Title: Social Thinking: Attitudes
1Social Thinking Attitudes Prejudice
2Attitudes
- What is an attitude?
- Our beliefs and feelings about objects, people,
and events that lead people to behave in certain
ways. - Has three components
- Cognitivethoughts about given topic or situation
- Affectivefeelings or emotions about topic
- Behavioralyour actions regarding the topic or
situation
3Components of Attitudes
- An attitude is a positive or negative evaluation
of an object, person, or idea
4How Attitudes Develop
- Conditioning Children are reinforced for acting
and thinking in ways that are consistent with
their parents attitudes. - Observational Learning We observe others and
adopt their ways of acting. - Cognitive Evaluations Evaluate evidence and
then form a belief based on that. Do this when
you have to justify your attitude. - Cognitive Anchors beliefs that shape the ways
we see the world and interpret events. We reject
things that differ too much from our cognitive
anchor.
5The Effect of Attitudes on Behavior
- Youre most likely to behave in accordance with
your attitudes when - Attitudes are extreme or are frequently expressed
- Attitudes have been formed through direct
experience. - You are very knowledgeable about the subject.
- You have a vested interest in the subject.
- You anticipate a favorable outcome or response
from others for doing so.
6Attitudes Affecting Actions
- Many studies suggest a persons attitudes do not
match their actions - Attitudes can predict behavior if
- Outside influences are minimal
- People are aware of their attitudes
- Attitude is relevant to behavior
7Actions Affecting Attitudes
- Under some circumstances ones actions can
influence attitudes. They include - Foot-in-the-door phenomenon
- Role playing
- Cognitive dissonance
8Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon
- The tendency for people who have first agreed to
a small request to comply later with a larger
request
9Role Playing
- Playing a role can influence or change ones
attitude - Zimbardos Prison Study
- College students played the role of guard or
prisoner in a simulated prison. - The study was ended after just 6 days when the
guards became too aggressive and cruel.
Dr. Phillip Zimbardo
10Cognitive Dissonance (Leon Festinger)
- The theory that people act to reduce the
discomfort (dissonance) they feel when their
thoughts (cognitions) are inconsistent with their
actions - When our attitudes are inconsistent with our
actions, we change our attitudes to reduce the
dissonance.
11How Cognitive Dissonance Leads to Attitude Change
- When your behavior conflicts with your attitudes,
an uncomfortable state of tension is produced.
However, if you can rationalize or explain your
behavior, the conflict (and the tension) is
eliminated or avoided. If you cant explain your
behavior, you may change your attitude so that it
is in harmony with your behavior.
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13Insufficient-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
14Cognitive Dissonance A Review
- If you have a good excuse for a behavior that
does not go with your attitude then you avoid
dissonance. - If you do not have a good excuse for a behavior
that is against your attitude you must change
your attitude to fit your behavior.
15Dissonance-Reducing Mechanisms
- Avoiding dissonant information
- we attend to information in support of our
existing views, rather than information that
doesnt support them - 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
16Prejudice
17Prejudice
- Based on the exaggerated notion that members of
other social groups are very different from
members of our own social group - An unjustifiable attitude toward a group and its
members - Usually involves stereotyped beliefs, negative
feelings, and a predisposition to discriminatory
action - Usually involves a negative attitude
18Keep in Mind
- Racial and ethnic groups are far more alike than
they are different - Any differences that may exist between members of
different racial and ethnic groups are far
smaller than differences among various members of
the same group.
19Categorization
- The tendency to group similar objects
- May be a means to explain stereotypes
20Stereotype
- An unchanging, oversimplified and usually
distorted belief about a group of people - We assume those different from ourselves must all
be similar to each other. - Because stereotypes sometimes have a kernel of
truth, they are easy to confirm, especially when
you see only what you expect to see. - When stereotypic beliefs become expectations that
are applied to all members of a given group, they
can be both misleading and damaging - Creating special cases, or exceptions, allows
people to maintain stereotypes in the face of
contradictory evidence - Stereotypes limit the possibilities of
individuals by discouraging them to explore their
full range of talents.
21Studying 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 - See The Hidden Prejudice video clip (Scientific
American Frontiers (6 minutes)
22Implicit 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
23Implicit 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
24Ingroup Us
- People with whom one shares a common identity
25Outgroup Them
- Those perceived as different or apart form us
(the ingroup)
26Out-Group Homogeneity Effect
- Typically, we describe the members of our
in-group as being quite varied, despite having
enough features in common to belong to the same
group - We tend to see members of the out-group as much
more similar to one another, even in areas that
have little to do with the criteria for group
membership.
27Ingroup Bias
- The tendency to favor ones own group usually at
the expense of the outgroup - We make favorable, positive attributions for
behaviors by members of our in-group, and
unfavorable, negative attributions for behaviors
by members of out-groups. - Ethnocentrism - belief that ones own culture or
ethnic group is superior to others
28The Basis for Prejudice
- In combination, stereotypes and
in-group/out-group bias form the cognitive basis
for prejudicial attitudes. - Prejudice also has a strong emotional component,
which is intensely negative and involves hatred,
contempt, fear, and loathing - Behaviorally, prejudice can be displayed in the
form of discrimination
29Discrimination
- Unfair treatment of individuals because they are
members of a particular group. - Victims of discrimination may see themselves as
inferior. - Low expectations low self esteem low chance
for success. - See clip of Clarks study from Separate but
Equal. - See this modern example (2 min)
30Prejudice and Discrimination
- Play Attitudes and Prejudicial Behavior (606)
Segment 31 from Psychology The Human
Experience. - Play Ethnocentrism and Prejudice (506) Segment
32 from Psychology The Human Experience.
31Causes of Prejudice
32Exaggerating Differences
- People exaggerate how different others are from
themselves. - We tend to prefer people who look, act and think
like us and see others as being more different
than they really are.
33Justifying Economic Status
- People of higher socioeconomic status tend to
justify it by assuming that people of lower
economic status are inferior to them. - Believe that lower status people are lazy and
dont work as hard. - This is also known as Just-World Phenomenon
34Just-World Phenomenon
- The tendency to believe that people get what they
deserve and deserve what they get - Reflects childs attitude that good is rewarded
and evil is punished
35Social Learning
- Children will imitate their parents attitudes and
parents will reinforce these attitudes in their
children - This is how prejudice is passed on from
generation to generation
36Victimization
- Victims of prejudice try to gain a sense of power
and pride by putting down another group that is
even worse off them.
37Scapegoat Theory
- Individual or group is blamed for a problem that
is too complex, powerful or remote to be
addressed. - Provides an outlet for anger by providing someone
to blame - Example Nazi Germany blaming the Jews for the
troubles in Germany after WWI.
38Accounting for Prejudice
39Accounting for Prejudice Two Theories
- Prejudice and intergroup hostility increase when
different groups are competing for scarce
resources - People are prejudiced against groups that are
perceived as threatening important in-group norms
and values - Social psychologists have increasingly come to
believe 2 is more correct.
40Overcoming Prejudice
41Reducing Prejudice
- Initially, researchers thought simple contact
between conflicting groups would reduce prejudice
(contact theory) - They now think that prejudice can be overcome
when rival groups cooperate to achieve a common
goal
42Social Identity and Cooperation
- Social identity theory
- States that when youre assigned to a group, you
automatically think of that group as an in-group
for you - Sherifs Robbers Cave study
- 1112 year old boys at camp
- Boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate
from one another - Each group took on characteristics of distinct
social group, with leaders, rules, norms of
behavior, and names
43Robbers Cave (Sherif)
- Leaders proposed series of competitive
interactions which led to 3 changes between
groups and within groups - within-group solidarity
- negative stereotyping of other group
- hostile between-group interactions
- A fierce rivalry quickly developed
- To restore harmony, Sherif created a series of
situations in which the two groups would need to
cooperate to achieve a common goal - After a series of joint efforts, the rivalry
diminished and the groups became friends.
44Robbers Cave
- Overcoming the strong we/they effect
- establishment of superordinate goals
- e.g., breakdown in camp water supply
- overcoming intergroup strife - research
- stereotypes are diluted when people share
individuating information - This idea used in the classroom The Jigsaw
Method of cooperative learning. (see pg. 514)
45Ways to Reduce Prejudice
- Increase contact among members of different
groups - Individuals must decide that prejudiced responses
are wrong and consciously reject their own and
others prejudiced and stereotyped thinking - Individuals must learn to recognize automatic
prejudicial reactions and deliberately replace
them with nonprejudiced responses that are based
on their personal standards