Title: Social Cognition
1Social Cognition
2What are Attitudes?
- Beliefs and feelings about objects, people and
events that lead people to behave in certain ways.
3How do Attitudes develop?
- Conditioning
- Observational Learning
- Cognitive evaluation
- Cognitive Anchors
- Persistent beliefs that shape the ways in which
he/she sees the world and interprets events
4When you combine attitudes and behavior what
happens?
- When behavior follows attitudes
Employees usually avoid jobs they dont like to
do.
People usually watch what they like on TV!
5When you combine attitudes and behavior what
happens?
- When attitudes follow behavior
prejudice towards a particular race do not
predict accurately actual behavior
Attitude to your church Doesnt necessarily
correlate with your church attendance
6What is Persuasion?
- Direct attempt to influence other peoples
attitudes
Telephone Sales
Used Car Salesman
Campaign Supporters
7What are some Methods of Persuasion?
- Central Route- using evidence and logical
arguments to persuade people - Peripheral route- indirect, attempts to associate
objects, people, or events with positive or
negative cues.
8How do some people deliver such messages of
persuasion?
- Two sided Argument -people present not only their
side of the argument but also the oppositions
side. - Emotional Appeals -persuade by arousing such
feelings as loyalty, desire, or fear rather than
by convincing through evidence and logic.
9What type of people deliver these messages of
persuasion?
- Experts
- Trustworthy
- Physically attractive
- Similar to their audience
10When are people more receptive to persuasion?
When they are in a good mood or a bad mood?
- A good mood, they are more likely to accept the
persuasive message. - Wouldnt you ask your parents something when they
are in a good mood?
11Are persuasive appeals specific to the audience
they are targeting?
- Yes.
- Take the presidential elections, do they run the
same messages on MTV as they would on the Food
Network?
12Are people always persuaded by appeals made to
them?
- No.
- There are some people that have Sales resistance.
- Sales resistance is the ability to turn down
requests to buy products or service or make
donations.
13What is prejudice?
- A generalized attitude toward a specific group of
people
14What are stereotypes?
- Unchanging oversimplified, and usually distorted
beliefs about groups of people
15- How many blondes does it take to milk a cow?
- Five - one to hold the udder, and four to lift
and the cow up and down.
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19What are two reasons people develop stereotypes?
- A way to organize information about their social
world - They assume that those who are different are
similar
20How can stereotypes be harmful?
- They ignore peoples individual natures and
assign traits to them on the basis of the group
which they belong.
21Are there positive stereotypes?
- Yes
- Belief that the members of a particular group are
good at something
22What is discrimination?
- The unfair treatment of individual because they
are different
23What is likely to happen to people that
experience discrimination?
- They may begin to see themselves as inferior.
24What are five causes of Prejudice
- Exaggerating differences
- Justifying economic status
- Social learning
- Victimizing
- Scapegoating
25Exaggerating Differences
- People tend to prefer people that are similar to
themselves. - People who different in one or several ways- in
skin color or religion, for example- are often
assumed to have attitudes and customs that are
more different than they really are.
26Justifying economic status
- People tend to develop prejudice against those
who are not in the same economic group. - May believe that people who are worse off than
themselves work less hard or are less motivated
to succeed.
27Social Learning
- Children, like adults, acquire many attitudes
from other people. - They are especially likely to acquire the
attitudes fo their parents. - Children tend to imitate their parents, and
parents reinforce their children when they do.
28Vicitimization
- Sometimes people who are the victims of prejudice
feel empathy for others who are discriminated
against. - However, this is not always the case. In fact,
some victims of prejudice try to gain a sense of
power and pride by asserting their superiority
over groups that are even worse off then
themselves.
29What is scapegoating?
- An individual or group that is blamed for
problems of others because the real cause of the
problems is too complex, powerful. Or remote to
be addressed.
30W.E.B.DuBois
- Why did the incident described by W.E.B. DuBois
affect him so deeply? - It was the first time that DuBois realized he was
different and that many opportunities were denied
him as a result. - How was DuBois reaction to racial inequality the
same as that of other African American youths of
his time? - Many other African American youths of his time
responded by fitting in, giving up, or becoming
bitter and angry. - How was DuBois reaction to racial inequality
different from that of other African American
youths of his time? - His reaction was to try to earn, through hard
work and cleverness, the things he was denied
because of his race, and to fight inequality
31How can prejudice be overcome?
- Increased contact among members of different
groups - Speak up when others act out
- Make a conscious effort to treat others
courteously
32What is social perception?
- The ways which people perceive one another
33What is the primacy effect?
- The tendency for people to form opinions of
others on the basis of first impressions.
34What is the recency effect?
- Occurs when people change their opinions of
others on the basis of recent interactions.
35What is the attribution theory?
- People tend to explain the behavior of others in
terms of either dispositional or personality
36What is the Actor-observer bias?
- People who attribute the behavior of others to
dispositional or external behaviors.
37Why does the actor-observer bias occur?
- It occurs when we judge people only by the
behavior we witness and peoples behavior may not
always be a true reflection of their
personalities.
38What is fundamental attribution error?
- The tendency to overestimate the effect of
dispositional causes for another persons behavior
and to underestimate the effect of situational
causes.
39What is self-serving bias?
- The tendency to view ones successes as stemming
from internal factors and ones failure as
stemming from external factors
40What are some forms of nonverbal communication?
- Facial expressions
- Gestures
- Posture
- The distance we keep from others
41Who is more likely to use physical contact in
Americans, Men or Women?
- American women are more likely to use physical
contact.
42When is touching inappropriate?
- When it is forced and when it is done in certain
places or in certain ways.
43What are two types of eye contact and what do
they convey?
- Gazing
- Eagerness or attention. It shows liking or
friendliness - Staring
- Anger. It does not show that someone likes
someone and its is not friendly.
44What is attraction?
- A kind of attitude of liking.
45What is universal trait that is widely shared in
the ideals of beauty?
- A smiling person is more attractive than a
frowning person
46What is the matching hypothesis?
- The view that people tend to choose other people
similar to themselves in attractiveness and
attitudes in the formation of interpersonal
relationships.
47Friends and partners tend to be similar in what
ways (according to Michael)?
- Race
- Ethnicity
- Age
- Level of education
- Religion
48What are two reasons that we tend to choose
friends and partners with backgrounds that are
similar to our own?
- We tend to live among people who are similar to
ourselves - They tend to have the same attitudes as the person
49What is reciprocity?
- The mutual exchange of feelings or attitudes
50Why do most people value friends?
- Because of the rewards that friendships offers
51What is intimacy?
52What is passion?
- Feelings of romantic and sexual attraction
53What is commitment?
54Type of Love Liking
- Formula Intimacy alone
- Description true friendships without passion or
long term commitment
55Type of Love Companionate love
- Formula Intimacy Commitment
- Description Long term committed friendships such
as a marriage in which passion has faded
56Type of Love Empty Love
- Formula Commitment Alone
- Description Decision to love each other without
intimacy or passion
57Type of Love Fatuous Love
- Formula Passion Commitment
- Description Commitment based on passion but
without time for intimacy to develop shallow
relationship such as a whirlwind courtship.
58Type of Love Infatuation
- Formula Passion Alone
- Description Passionate, obsessive love at first
sight without intimacy or commitment
59Type of Love Romantic Love
- Formula Intimacy Passion
- Description Lovers physically and emotionally
attracted to each other but without commitment as
in summer romance.
60Type of Love Consummate Love
- Formula Intimacy passion commitment
- Description A complete love consisting of all
three components ( an ideal difficult to attain)