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The Self in the Social World

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Self-schemas-- our beliefs about the self that organize & guide the processing ... It's easier being a Big Fish in a Small Pond ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Self in the Social World


1
The Self in the Social World
  • Dr. Kline
  • FSU-PC

2
A. What is our self-concept?
  • Who am I???
  • We use our self-concept to define ourselves.
  • E.g., parents, college graduates

3
What is a schema???
4
B. Schemas--mental templates by which we
organize our worlds.
  • Self-schemas-- our beliefs about the self that
    organize guide the processing of self-relevant
    information.
  • These influence how we perceive, remember, and
    evaluate both other people and ourselves.

5
Question
  • If you think of yourself as intelligent, how will
    this effect how you relate to others?

6
You will
  • notice others intelligence
  • respond well to questions that tap your knowledge
    base.
  • welcome info consistent with your self schema.

7
1. What is the self-reference effect?
  • Our tendency to process efficiently and remember
    well information related to oneself.

8
How does this influence our thinking?
  • We are better at remembering things that are
    relevant to us!!!!
  • (E.g., cocktail party phenomenon)

9
So our focus is on Ourselves.
  • We see ourselves as the principal actor/actress
    in a play showcasing our lives.

10
We overestimate others views of us.
  • We assume others are evaluating us!!
  • However, most people either dont notice or
    quickly forget our social blunders.
  • (We often make mountains out of molehills.)

11
Gilcovich study (2000)
  • Some Cornell studentswere asked to wear Barry
    Manilow T-shirts before entering a room of
    students.
  • T-shirt wearers assumed that nearly 50 of the
    students would notice.
  • Only 23 of students noticed.

12
Take home message
  • People are rarely aware of our emotions, social
    blunders, and public mental slips.
  • What we agonize over, others forget.

13
2. What is Self-esteem (SE)?
  • What do you think???

14
SE- our sense of self worth.
  • The sum of all our self-schemas.
  • Do we see ourselves as fun interesting?
  • OR
  • Dull boring?

15
C. Factors influencing development- self-concept.
  • Our roles
  • social identity
  • social comparisons
  • our successes/failures
  • others view

16
Roles
  • We each have several roles we play (e.g., mother,
    professor,).
  • New roles may feel aliento us, but with time
    the new roles become part of our self-concept.
    (e.g., becoming a parent)

17
Social Identity
  • The we aspect of our self-concepts.
  • Refers to definition of who you areyour race,
    religion, gender, academic major, etc.
  • E.g., Asian female practicing Buddism.

18
Does our awareness of our social identity change
when we belong to a minority group?
  • What do you think???

19
Yes!!!!
  • A solo female among a large group of males (or
    vice versa) is often well aware of their social
    identity.
  • Why?? They are conscious of their uniqueness
    within the majority group.

20
Social Comparisons (How do I compare with thee?)
  • We evaluate our abilities and opinions by
    comparing ourselves with others.
  • (e.g., How do I compare with others on
    attractiveness, wealth, education, status?)

21
Its easier being a Big Fish in a Small Pond
  • Students have higher academic self-concept if
    they attend a school with few star students.
  • Upon entering big research universities, academic
    self-esteem may be threatened.

22
What if I am doing worse compared with others?
  • We set ourselves up for disappointment by making
    unfair comparisons.
  • To protect our shaky self-esteemwe often
    rationalize that the competitor is advantaged
    (more resources, money, support).

23
Success
  • When we engage in challenging tasks succeed our
    self-concept improves.

24
D. Predicting our behavior
  • Do we accurately predict our behavior?
  • No!!!
  • The best predictor of our future behavior is our
    past behavior!!!

25
Do we accurately predict the longevity of our
relationships?????

26
No!!
  • We view the longevity of our relationship
    through rose-colored glasses.
  • McDonald Ross (1997) found that dating
    couples had overly optimistic predictions about
    their relationships.
  • Their parents roommates tended to be more
    accurate.

27
E. Self-Efficacy
  • Is our sense of competency and effectiveness at
    what we do.
  • Differs from self-esteem!!
  • You can have high self-efficacy and low SE.

28
What improves self-efficacy?
  • 1. Hard-achieved accomplishments!!
  • We feel good about our abilities when we set and
    meet challenging goals.
  • 2. Subtle manipulations work too (Levy-elderly
    study).

29
Levy study (1996)
  • 90 older adults were presented with either
    positive (sage, wise,) or negative (senile,
    decline) words subliminally.
  • Words were flashed on screen with .066 sec
    durationoutside of awareness.
  • Ss exposed to positive words had higher memory
    self-efficacy.

30
Self-efficacy
  • If we believe we can do something, can we do
    it????
  • Depends do we feel control over the outcomes?

31
F. Locus of Control perceived control
  • Are outcomes of events due to our efforts or
    controlled by outside influences (luck)?
  • Internal we control the events in our lives.
  • External events are controlled by outside
    sources.

32
Who does better-those with an internal locus or
an external locus??
  • What do you think???

33
Internal Locus of control!!!
  • Folks with an internal locus of controldo better
    in school, make more money, and deal with marital
    problems directly.
  • Caution- Just World hypothesis

34
How do we develop either an internal or external
locus of control?

35
Its based on our explanations of our setbacks.
  • Attributing negative outcomes to others works
    against us.
  • Seeing our failings as the result of our
    actions, encourages us to work harder to improve.

36
G. Self-Serving Bias
  • We tend to perceive ourselves favorably.
  • we attribute our failures to external sources
    (bad luck), but overwhelmingly accept credit for
    our successes!!!

37
Do students exhibit the self-serving bias?
  • Yes!!! Students who do well on an exam are more
    likely to say the exam was valid.
  • Students who do poorly often report the test
    was misleading/too hard.

38
Do teachers do this?
  • Yes!!!

39
H. Unrealistic Optimism
  • Many of us have unrealistically positive views of
    things that will happen.
  • Baker Emery (1993) surveyed 137 marriage
    license applicants who knew divorce rate, but
    assessed their own risk at 0.

40
I. False Consensus uniqueness
  • The tendency to overestimate the commonality of
    ones opinions and ones undersirable or
    unsuccessful behaviors.
  • (We lie and then say well everyone
    lies.)
  • False uniqueness occurs when we underestimate the
    commonality of our abilities.
  • (we see our talents/abilities as unusual
    special).

41
The Dark Side of Self-Esteem (SE)
  • Low SE predicts-higher risk of depression, drug
    abuse, delinquency.
  • Yet, many juvenile delinquents, gang leaders,
    terrorists have high SE!
  • Here, high SE may be related to psychopathology
    (psychopaths) and/or may contribute to violence.

42
Do people with big egos commit bad acts to
conceal inner insecurity and low SE?
  • What do you think???

43
The evidence does not support this!!!
  • Do narcissistic people actually have fragile egos
    hidden behind a self-enhancing veneer?
  • Studies of bullies, gang members, and genocidal
    dictators, have not produced evidence of low SE.

44
J. Self-presentation Putting your best face
forward!
  • We try to portray ourselves in the best possible
    light to others.
  • How do we do this?

45
False modesty
  • We often make self-derogatory remarks, to elicit
    sympathy from others.
  • (e.g., Im such a fool.)
  • This elicits reassurances from others that were
    ok and makes us appear modest.
  • (e.g., forced good sportsmanship)

46
Self-handicapping
  • Fragile SE is protected, by overtly sabotaging
    chances of success.
  • Person is off-the-hook. They would have
    succeeded had it not been for that obstacle.
  • (E.g., chronic procrastination on important
    projects leading to failure, cheating on a mate
    to end a happy relationship)

47
Impression Management
  • We continually manage the impressions we create.
  • Whether we wish to impress, intimidate, seem
    helpless, we play to our audience.
  • We try to give others positive images of us.
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