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Social Psychology Chapter 16.

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Presentation on theme: "Social Psychology Chapter 16."— Presentation transcript:

1 Social Psychology Chapter 16

2 Why Study Attitudes? Attitudes are important because they:
strongly influence our social thought help to organize and evaluate stimuli (e.g., categorizing stimuli as positive or negative) presumably have a strong affect on behavior help to predict people’s behavior in wide range of contexts (e.g., voting, interpersonal relations) 4.5 4 10 10

3 Attitudes How are attitudes formed? Do attitudes influence behavior?
How are attitudes changed? 4.4 4 10 10

4 Definition Evaluations of any aspect of our social world. Automobiles
Abortion President Bush

5 Attitude Structure Affect Cognition Behavior Gun Control
Affect: “Guns make me sick!” Affect Behavior: “I vote for gun control whenever possible.” Cognition Cognition: “Guns in the house increase the likelihood of children accidentally shooting themselves.” Behavior

6 Attitude Formation social learning- acquire attitudes from others
classical conditioning- learning based on association subliminal conditioning- without awareness instrumental conditioning- learn to hold the “right” views observational learning- learning by observing actions of others and exposure to mass media 4 10 10

7 Attitude Formation (con’t)
social comparison- compare ourselves to others to determine if our view of reality is correct attitudes are shaped by social information from others we like or respect genetic factors- inherited general dispositions (e.g., see world in a positive or negative light) highly heritable attitudes and gut-level preferences (music) are especially influenced 4 10 10

8 Summary Attitudes are evaluations of any aspect of our social world
Attitudes are often learned Attitudes are also formed through social comparison New research suggests attitudes are influenced by genetic factors

9 Attitude-Behavior Link
Attitudes do not always predict behavior LaPiere (1934) found that virtually all businesses served Chinese couple courteously, yet most owners held negative attitudes Sun-worshippers know the dangers of exposure to the sun, yet they tan anyway “looking good” attitude takes precedence over attitudes toward personal health Forward 4 10 10

10 Would you serve Chinese people?
LaPiere Study Would you serve Chinese people? Back

11 Attitude Change Dissonance Theory Persuasion
Elaboration-Likelihood Model

12 Attitude Formation & Change
Cognitive Dissonance Theory Festinger and Carlsmith study

13 $20 Told next person tasks were fun and interesting Asked how much they enjoyed experiment Boring Tasks Told next person tasks were fun and interesting $1

14 Festinger & Carlsmith Study Results

15 Cognitive Approach to Attitude Change
Persuasion efforts to change attitudes through various kinds of messages. Early persuasion research focused on: The communicator (source) What they said (message) How they said it (channels) Who was listening (audience) Research suggests there are two routes through which information is processed The Elaboration-Likelihood Model

16 Elaboration-Likelihood Model
Nonverbal cues important Argument strength unimportant Message unimportant, uninteresting Heuristic processing Peripheral Route Nonverbal cues unimportant Argument strength important Message important, interesting Systematic processing Central Route

17 Figure 16.10 Overview of the persuasion process

18 Factors Influencing Information Processing
We tend to use systematic processing when: we are strongly motivated accuracy motivation impression motivation defensive motivation we have a high ability to do so We tend to use heuristic processing when: we are unmotivated we lack the ability to systematically process info

19 Concern for Other’s Goals
Competing Collaborating Avoiding Accommodating Compromising High Distributive Dimension Integrative Dimension Concern for Your Goals Low Low High Concern for Other’s Goals

20 Factors That Influence Strategy Selection
Skills Willingness of other participant Perception of future relationship Attributions about others’ behavior

21 Person Perception: Forming Impressions of Others
Effects of physical appearance Cognitive schemas Stereotypes Prejudice and discrimination Subjectivity in person perception Evolutionary perspectives

22 Attribution Processes: Explaining Behavior
Attributions Internal vs. External Kelley’s covariation model Biases in attributions Fundamental attribution error Defensive attribution Self-serving bias Cultural influences


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