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Lecture Slides 
Chapter Twelve 
Social 
Psychology 
By Glenn Meyer 
Trinity University
Introduction: What Is 
Social Psychology? 
Branch of psychology 
that studies how 
people think, feel, and 
behave in social 
Sense of self: Unique sense of identity 
influenced by social, cultural, and 
psychological experiences 
Two key research areas 
• Social cognition refers to how we form 
impressions of other people, how we 
interpret the meaning of other people’s 
behavior, and how our behavior is 
affected by our attitudes. 
• Social influence focuses on how our 
behavior is affected by other people and 
by situational factors. 
situations
Person 
perception 
Social 
Cognition 
Mental 
processes that 
people use to 
make sense 
out of their 
social 
environment 
Social 
categorization 
Implicit 
personality 
theory 
Attribution 
Stereotypes 
Attitudes
Person Perception 
Forming Impressions of Other People 
Principle 1: Your reactions to others are determined by 
your perceptions of them, not by who they really are. 
Four key 
components 
or principles 
influence 
your 
decision 
Characteristics of the person 
you are trying to evaluate 
CLICK HERE 
Principle 2: Your self-perception also influences how you 
perceive others and how you act on your perceptions. 
Your own self-perception 
CLICK HERE 
Principle 3: Your goals in a particular situation determine the 
amount and kinds of information you collect about others. 
Your goals in the situation 
CLICK HERE 
Mental process we use 
to form judgments 
about other people 
We can judge a person’s 
attractiveness, 
likeability, competence, 
trustworthiness, and 
aggressiveness in a 
1/10 of a second 
Principle 4: In every situation, you evaluate people partly in 
terms of how you expect them to act. 
Specific situation in which the 
process occurs 
CLICK HERE
Social Categorization 
Using Mental Shortcuts in Person Perception 
Mental process of categorizing 
people into groups (or social 
categories) on the basis of their 
shared characteristics 
• Conscious processes 
• Explicit cognition: Deliberate, conscious mental 
processes involved in perceptions, judgments, 
decisions, and reasoning 
• Unconscious or automatic processes 
• Implicit cognition: Automatic, nonconscious, mental 
processes that influence perceptions, judgments, 
decisions, and reasoning 
• Assumption that people share traits and behaviors 
• Implicit personality theory: Network of assumptions 
or beliefs about the relationship among various types 
of people, traits, and behaviors; leads to use of 
cognitive schemas
One Schema: 
Attractiveness 
“What is beautiful is good.” 
• Attractive people are 
perceived as more 
intelligent, happier, and 
better adjusted 
• Attractive people also tend 
to be higher in self-esteem, 
intelligence, and other 
desirable personality traits 
than people of more 
average appearance 
• Beginning in infancy and 
continuing throughout their 
lives, attractive people 
receive more attention and 
more favorable treatment 
from other people, such as 
parents, teachers, 
employers, and peers
Brain Reward When 
Making Eye Contact 
with Attractive 
People 
• Direct eye contact with a 
physically attractive 
person, activates ventral 
striatum 
• Ventral striatum is a brain 
area that predicts reward 
• Orbital frontal cortex, 
nucleus accumbens, and 
amygdala are all 
selectively responsive to 
the reward value of 
attractive faces
Attribution 
Explaining Behavior 
• Process of inferring the 
causes of people’s 
behavior, including one’s 
own 
• The explanation given for 
a particular behavior 
• Helps psychologically 
insulate us from the 
uncomfortable thought “It 
could have just as easily 
been me”
Using Attitudes as Ways to “Justify” 
Injustice, Discrimination, and Prejudice 
Just-world hypothesis 
The assumption that life is 
fair; for example, it seems 
horrible to think that you 
can be a good person and 
bad things could happen to 
you anyway. 
Just-world hypothesis leads to “blaming the 
victim.” We explain others’ misfortunes as 
being their fault, as in: She deserved to be 
raped. What was she doing in that 
neighborhood anyway? Their lower social 
status is their own fault.
Culture and Attributional Biases 
Self-Serving Bias – found in individualistic cultures 
• People tend to credit themselves for their successes (internal attributions) 
and to blame their failures on external circumstances (external 
attributions) 
• Self-serving bias is far from universal, as cross-cultural psychologists have 
discovered 
Self-Effacing Bias – found in collectivistic cultures 
• Involves blaming failure on internal, personal factors, while attributing 
success to external, situational factors 
• Reflects the emphasis that interdependent cultures place on fitting in with 
other members of the group 
• Japanese proverb: “The nail that sticks up gets pounded down.” 
Fundamental Attribution Error 
• Members of collectivistic cultures are less likely to commit the fundamental 
attribution error than are members of individualistic cultures.
The Social 
Psychology of 
Attitudes 
Attitude: learned 
tendency to 
evaluate objects, 
people, or issues in 
a particular way 
Can be negative or 
positive 
Cognitive— 
thoughts and 
conclusions about 
given topic or 
situation 
Example: In my 
opinion, cars 
should be more 
fuel efficient! 
Has three 
components 
Affective—feelings 
or emotions about 
topic 
Example: It 
makes me 
furious to see 
Professor 
Dumptress 
driving a big 
wasteful SUV! 
Behavioral—your 
actions regarding 
the topic or 
situation 
Example: I’m 
buying an 
electric car and 
always parking 
next to ol’ 
Dumptress.
The Effect of Attitudes on Behavior 
You’re most likely to behave in accordance 
with your attitudes when: 
• You anticipate a favorable outcome or 
response from others for behaving that way 
• Your attitudes are extreme or are frequently 
expressed 
• Your attitudes have been formed through 
direct experience 
• You are very knowledgeable about the 
subject 
• You have a vested interest in the subject and 
personally stand to gain or lose something 
on a specific issue
Interpersonal 
Attraction and 
Liking 
Attraction 
feeling drawn to other people— 
having positive thoughts and 
feelings about them 
What makes one person more attractive? 
• Personal characteristics such as warmth, trustworthiness, 
adventurousness, and social status 
• Physical appearance, especially facial features — most 
significant factor in attraction 
• Wide smiles, high eyebrows, dilated pupils, and full lips are 
judged as attractive by both men and women 
• Women tend to prefer taller men 
• Men tend to prefer women who are of short or average height
Interpersonal 
Attraction and 
Liking 
Interpersonal aspects of attraction 
• People whom we perceive as being like us 
• More familiar 
• Socioeconomic and cultural environment 
• Men in societies where food and resources are in short supply 
tend to prefer heavier women 
• Preference for thinner women is more common in societies 
where resources are abundant
The Effect of Behavior on Attitudes 
Cognitive Dissonance (Festinger) 
• We seek ways to decrease the discomfort caused by the 
inconsistency 
• If you can rationalize or explain your behavior, the conflict (and 
the tension) is eliminated or avoided 
• If you can’t explain your behavior, you may change your attitude 
so that it is in harmony with your behavior 
• When you are torn between two choices, then pick one and not 
the other 
• You emphasize the negative features of the choice you 
rejected, which is commonly called a “sour grapes” 
rationalization 
• You also emphasize the positive features of the choice you 
made—a “sweet lemons” rationalization 
Dissonance 
Unpleasant state of 
psychological tension or 
arousal that occurs when 
two thoughts or 
perceptions are 
inconsistent
Philip Zimbardo
Ways to Reduce Dissonance 
Attend to 
information that 
supports our 
existing views, 
rather than 
information that 
doesn’t support 
them 
Once we’ve 
made a choice to 
do something, 
lingering doubts 
about our actions 
would cause 
dissonance, so 
we are motivated 
to set them aside
Understanding Prejudice 
Prejudice 
negative attitude toward people 
who belong to a specific social 
group 
Important Points 
• Racial and ethnic groups are far more alike than 
are different 
• Any differences that may exist between 
members of different racial and ethnic groups 
are far smaller than differences among various 
members of same group
From Stereotypes to 
Prejudice 
In-Groups and Out-Groups 
Social categories can be defined by relatively 
objective characteristics: age, language, 
religion, national or regional origin, tribe, 
ethnic group, sexual orientation, and skin 
color 
• Stereotypes typically include qualities that 
are unrelated to the objective criteria. 
• The tendency to stereotype is a natural 
cognitive process to simplify social 
information. 
What is a stereotype? 
A cluster of 
characteristics 
associated with all 
members of a specific 
group of people. 
A belief held by 
members of one 
group about members 
of another group. 
Stereotypes can cause problems 
• Can blind us to the true causes of events 
• Stereotype threat 
• Once formed, stereotypes are hard to 
shake 
• Stereotypic beliefs become expectations 
that are applied to all members of a given 
group 
• Can be both misleading and damaging 
• People tend to discount evidence that 
contradicts a stereotype 
Creating exceptions 
allows people to 
maintain stereotypes in 
the face of 
contradictory evidence 
Hey, some of my best 
friends are… 
I’ll hire you even if you 
are ….
The Out-Group Homogeneity Effect 
They’re All the Same to Me 
Out-group 
Social Categories 
The social group to which 
you do not belong 
Click here 
In-group 
The social group to which 
you belong 
Click here 
• In-group bias— 
tendency to make 
favorable attributions to 
members of your in-group 
• Ethnocentrism is one 
type of in-group bias 
Out-group homogeneity 
effect—tendency to see 
members of the out-group 
as more similar to one 
another
In-Group Bias 
We’re Tactful, They’re Sneaky 
In-group bias 
The tendency to make favorable, 
positive attributions for behaviors 
by members of our in-group and 
unfavorable, negative attributions 
for behaviors by members of out-groups 
Examples: 
We succeeded because 
we worked hard; they 
succeeded because they 
lucked out 
We failed because of 
circumstances beyond 
our control; they failed 
because they’re stupid 
and incompetent 
We are intelligent, they 
are sneaky 
Ethnocentrism – form of in-group bias 
Belief that one’s culture or ethnic 
group is superior to others
The Extreme Emotion of Prejudice 
• Prejudice and intergroup hostility increase when different 
groups are competing for scarce resources 
• Prejudice and intergroup hostility are also likely to increase 
during times of social change 
• People are often prejudiced against groups that are 
perceived as threatening important in-group norms and 
values 
Examples: homophobia, religious prejudice
Implicit Attitudes 
• Overt prejudice has diminished and isn’t socially acceptable 
to most 
• Psychologists believe that overt forms of prejudice have been 
replaced by more subtle forms of prejudice 
• Implicit attitudes: evaluations that are automatic, 
unintentional, and difficult to control 
• People can be unaware of them but they influence choices 
and behavior 
• Most widely used test to measure implicit attitudes and 
preferences is the Implicit Association Test or IAT 
(https://implicit.harvard.edu/) 
• Measures the degree to which you associate particular 
groups of people with specific characteristics or attributes
Overcoming Prejudice – How To? 
The Robbers Cave Experiment – Sheriff 
• Conducted with 11- to 12-year-old boys at camp 
• Boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate from 
one another 
• Researchers arranged for the groups to meet in a series 
of competitive games 
• Fierce rivalry quickly developed, demonstrating the ease 
with which mutually hostile groups could be created 
• Nasty incidents occurred 
• Each group took on characteristics of distinct social 
group, with leaders, rules, norms of behavior, and 
nicknames 
• Simple increased contact did not reduce hostility 
• Harmony between the groups was established by having 
two groups cooperate to achieve a common goal 
• But might have not worked if the two artificial groups 
were not homogeneous (all were white and middle-class)
The Jigsaw Classroom—Promoting 
Cooperation 
• Adapted Robber’s Cave techniques to a newly integrated 
school 
• Aronson (1992) brought together students in small, ethnically 
diverse groups to work on a mutual project 
• Each student had a unique contribution to make toward the 
success of the group; interdependence and cooperation 
replaced competition – called the Jigsaw classroom 
technique. 
• Results: Children in the jigsaw classrooms had higher self-esteem 
and a greater liking for children in other ethnic groups 
than those in traditional classrooms 
• Less negative stereotypes and prejudice and a reduction in 
intergroup hostility 
• “Cooperation changes our tendency to categorize the out-group 
from ‘those people’ to ‘we people.’”
Conformity— 
Following the Crowd 
Conformity 
adjusting your opinions, judgment, 
or behavior so that it matches that 
of other people, or the norms of a 
social group or situation 
Social influence 
the psychological study of how 
our behavior is influenced by 
the social environment and 
other people 
Asch’s Experiment 
• All but one in group was confederate 
• Seating was rigged 
• Asked to rate which line matched a “standard” line 
• Confederates were instructed to pick the wrong line 12 of 
18 times 
Results 
• Asch found that 76% participants conformed 
to at least one wrong choice 
• Subjects gave wrong answer (conformed) on 
37% of the critical trials 
• Remember that on about two-thirds of trials, 
participants stuck to their guns
Why did they conform to 
clearly wrong choices? 
• Informational influence? 
• Subjects reported having 
doubted their own 
perceptual abilities, which 
led to their conformance – 
didn’t report seeing the lines 
the way the confederates 
had
Factors Influencing Conformity 
Previous research had shown people will conform to others’ 
judgments more often when the evidence is ambiguous. 
Two basic reasons 
• Normative social influence — the desire to be accepted as 
part of a group leads to that group having an influence 
• Informational social influence — other people can provide 
useful and crucial information 
Asch identified several reasons that promote conformity, 
including 
• Facing a unanimous group 
• Giving your response in front of a group 
• Doubting your abilities or knowledge 
Factors which decrease conformity include 
• Having an ally 
• Any dissent lessens conformity, even if some dissent is 
incorrect
Conformity is higher in collectivistic cultures than in 
individualistic cultures. 
Collectivistic Cultures 
Click here 
Culture and Conformity 
Individualistic 
Cultures 
Click here 
• Individualistic 
cultures tend to 
emphasize 
independence. 
• Conformity tends to 
carry a negative 
connotation 
• Conforming while privately 
disagreeing tends to be regarded 
as socially appropriate tact or 
sensitivity 
• Publicly challenging the 
judgments of others, particularly 
the judgment of members of 
one’s in-group, would be 
considered rude, tactless, and 
insensitive 
• Conformity does not seem to 
carry the same negative 
connotation
Obedience 
• Obedience is the 
performance of a behavior 
in response to a direct 
command 
• Typically, an authority 
figure or a person of higher 
status, such as a teacher 
or supervisor, gives the 
command 
Stanley Milgram’s critical 
question: Could a person be 
pressured by others into 
committing an immoral act, 
some action that violated his 
or her own conscience, such 
as hurting a stranger?
Milgram’s Original Obedience 
Experiment 
Basic study procedure 
• Participants represented a wide range of occupational and 
educational backgrounds 
• Postal workers, high-school teachers, white-collar workers, 
engineers, and laborers 
• One teacher and one learner (learner is always the confederate) 
• Watch learner being strapped into chair 
• Learner expresses concern over his “heart condition” 
• Teacher goes to another room with experimenter 
• Shock generator panel –15 to 450 volts, labeled “slight shock” to 
“XXX” 
• Asked to give higher shocks for every mistake learner makes 
• Learner protests more and more as shock increases 
• Experimenter continues to request obedience even if teacher 
balks 
• “The experiment requires that you continue” or “You have no 
other choice, you must continue.”
The Results of Milgram’s Original 
Experiment 
Milgram asked psychiatrists, college 
students, and middle-class adults to 
make predictions 
• All three groups predicted that all subjects (the teachers) 
would refuse to obey at some point 
• Predicted that most subjects would refuse at 150-volt 
level, where learner first protested 
• Predicted that only a few rare individuals would go as far 
as the 300-volt level 
• Predicted that no one would go to the full 450 volts
The Results of 
Milgram’s Original 
Experiment 
What Happened? 
• Two-thirds of Milgram’s 
subjects—26 of the 40—were 
fully compliant and went to the 
full 450-volt level 
• Of those who defied the 
experimenter, not one stopped 
before the 300-volt level 
• No difference between men and 
women 
• Has been replicated many times
A previously 
well-established 
mental 
framework to 
obey 
Subjects arrived at the lab 
with the mental 
expectation that they 
would obediently follow 
Click here Click here 
Forces that 
Influence 
Obedience 
The situation, 
or context, in 
which the 
obedience 
occurred 
The gradual, 
repetitive 
escalation of 
the task 
The 
Making 
Sense of 
Milgram’s 
Findings 
The physical 
experimenter’s 
behavior and 
reassurances 
and 
psychological 
separation 
from the 
learner 
Click here 
Click here Click here 
Research 
setting 
predisposed 
subjects to trust 
experimenter 
The physical and 
psychological 
separation from 
the learner 
• Learner was in 
a separate room 
• Punishment was 
depersonalized
Conditions that 
Undermine Obedience 
• When teachers 
were allowed to act 
as their own 
authority and freely 
choose the shock 
level, 95 percent of 
them did not 
venture beyond 
150 volts 
• Milgram found that 
people were more 
likely to muster up 
the courage to defy 
an authority when 
they saw others do 
so
Asch, Milgram, and 
the Real World 
Genocides and 
Abuse 
The Holocaust 
Bosnia 
Darfur 
Cambodia 
Armenia 
Rwanda 
Zimbardo’s 
Prison 
Experiment and 
Abu Ghraib
Abuse at Abu Ghraib: 
Why Do Ordinary People Commit Evil Acts? 
What Why factors would ordinary contributed Americans to the events mistreat 
that 
occurred people like at Abu that? Ghraib How can prison? 
normal people 
• commit In-group such versus cruel, out-immoral group acts? 
thinking, negative 
stereotypes 
• A few bad apples? 
• Isolated incidents of overzealous or 
• Dehumanization and prejudice 
• Process sadistic similar soldiers to Zimbardo’s run amok? 
Stanford 
Prison Experiment 
• Not just following orders but also following 
implied social norms and roles
Helping Behavior and 
the Bystander Effect 
• Prosocial behavior describes 
any behavior that helps 
another person, including 
altruistic acts—whatever the 
motive 
• Altruism is fundamentally 
selfless—the individual is 
motivated purely by the 
desire to help someone in 
need. No expectation of 
personal benefit. 
• The Kitty Genovese Case 
• Friday, March 13, 1964; 
Killed in NYC 
• No one ran to help 
• City apathy too simplistic 
• Now called the Bystander 
Effect
Bibb Latané and John Darley (1970) 
“People often help others, even at great personal risk to themselves. 
For every ‘apathy’ story, one of outright heroism could be cited. . . It 
is a mistake to get trapped by the wave of publicity and discussion 
surrounding incidents in which help was not forthcoming into 
believing that help never comes. People sometimes help and 
sometimes don’t. What determines when help will be given?”
Factors that Increase the Likelihood of 
Bystanders Helping 
The “feel good, do good” effect 
Feeling guilty 
Seeing others who are willing to help 
Perceiving the other person as 
deserving of help 
Knowing how to help and being capable 
A personalized relationship
Factors that Decrease the Likelihood of 
Bystanders Helping 
Bystander effect: The presence of other 
people 
Diffusion of responsibility 
Being in a big city or a very small town 
Vague or ambiguous situations 
When the personal costs for helping 
outweigh the benefits
Social Loafing 
When Individual Effort Is 
“Lost in the Crowd” 
The Influence of Groups 
on Individual Behavior 
Individual behavior can be 
strongly influenced by the 
presence of others. 
Social loafing 
is reduced when 
• The group is composed of people we 
People tend to expend less effort on 
know 
collective tasks than they do when 
performing the same task alone 
• We are members of a highly valued 
group 
• Pronounced when it’s difficult or 
impossible to assess each individual’s 
contribution to collective effort 
• Task is meaningful or unique 
• Women are generally less likely to 
• The greater the number of people 
engage in social loafing than are men 
involved in a collective effort, the lower 
each individual’s output 
• Diffusion of responsibility occurs among 
group members working on a collective 
task
Social Facilitation 
• The tendency for the presence of 
other people to enhance 
individual performance 
• When a task is relatively 
simple or well-rehearsed, the 
presence of other people 
tends to enhance individual 
performance 
• The presence of others tends 
to increase our level of 
arousal and motivation 
• Complex or poorly learned tasks, 
presence of other people is likely 
to hinder performance 
• Arousal coupled with 
apprehension about being 
negatively evaluated tends to 
work against us
Deindividuation 
• When group members feel 
anonymous. 
• Reduction of self-awareness 
and inhibitions 
when person is part of a 
group in which members 
feel anonymous 
• Example: Wearing 
hoods in the Ku Klux 
Klan, large riots 
• One way to counteract 
deindividuation is to 
heighten self-awareness
The Persuasion Game 
The Rule of 
Reciprocity 
If someone 
gives you 
something or 
does you a 
favor, you feel 
obligated to 
return the favor 
Defending 
Against 
Persuasion 
Techniques 
The Rule of 
Commitment 
Foot-in-the-door 
technique 
Low-ball 
technique 
Sleep on it. 
Play devil’s advocate. 
When in doubt, do nothing.

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Chapter12

  • 1. Lecture Slides Chapter Twelve Social Psychology By Glenn Meyer Trinity University
  • 2. Introduction: What Is Social Psychology? Branch of psychology that studies how people think, feel, and behave in social Sense of self: Unique sense of identity influenced by social, cultural, and psychological experiences Two key research areas • Social cognition refers to how we form impressions of other people, how we interpret the meaning of other people’s behavior, and how our behavior is affected by our attitudes. • Social influence focuses on how our behavior is affected by other people and by situational factors. situations
  • 3. Person perception Social Cognition Mental processes that people use to make sense out of their social environment Social categorization Implicit personality theory Attribution Stereotypes Attitudes
  • 4. Person Perception Forming Impressions of Other People Principle 1: Your reactions to others are determined by your perceptions of them, not by who they really are. Four key components or principles influence your decision Characteristics of the person you are trying to evaluate CLICK HERE Principle 2: Your self-perception also influences how you perceive others and how you act on your perceptions. Your own self-perception CLICK HERE Principle 3: Your goals in a particular situation determine the amount and kinds of information you collect about others. Your goals in the situation CLICK HERE Mental process we use to form judgments about other people We can judge a person’s attractiveness, likeability, competence, trustworthiness, and aggressiveness in a 1/10 of a second Principle 4: In every situation, you evaluate people partly in terms of how you expect them to act. Specific situation in which the process occurs CLICK HERE
  • 5.
  • 6. Social Categorization Using Mental Shortcuts in Person Perception Mental process of categorizing people into groups (or social categories) on the basis of their shared characteristics • Conscious processes • Explicit cognition: Deliberate, conscious mental processes involved in perceptions, judgments, decisions, and reasoning • Unconscious or automatic processes • Implicit cognition: Automatic, nonconscious, mental processes that influence perceptions, judgments, decisions, and reasoning • Assumption that people share traits and behaviors • Implicit personality theory: Network of assumptions or beliefs about the relationship among various types of people, traits, and behaviors; leads to use of cognitive schemas
  • 7. One Schema: Attractiveness “What is beautiful is good.” • Attractive people are perceived as more intelligent, happier, and better adjusted • Attractive people also tend to be higher in self-esteem, intelligence, and other desirable personality traits than people of more average appearance • Beginning in infancy and continuing throughout their lives, attractive people receive more attention and more favorable treatment from other people, such as parents, teachers, employers, and peers
  • 8. Brain Reward When Making Eye Contact with Attractive People • Direct eye contact with a physically attractive person, activates ventral striatum • Ventral striatum is a brain area that predicts reward • Orbital frontal cortex, nucleus accumbens, and amygdala are all selectively responsive to the reward value of attractive faces
  • 9. Attribution Explaining Behavior • Process of inferring the causes of people’s behavior, including one’s own • The explanation given for a particular behavior • Helps psychologically insulate us from the uncomfortable thought “It could have just as easily been me”
  • 10.
  • 11. Using Attitudes as Ways to “Justify” Injustice, Discrimination, and Prejudice Just-world hypothesis The assumption that life is fair; for example, it seems horrible to think that you can be a good person and bad things could happen to you anyway. Just-world hypothesis leads to “blaming the victim.” We explain others’ misfortunes as being their fault, as in: She deserved to be raped. What was she doing in that neighborhood anyway? Their lower social status is their own fault.
  • 12. Culture and Attributional Biases Self-Serving Bias – found in individualistic cultures • People tend to credit themselves for their successes (internal attributions) and to blame their failures on external circumstances (external attributions) • Self-serving bias is far from universal, as cross-cultural psychologists have discovered Self-Effacing Bias – found in collectivistic cultures • Involves blaming failure on internal, personal factors, while attributing success to external, situational factors • Reflects the emphasis that interdependent cultures place on fitting in with other members of the group • Japanese proverb: “The nail that sticks up gets pounded down.” Fundamental Attribution Error • Members of collectivistic cultures are less likely to commit the fundamental attribution error than are members of individualistic cultures.
  • 13. The Social Psychology of Attitudes Attitude: learned tendency to evaluate objects, people, or issues in a particular way Can be negative or positive Cognitive— thoughts and conclusions about given topic or situation Example: In my opinion, cars should be more fuel efficient! Has three components Affective—feelings or emotions about topic Example: It makes me furious to see Professor Dumptress driving a big wasteful SUV! Behavioral—your actions regarding the topic or situation Example: I’m buying an electric car and always parking next to ol’ Dumptress.
  • 14.
  • 15. The Effect of Attitudes on Behavior You’re most likely to behave in accordance with your attitudes when: • You anticipate a favorable outcome or response from others for behaving that way • Your attitudes are extreme or are frequently expressed • Your attitudes have been formed through direct experience • You are very knowledgeable about the subject • You have a vested interest in the subject and personally stand to gain or lose something on a specific issue
  • 16. Interpersonal Attraction and Liking Attraction feeling drawn to other people— having positive thoughts and feelings about them What makes one person more attractive? • Personal characteristics such as warmth, trustworthiness, adventurousness, and social status • Physical appearance, especially facial features — most significant factor in attraction • Wide smiles, high eyebrows, dilated pupils, and full lips are judged as attractive by both men and women • Women tend to prefer taller men • Men tend to prefer women who are of short or average height
  • 17. Interpersonal Attraction and Liking Interpersonal aspects of attraction • People whom we perceive as being like us • More familiar • Socioeconomic and cultural environment • Men in societies where food and resources are in short supply tend to prefer heavier women • Preference for thinner women is more common in societies where resources are abundant
  • 18. The Effect of Behavior on Attitudes Cognitive Dissonance (Festinger) • We seek ways to decrease the discomfort caused by the inconsistency • If you can rationalize or explain your behavior, the conflict (and the tension) is eliminated or avoided • If you can’t explain your behavior, you may change your attitude so that it is in harmony with your behavior • When you are torn between two choices, then pick one and not the other • You emphasize the negative features of the choice you rejected, which is commonly called a “sour grapes” rationalization • You also emphasize the positive features of the choice you made—a “sweet lemons” rationalization Dissonance Unpleasant state of psychological tension or arousal that occurs when two thoughts or perceptions are inconsistent
  • 20. Ways to Reduce Dissonance Attend to information that supports our existing views, rather than information that doesn’t support them Once we’ve made a choice to do something, lingering doubts about our actions would cause dissonance, so we are motivated to set them aside
  • 21. Understanding Prejudice Prejudice negative attitude toward people who belong to a specific social group Important Points • Racial and ethnic groups are far more alike than are different • Any differences that may exist between members of different racial and ethnic groups are far smaller than differences among various members of same group
  • 22. From Stereotypes to Prejudice In-Groups and Out-Groups Social categories can be defined by relatively objective characteristics: age, language, religion, national or regional origin, tribe, ethnic group, sexual orientation, and skin color • Stereotypes typically include qualities that are unrelated to the objective criteria. • The tendency to stereotype is a natural cognitive process to simplify social information. What is a stereotype? A cluster of characteristics associated with all members of a specific group of people. A belief held by members of one group about members of another group. Stereotypes can cause problems • Can blind us to the true causes of events • Stereotype threat • Once formed, stereotypes are hard to shake • Stereotypic beliefs become expectations that are applied to all members of a given group • Can be both misleading and damaging • People tend to discount evidence that contradicts a stereotype Creating exceptions allows people to maintain stereotypes in the face of contradictory evidence Hey, some of my best friends are… I’ll hire you even if you are ….
  • 23. The Out-Group Homogeneity Effect They’re All the Same to Me Out-group Social Categories The social group to which you do not belong Click here In-group The social group to which you belong Click here • In-group bias— tendency to make favorable attributions to members of your in-group • Ethnocentrism is one type of in-group bias Out-group homogeneity effect—tendency to see members of the out-group as more similar to one another
  • 24. In-Group Bias We’re Tactful, They’re Sneaky In-group bias The tendency to make favorable, positive attributions for behaviors by members of our in-group and unfavorable, negative attributions for behaviors by members of out-groups Examples: We succeeded because we worked hard; they succeeded because they lucked out We failed because of circumstances beyond our control; they failed because they’re stupid and incompetent We are intelligent, they are sneaky Ethnocentrism – form of in-group bias Belief that one’s culture or ethnic group is superior to others
  • 25. The Extreme Emotion of Prejudice • Prejudice and intergroup hostility increase when different groups are competing for scarce resources • Prejudice and intergroup hostility are also likely to increase during times of social change • People are often prejudiced against groups that are perceived as threatening important in-group norms and values Examples: homophobia, religious prejudice
  • 26. Implicit Attitudes • Overt prejudice has diminished and isn’t socially acceptable to most • Psychologists believe that overt forms of prejudice have been replaced by more subtle forms of prejudice • Implicit attitudes: evaluations that are automatic, unintentional, and difficult to control • People can be unaware of them but they influence choices and behavior • Most widely used test to measure implicit attitudes and preferences is the Implicit Association Test or IAT (https://implicit.harvard.edu/) • Measures the degree to which you associate particular groups of people with specific characteristics or attributes
  • 27. Overcoming Prejudice – How To? The Robbers Cave Experiment – Sheriff • Conducted with 11- to 12-year-old boys at camp • Boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate from one another • Researchers arranged for the groups to meet in a series of competitive games • Fierce rivalry quickly developed, demonstrating the ease with which mutually hostile groups could be created • Nasty incidents occurred • Each group took on characteristics of distinct social group, with leaders, rules, norms of behavior, and nicknames • Simple increased contact did not reduce hostility • Harmony between the groups was established by having two groups cooperate to achieve a common goal • But might have not worked if the two artificial groups were not homogeneous (all were white and middle-class)
  • 28. The Jigsaw Classroom—Promoting Cooperation • Adapted Robber’s Cave techniques to a newly integrated school • Aronson (1992) brought together students in small, ethnically diverse groups to work on a mutual project • Each student had a unique contribution to make toward the success of the group; interdependence and cooperation replaced competition – called the Jigsaw classroom technique. • Results: Children in the jigsaw classrooms had higher self-esteem and a greater liking for children in other ethnic groups than those in traditional classrooms • Less negative stereotypes and prejudice and a reduction in intergroup hostility • “Cooperation changes our tendency to categorize the out-group from ‘those people’ to ‘we people.’”
  • 29. Conformity— Following the Crowd Conformity adjusting your opinions, judgment, or behavior so that it matches that of other people, or the norms of a social group or situation Social influence the psychological study of how our behavior is influenced by the social environment and other people Asch’s Experiment • All but one in group was confederate • Seating was rigged • Asked to rate which line matched a “standard” line • Confederates were instructed to pick the wrong line 12 of 18 times Results • Asch found that 76% participants conformed to at least one wrong choice • Subjects gave wrong answer (conformed) on 37% of the critical trials • Remember that on about two-thirds of trials, participants stuck to their guns
  • 30. Why did they conform to clearly wrong choices? • Informational influence? • Subjects reported having doubted their own perceptual abilities, which led to their conformance – didn’t report seeing the lines the way the confederates had
  • 31. Factors Influencing Conformity Previous research had shown people will conform to others’ judgments more often when the evidence is ambiguous. Two basic reasons • Normative social influence — the desire to be accepted as part of a group leads to that group having an influence • Informational social influence — other people can provide useful and crucial information Asch identified several reasons that promote conformity, including • Facing a unanimous group • Giving your response in front of a group • Doubting your abilities or knowledge Factors which decrease conformity include • Having an ally • Any dissent lessens conformity, even if some dissent is incorrect
  • 32. Conformity is higher in collectivistic cultures than in individualistic cultures. Collectivistic Cultures Click here Culture and Conformity Individualistic Cultures Click here • Individualistic cultures tend to emphasize independence. • Conformity tends to carry a negative connotation • Conforming while privately disagreeing tends to be regarded as socially appropriate tact or sensitivity • Publicly challenging the judgments of others, particularly the judgment of members of one’s in-group, would be considered rude, tactless, and insensitive • Conformity does not seem to carry the same negative connotation
  • 33. Obedience • Obedience is the performance of a behavior in response to a direct command • Typically, an authority figure or a person of higher status, such as a teacher or supervisor, gives the command Stanley Milgram’s critical question: Could a person be pressured by others into committing an immoral act, some action that violated his or her own conscience, such as hurting a stranger?
  • 34.
  • 35. Milgram’s Original Obedience Experiment Basic study procedure • Participants represented a wide range of occupational and educational backgrounds • Postal workers, high-school teachers, white-collar workers, engineers, and laborers • One teacher and one learner (learner is always the confederate) • Watch learner being strapped into chair • Learner expresses concern over his “heart condition” • Teacher goes to another room with experimenter • Shock generator panel –15 to 450 volts, labeled “slight shock” to “XXX” • Asked to give higher shocks for every mistake learner makes • Learner protests more and more as shock increases • Experimenter continues to request obedience even if teacher balks • “The experiment requires that you continue” or “You have no other choice, you must continue.”
  • 36.
  • 37. The Results of Milgram’s Original Experiment Milgram asked psychiatrists, college students, and middle-class adults to make predictions • All three groups predicted that all subjects (the teachers) would refuse to obey at some point • Predicted that most subjects would refuse at 150-volt level, where learner first protested • Predicted that only a few rare individuals would go as far as the 300-volt level • Predicted that no one would go to the full 450 volts
  • 38. The Results of Milgram’s Original Experiment What Happened? • Two-thirds of Milgram’s subjects—26 of the 40—were fully compliant and went to the full 450-volt level • Of those who defied the experimenter, not one stopped before the 300-volt level • No difference between men and women • Has been replicated many times
  • 39. A previously well-established mental framework to obey Subjects arrived at the lab with the mental expectation that they would obediently follow Click here Click here Forces that Influence Obedience The situation, or context, in which the obedience occurred The gradual, repetitive escalation of the task The Making Sense of Milgram’s Findings The physical experimenter’s behavior and reassurances and psychological separation from the learner Click here Click here Click here Research setting predisposed subjects to trust experimenter The physical and psychological separation from the learner • Learner was in a separate room • Punishment was depersonalized
  • 40. Conditions that Undermine Obedience • When teachers were allowed to act as their own authority and freely choose the shock level, 95 percent of them did not venture beyond 150 volts • Milgram found that people were more likely to muster up the courage to defy an authority when they saw others do so
  • 41. Asch, Milgram, and the Real World Genocides and Abuse The Holocaust Bosnia Darfur Cambodia Armenia Rwanda Zimbardo’s Prison Experiment and Abu Ghraib
  • 42. Abuse at Abu Ghraib: Why Do Ordinary People Commit Evil Acts? What Why factors would ordinary contributed Americans to the events mistreat that occurred people like at Abu that? Ghraib How can prison? normal people • commit In-group such versus cruel, out-immoral group acts? thinking, negative stereotypes • A few bad apples? • Isolated incidents of overzealous or • Dehumanization and prejudice • Process sadistic similar soldiers to Zimbardo’s run amok? Stanford Prison Experiment • Not just following orders but also following implied social norms and roles
  • 43.
  • 44. Helping Behavior and the Bystander Effect • Prosocial behavior describes any behavior that helps another person, including altruistic acts—whatever the motive • Altruism is fundamentally selfless—the individual is motivated purely by the desire to help someone in need. No expectation of personal benefit. • The Kitty Genovese Case • Friday, March 13, 1964; Killed in NYC • No one ran to help • City apathy too simplistic • Now called the Bystander Effect
  • 45. Bibb Latané and John Darley (1970) “People often help others, even at great personal risk to themselves. For every ‘apathy’ story, one of outright heroism could be cited. . . It is a mistake to get trapped by the wave of publicity and discussion surrounding incidents in which help was not forthcoming into believing that help never comes. People sometimes help and sometimes don’t. What determines when help will be given?”
  • 46. Factors that Increase the Likelihood of Bystanders Helping The “feel good, do good” effect Feeling guilty Seeing others who are willing to help Perceiving the other person as deserving of help Knowing how to help and being capable A personalized relationship
  • 47. Factors that Decrease the Likelihood of Bystanders Helping Bystander effect: The presence of other people Diffusion of responsibility Being in a big city or a very small town Vague or ambiguous situations When the personal costs for helping outweigh the benefits
  • 48. Social Loafing When Individual Effort Is “Lost in the Crowd” The Influence of Groups on Individual Behavior Individual behavior can be strongly influenced by the presence of others. Social loafing is reduced when • The group is composed of people we People tend to expend less effort on know collective tasks than they do when performing the same task alone • We are members of a highly valued group • Pronounced when it’s difficult or impossible to assess each individual’s contribution to collective effort • Task is meaningful or unique • Women are generally less likely to • The greater the number of people engage in social loafing than are men involved in a collective effort, the lower each individual’s output • Diffusion of responsibility occurs among group members working on a collective task
  • 49. Social Facilitation • The tendency for the presence of other people to enhance individual performance • When a task is relatively simple or well-rehearsed, the presence of other people tends to enhance individual performance • The presence of others tends to increase our level of arousal and motivation • Complex or poorly learned tasks, presence of other people is likely to hinder performance • Arousal coupled with apprehension about being negatively evaluated tends to work against us
  • 50. Deindividuation • When group members feel anonymous. • Reduction of self-awareness and inhibitions when person is part of a group in which members feel anonymous • Example: Wearing hoods in the Ku Klux Klan, large riots • One way to counteract deindividuation is to heighten self-awareness
  • 51. The Persuasion Game The Rule of Reciprocity If someone gives you something or does you a favor, you feel obligated to return the favor Defending Against Persuasion Techniques The Rule of Commitment Foot-in-the-door technique Low-ball technique Sleep on it. Play devil’s advocate. When in doubt, do nothing.

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