Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Presentation is loading. Please wait.

Social Psychology.

Similar presentations


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

1 Social Psychology

2 The Lunch Date Produced by Adam Davidson (1989)
(won the 1990 Oscar for best short film)

3 Social Thought Social Cognition Schemata
The collection and assessment of information about other people Schemata Primacy effect

4 Condition “Friendly” Ratings One-paragraph, friendly 95% One-paragraph, unfriendly 3% Two-paragraph, friendly-unfriendly 78% Two-paragraph, unfriendly-friendly 18%

5 Social Thought Schemata Primacy effect Recency effect Stereotypes
A set of characteristics presumed to be shared by all members of a social category

6 Social Thought Attributions Internal/Dispositional
External/Situational

7 Kelley’s Covariation Model of Attribution
Consensus Consistency Distinctiveness

8 Attribution Errors Fundamental attribution error/Correspondence error
tendency to explain others’ behavior in terms of dispositional (internal) rather than situational (external) causes Self-serving bias tendency to take credit for positive behavior or outcomes by attributing them to internal causes, but to blame negative ones on external causes, especially on factors beyond our control

9 Attribution Errors Just World Hypothesis Halo effect
People get what they deserve Halo effect Good goes together… Assumed similarity bias Tendency to assume others are like self, even when meeting for first time

10 Attitudes A relatively stable organization of beliefs, feelings, and behavior tendencies toward something or someone Can be positive or negative Affect behavior

11 Attitudes Components of Attitudes Beliefs Feelings Behavior tendencies

12 Actions can affect attitudes…
Foot-in-the-door effect Door-in-the-face effect Lowball procedure That’s-not-all technique Not-so-free sample technique

13 Cognitive Dissonance Discomfort experienced when there is an obvious gap between our attitudes and our actions or between two attitudes

14 Boring Task (turning pegs)
Explain to next subject that it was interesting Paid $20 Paid $1 “It was boring” = NO Attitude Change “It was fun” = Attitude Change

15

16 Persuasion Any attempt to change an attitude, and ultimately, behavior
Source Message Medium Audience

17 When Attitudes Go Bad… Prejudice Discrimination
Belief  negative stereotype Feelings  strong, negative Behavioral Tendencies  strong

18 Sources of Prejudice Frustration-aggression theory
Social conflict theory Social learning theory Information processing Stereotypes

19 Social Influence Attempts made by one or more people to change the attitudes or behavior of others Obedience A change of behavior in response to a command from an authority figure Stanley Milgram

20

21 Relieved of personal responsibility
Signs of authority Commands were gradual

22 Conformity Voluntarily yielding to social norms, even at the expense of one’s own preferences Asch’s conformity studies 35% conformity rate Influential factors Situational characteristics Group size, unanimity Nature of the task Personal characteristics

23 Social Action Bystander Effect Diffusion of Responsibility
Mob behavior Deindividuation The more anonymous people feel in a group, the less responsible they feel as individuals


Download ppt "Social Psychology."

Similar presentations


Ads by Google