?
- What does it eat?
- How does it get about?
89Stereotypes and stigma
- Generalisations are (usually) OK with birds, but
with people they can cause problems - Each individual inherits stereotypical group
properties - Sometimes based on ignorance
- Often have negative connotations (c.f. Out-group
bias)
90Sex Stereotypes and Discrimination
- Sex stereotyping social stereotypes of women as
nice and incompetent and men as competent but
not so nice prevail across cultures and in both
genders! (Fiske, 1998) - But research suggests that people do not actually
describe themselves in terms of this sex
stereotype (Martin, 1987) (e.g., women and
sex-discrimination) - People actually represent the sexes as
subtypes - Housewife Businessman
- Sexy woman Macho man
- Career woman
- Feminist/athlete/lesbian
- Men and women generally see women as more
homogenous than men (Lorenzi-Cioldi et al., 1995)
91Sex Stereotypes and Discrimination
- Why are there these differential stereotypes
which prevail across genders? - Sex roles Behaviour viewed as sex-stereotypically
appropriate - Socialisation into sex roles so do sex
stereotypes reflect actual differences in
psychological factors or role assignment? - Very few differences on psychological dimensions,
but large differences in terms of perceptions of
sex roles - Therefore certain roles are sex typed (Eagly
Steffen, 1984) - E.g. role assignment in jobs
92Sex Stereotypes and Discrimination
Women Men
Restaurant servers Lawyers
Telephone operators Dentists
Secretaries Lorry drivers
Nurses Accountants
Babysitters Business executives
Dental hygienists Engineers
Librarian
Nursery school teachers
93Sex Stereotypes and Discrimination
- Glass-ceiling effect Stereotypes prevent
promotion due to competence perceptions e.g.
female in upper management, males in flight
attendants - Maintaining sex stereotypes Media largely
responsible unsubtle vs. subtle - Face-ism Media depiction gives greater
prominence to the head and less prominence to the
body for men, but vice-versa for women (Archer et
al., 1983)
94Sex Stereotypes and Attributions
By a MAN attributed to ability or high level of
effort
Performance viewed as more deserving of reward or
recognition
Successful task performance
By a WOMAN attributed to luck or an easy task
Performance viewed as less deserving of reward or
recognition
95Sex Stereotypes and Attribution
More to luck
Female actor
Ratings of Target
More to ability
Male task
Female task
Source Deaux and Emswiller (1974)
96Racism
- Racism Prejudice and discrimination against
people based on ethnicity or race - Much research focused on anti-black attitudes
among whites in the United States - Dramatic reduction in unfavourable attitudes
since 1930s - Similar reduction toward ethnic minorities in
Britain and Western Europe
97Racism
Percentage of white respondents selecting trait
Superstitious
Lazy
Ignorant
1933
1953
1967
1987
1993
Source Dovidio et al. (1996)
98New Racism
- Racial stereotypes have not gone away but changed
- Theories of new racism suggest that people
experience conflict between prejudiced attitudes
and modern egalitarian values - Although explicit attitudes might appear
egalitarian, implicit 'attitudes' suggest that
'racism' might still be at play
99Theories of prejudice
- Loads of these (see textbook) but important
factors are - Official sanction
- E.g. racial segregation in US South Africa
women not being given the vote, anti-homosexual
proclamations in religious texts inclusion on
DSM II, etc, etc
100Group behaviour
101Groups
- People affiliate with groups
- Mostly these are enduring and rooted in history
- Sometimes transitory and ephemeral
- Group are one way we achieve more than as
individuals - But they can be dysfunctional
102Group Polarisation
- Polarisation refers to the enhancement of the
dominant group perception or opinion after
discussion/negotiation (Moscovici Zavalloni,
1969) - People become more polarised from initial
starting position e.g. Myers and Bishop (1970)
prejudice levels after a group discussion
103Group Polarisation
- Three Theoretical Explanations
- Normative influence People maintain their
beliefs in the socially desirable direction so as
not to stand out - Informational influence (Isenberg, 1986) New
information is made available and the shift is a
function of the proportion of arguments in favour
of one side, their clarity and novelty. - Social Identity (Turner et al., 1989) People
construct a group norm and then conform to that
norm, results in a polarised in-group norm.
Processes of self-categorisation and
deindividuation occur.
104Minority vs. Majority
- Minority Influence
- Moscovici (1969) demonstrated that a minority can
influence the majority perceptions if the
minority were consistent and perceived as viable
(couldnt be explained away in terms of dogma,
eccentric, weird) - Mugny Papastamou (1980) found that minority
groups can be influential if their message is
consistent yet flexible and open to reach
compromises c.f. Film about jurors 12 Angry Men
105Minority vs. Majority
- Majority Influence
- Groupthink Psychological drive for consensus at
any cost suppressing dissents and alternatives in
cohesive decision making (Janis, 1972). Five
requirements - A cohesive group
- High stakes
- Insulated from external information
- No searches for alternatives
- Time pressure an urgency to decide
- Directive leader
106Minority vs. Majority
- Majority Influence
- Groupthink Symptoms
- Illusion of moral high ground
- Dissent from leader discouraged group norm
- No consideration of strengths weaknesses
- Not willing to listen to other opinions
- Mindguards discourage dissent
- Can lead to flawed decision making
107Minority vs. Majority
- Majority Influence
- Groupthink Techniques to avoid
- Criticism should be encouraged
- Input for external non-group members
- Sub-groups formed and feed-in to main group
- Group leader should not be invulnerable
108Groups and group conflict
- The history of humanity is a history of
inter-group conflict between - Countries
- 20th Conflicts in Europe (inc. two world wars)
- Religions
- Northern Ireland protestants vs catholics
- Ethnicities
- Hutus versus Tutsis in Rwanda
109Groups
- In addition to personal affiliations and personal
identities people also have a group or social
identity - (or more correctly they can have many)
110Social Identity Theory
- Self-concept is linked with the social groups
that we identify with - Tajfel (1979) proposed Social Identity Theory to
explain how group concerns can become personal
concerns and vice-versa - Aims to explain inter-group processes as well as
how peoples cognitions are affected by group
membership - People undergo an identification process that
leads them to group affiliation
111Social Identity Theory
- Affiliation to groups is determined by 2
processes - Social categorisation
- Process in which people categorise social stimuli
to reduce cognitive load - Social comparison
- Tendency to make comparisons between groups and
positively evaluate in-group members - Social Identity Theory has much to offer in
explaining choices of group membership but also
inter-group and intra-group behaviour (as we
shall see later)
112Self-Categorisation Theory
- People in groups tend to categorise themselves as
group members - Tend to internalise the attributes that are
common to group members and make self-evaluations - E.g. Lawyers will assume the characteristics of
other lawyers e.g. using legal-speak, wearing a
suit in court, charging high fees etc.
Personal Identity
Social Identity
Group I.D. self- descriptions made in terms of
membership of social categories e.g. race, sex,
nationality, profession, religion, sports team,
hobbies etc.
Personal I.D. self- descriptions - denote
specific aspects of the individual
Turner (1982) These represent different levels
of SELF-CATEGORISATION
113What is Intergroup Behaviour?
- Intergroup behaviour is any perception,
cognition, or behaviour that is influenced by
peoples recognition that they and others are
members of distinct social groups (Hogg
Vaughan, 2005, p. 392) - Examples of intergroup behaviour
- International and intra-national conflicts
- Political confrontations
- Interethnic relations
- Negotiations between unions and management
- Competitive team sports
114Collective Violence
- Race riots in Watts suburb of Los Angeles in 1965
occurred after the perceived injustice of the
arrest of 3 black family members - Tensions boiled over and riots broke out
- 35m property was damaged, 34 people were killed,
and the military had to be called in to restore
order - High level of unemployment, deprivation, and
highly secularised (99 of the population were
African-American)
115Collective Violence
- Race riots in South Central Los Angeles in 1992
were seen as a direct response to the jury
acquittal of 4 white policemen for the beating on
Rodney King - Set against a background of rising unemployment
and deep disadvantage in black communities - 50 dead and 2300 injured
- Attacks symbolised by beating of white truck
driver Reginald Denny
116Intergroup conflict in non-humans
- Ants, bees and other social insects will often
experience intergroup rivalry - Chimpanzees have conflict over resources (Wilson
Wrangham, 2003) - Especially (but not exclusively) when resources
are scarce
117Realistic Conflict
- Competition between groups over scarce resources
results in conflict and ethnocentrism - E.g., Sherifs (1966) summer camp experiments
- Example of realistic intergroup hostility and
intergroup-co-operation - Four phases
- Spontaneous friendship formation
- Ingroup formation
- Intergroup competition
- Intergroup cooperation (superordinate goals)
118Realistic Conflict
- Notable points from Sherifs (1966) summer camp
experiments - Latent enthnocentrism existed in absence of
competition - Ingroups formed despite the fact that friends
were actually outgroup members - Prejudice, discrimination, and ethnocentrism
arose as a consequence of real intergroup
conflict - Boys in summer camp did not have authoritarian or
dogmatic personalities - Simple contact between members of opposing groups
did not improve intergroup relations
119Realistic Conflict Theory
- Sherif (1966) proposed realistic conflict theory
- Individuals who share common goals that require
interdependence will tend to cooperate and form a
group - Individuals who have mutually exclusive goals
(e.g., scarce resources) will be involved in
inter-individual competition which prevents group
formation and contributes to the collapse of an
existing group - At the intergroup level, mutually exclusive goals
between groups results in realistic intergroup
conflict and ethnocentrism while shared
(superordinate) goals results in cooperation
120Social Identity Minimal Groups
- Formation of groups spontaneously creates
intergroup conflict and ethnocentric attitudes
very quickly even without realistic conflict - Spontaneous emergent of conflict studied by
Tajfel et al. (1971) using the minimal group
paradigm - Minimal group paradigm Experimental methodology
to investigate the effect of social
categorisation alone on group behaviour - Truly a minimal group effect
- Groups formed on a flimsy criterion
- No past history or possible future
- Members had no knowledge of other members
- No self-interest in the money allocation task
121Social Identity Minimal Groups
- Allocation of points in grid game to ingroup and
outgroup in minimal group paradigm - Four possible strategies
- Fairness
- Maximum joint profit
- Maximum ingroup profit
- Maximum difference
122(No Transcript)
123Social Identity Minimal Groups
- Therefore
- Mere awareness of being in a group can influence
individuals perceptions of other group members - Individuals become depersonalised group
attributes rather than personal become salient
in group situations - The group does not have to be well defined
- Strong effect in hundreds of minimal group
experiments which - Allocated people to groups completely randomly
- Removed the money-points
124Prejudice
- Prejudice involves a negative attitude toward
specific people based on their membership in an
identified group - Three components of prejudice
- Stereotypes are thoughts and beliefs about people
based on their group membership - Strong emotional feelings about the object of
prejudice - Predispositions to act in certain negative ways
toward the group (discrimination) - Eliminating prejudice may require
- Cognitive retraining
- Increased group contact
125Sources of Prejudice
- Learning Prejudice is acquired through
classical and operant conditioning and through
modeling - Cognitive processes People use mental shortcuts
to categorise others - Ingroup versus outgroup categorisation
- Economic/Political competition Prejudice arises
when financial resources are limited - Displaced aggression Persons may displace their
frustration onto non-threatening groups, a
practice known as scapegoating - Black-sheep effect When an ingroup member
holding attitudes dissonant to other group
members is derogated (scapegoating)
126Reducing group conflict
- Realistic conflict theory (Sherif, 1966) suggests
that the existence of superordinate goals and
cooperation reduces intergroup hostility, also
avoidance of mutually exclusive goals - Social identity theory (Tajfel Turner, 1979)
suggests that hostility will be reduced if
intergroup stereotypes become less derogatory and
polarised and legitimised non-violent forms of
intergroup competition exist - Jaw jaw rather than war war, sanctions etc.
- Education?
127Promoting inter-group co-operation
- Solutions sought to break down out-group
prejudice are... - (1) Promoting interpersonal contact to break-down
attitudes derived from social comparison - (2) Creating super-ordinate goals to promote
intergroup cooperation on a task with mutual
benefit - . Minimising importance of group boundaries and
perceptions of group differences
128(No Transcript)
129The process of civilisation
- No one would deny prejudice and conflict are
still with us - But things may be getting better
- Although humans still have a dark side education
and the rule of law means that it may be less
prominent (see Pinker, 2011)
130(No Transcript)
131(No Transcript)
132Summary
- It is in our genes to be social
- But we are not a superorganism
- Humans are conditional cooperators
- We are wired to influence other and to form
affiliations - We affiliate with groups
- Which can lead to conflict