1 / 76

Social Psychology

6th edition. Social Psychology. Elliot Aronson University of California, Santa Cruz Timothy D. Wilson University of Virginia Robin M. Akert Wellesley College slides by Travis Langley Henderson State University. Chapter 13. Prejudice: Causes and Cures. Source of image: www.clipart.com.

belle
Télécharger la présentation

Social Psychology

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. 6th edition Social Psychology Elliot Aronson University of California, Santa Cruz Timothy D. Wilson University of Virginia Robin M. Akert Wellesley College slides by Travis Langley Henderson State University

  2. Chapter 13 Prejudice: Causes and Cures Source of image: www.clipart.com

  3. Prejudice: The Ubiquitous Social Phenomenon • Prejudice is ubiquitous: In one form or another, it affects us all. • For one thing, prejudice is a two-way street; it often flows from the minority group to the majority group as well as in the other direction. • And any group can be a target of prejudice.

  4. Prejudice: The Ubiquitous Social Phenomenon Many aspects of your identity can cause you to be labeled and discriminated against: • nationality • racial and ethnic identity • gender • sexual orientation • religion • appearance • physical state • weight • disabilities • diseases • hair color • professions • hobbies

  5. Prejudice: The Ubiquitous Social Phenomenon Many aspects of your identity can cause you to be labeled and discriminated against. • Consider the stereotypes of the “ditzy blonde”, “dumb jock,” or “computer nerd.” • Some people have negative attitudes about blue-collar workers; others, about Fortune 500 CEOs. • The point is that none of us emerges completely unscathed by prejudice; it is a problem common to all humankind.

  6. Prejudice: The Ubiquitous Social Phenomenon In addition to being widespread, prejudice is dangerous. Simple dislike of a group can be relentless and can escalate to extreme hatred, to thinking of its members as less than human, and to torture, murder, and even genocide. Even when murder or genocide is not the culmination of prejudiced beliefs, the targets of prejudice will suffer in less dramatic ways. One frequent consequence of being the target of relentless prejudice is a diminution of one’s self-esteem.

  7. Prejudice and Self-Esteem • Seeds of low self-esteem are sown early. • Clark and Clark (1947) demonstrated that African American children as young as 3 already thought it was not particularly desirable to be black. • Children were offered a choice between playing with a white doll and playing with a black doll. The great majority of them rejected the black doll, feeling that the white doll was prettier and generally superior. • Taking this evidence into consideration, the Supreme Court ruled that separating black children from white children on the basis of race alone “generates a feeling of inferiority." Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  8. Prejudice and Self-Esteem • Goldberg (1968) women in this culture had learned to consider themselves intellectually inferior to men. • In his experiment, Goldberg asked female college students to read scholarly articles and to evaluate them in terms of their competence and writing style. • For some students, specific articles were signed by male authors (e.g., “John T. McKay”), while for others, the same articles were signed by female authors (e.g., “Joan T. McKay”). • The female students rated the articles much higher if they were attributed to a male author than if the same articles were attributed to a female author.

  9. A Progress Report Significant changes have happened since those studies: • The number of blatant acts of overt prejudice and discrimination has decreased sharply. • Affirmative action opened the door to greater opportunities for women and minorities. • The media have increased our exposure to women and minorities doing important work in positions of power and influence.

  10. A Progress Report These changes are reflected in the gradual increase in self-esteem of people in these groups. Most recent research has failed to replicate the results of those earlier experiments. • African American children have gradually become more content with black dolls than they were in the late 1930s. • People no longer discriminate against a piece of writing simply because it is attributed to a woman. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  11. A Progress Report While this progress is real, it would be a mistake to conclude that prejudice has ceased to be a serious problem in the United States. Prejudice exists in countless subtle and not-so-subtle ways. For the most part, in America, prejudice has gone underground and become less overt.

  12. Prejudice Defined Prejudice is an attitude. Attitudes are made up of three components: • affective or emotional component, representing both the type of emotion linked with the attitude (e.g., anger, warmth) and the extremity of the attitude (e.g., mild uneasiness, outright hostility), • cognitive component, involving the beliefs or thoughts (cognitions) that make up the attitude, • behavioral component, relating to one’s actions—people don’t simply hold attitudes; they usually act on them as well.

  13. Prejudice Defined Prejudice refers to the general attitude structure and its affective (emotional) component. While prejudice can involve either positive or negative affect, social psychologists (and people in general) use the word prejudice primarily when referring to negative attitudes about others.

  14. Prejudice Defined Prejudice refers to the general attitude structure and its affective (emotional) component. While prejudice can involve either positive or negative affect, social psychologists (and people in general) use the word prejudice primarily when referring to negative attitudes about others. Prejudice A hostile or negative attitude toward people in a distinguishable group, based solely on their membership in that group. Source of image: www.clipart.com

  15. Stereotypes: The Cognitive Component The distinguished journalist Walter Lippmann (1922), who was the first to introduce the term stereotype, described the distinction between the world out there and stereotypes—“the little pictures we carry around inside our heads.” Within a given culture, these pictures tend to be remarkably similar.

  16. Stereotypes: The Cognitive Component Stereotype A generalization about a group of people in which identical characteristics are assigned to virtually all members of the group, regardless of actual variation among the members. Once formed, stereotypes are resistant to change on the basis of new information. Source of image: www.clipart.com

  17. Stereotypes: The Cognitive Component Stereotyping is a cognitive process, not an emotional one. Stereotyping does not necessarily lead to intentional acts of abuse. Often stereotyping is merely a technique we use to simplify how we look at the world—and we all do it to some extent.

  18. SPORTS, RACE, AND ATTRIBUTION • POTENTIAL ABUSE OF STEREOTYPING’S MENTAL SHORTCUTS CAN BE BLATANT AND OBVIOUS—AS WHEN ONE ETHNIC GROUP IS CONSIDERED LAZY OR ANOTHER ETHNIC GROUP IS CONSIDERED GREEDY. • THE POTENTIAL ABUSE CAN BE MORE SUBTLE—AND IT MIGHT EVEN INVOLVE A STEREOTYPE ABOUT A POSITIVE ATTRIBUTE.

  19. SPORTS, RACE, AND ATTRIBUTION So what here is abusive to the minority? What’s wrong with the implication that black men can jump? The abuse enters when we ignore the overlap in the distributions—like when we ignore the fact that plenty of African American kids are not adept at basketball and a plenty of white kids are. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  20. SPORTS, RACE, AND ATTRIBUTION So what here is abusive to the minority? What’s wrong with the implication that black men can jump? The abuse enters when we ignore the overlap in the distributions—like when we ignore the fact that plenty of African American kids are not adept at basketball and a plenty of white kids are. Thus if we meet a young African American man and are astonished at his ineptitude on the basketball court, we are, in a very real sense, denying him his individuality. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  21. STEREOTYPES, ATTRIBUTION, AND GENDER  • Compared to men, women do tend to manifest behaviors that can best be described as more socially sensitive, friendlier, and more concerned with the welfare of others, while men tend to behave in ways that are more dominant, controlling, and independent. • Some data indicate that the stereotype tends to underestimate the actual gender differences. • While overlap exists between men and women on these characteristics, the differences are too consistent to be dismissed as unimportant.

  22. STEREOTYPES, ATTRIBUTION, AND GENDER  Needless to say, the phenomenon of gender stereotyping often does not reflect reality and can cut deeply. When a man is successful on a given task, observers of both sexes attribute his success to ability. If a woman is successful at that same task, observers attribute her success to hard work. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  23. STEREOTYPES, ATTRIBUTION, AND GENDER  Even as children, girls have a tendency to downplay their own ability. While 4th-grade boys attribute their own successful outcomes on a difficult intellectual task to their ability, girls tend to derogate their own successful performance. While boys learn to protect their egos by attributing their own failures to bad luck, girls take more blame for failures. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  24. STEREOTYPES, ATTRIBUTION, AND GENDER  These beliefs can be influenced by the attitudes of our society in general and parents. • Mothers who hold the strongest gender-stereotypical beliefs also believe their own daughters have relatively low math ability and that their sons have relatively high math ability. • Mothers who don't hold stereotypical beliefs do not see their daughters as less able in math than their sons.

  25. Discrimination:The Behavioral Component Discrimination An unjustified negative or harmful action toward the members of a group simply because of their membership in that group.

  26. DISCRIMINATION AGAINST HOMOSEXUALS SEVERAL STUDIES DURING THE PAST TWO DECADES HAVE SHOWN THAT HOMOSEXUALS FACE A GOOD DEAL OF DISCRIMINATION AND ANTIPATHY IN THEIR DAY-TO-DAY LIVES. Unlike women, ethnic minorities, and people with disabilities, homosexuals are not protected by national laws banning discrimination in the workplace. Only 11 states have such laws.

  27. DISCRIMINATION AGAINST HOMOSEXUALS Researchers have found that compared to the way they interacted with “nonhomosexuals,” employers interacting with job applicants they have been led to think are homosexual: • were less verbally positive • spent less time interviewing them • used fewer words while chatting with them • made less eye contact with them

  28. What Causes Prejudice?

  29. The Way We Think: Social Cognition Our first explanation for what causes prejudice is that it is the inevitable byproduct of the way we process and organize information. Our tendency to categorize and group information, to form schemas and use them to interpret new or unusual information, to rely on potentially inaccurate heuristics (shortcuts in mental reasoning), and to depend on what are often faulty memory processes—all of these aspects of social cognition can lead us to form negative stereotypes and to apply them in a discriminatory way.

  30. SOCIAL CATEGORIZATION: US VERSUS THEM • THE FIRST STEP IN PREJUDICE IS THE CREATION OF GROUPS—PUTTING SOME PEOPLE INTO ONE GROUP BASED ON CERTAIN CHARACTERISTICS AND OTHERS INTO ANOTHER GROUP BASED ON THEIR DIFFERENT CHARACTERISTICS. • THIS KIND OF CATEGORIZATION IS THE UNDERLYING THEME OF HUMAN SOCIAL COGNITION. • THUS SOCIAL CATEGORIZATION IS BOTH USEFUL AND NECESSARY; HOWEVER, THIS SIMPLE COGNITIVE PROCESS HAS PROFOUND IMPLICATIONS.

  31. SOCIAL CATEGORIZATION: US VERSUS THEM For example, in Jane Elliot’s third-grade classroom, children grouped according to eye color began to act differently based on that social categorization. • Blue-eyed children, the superior group, stuck together and actively promoted and used their higher status and power in the classroom. • They formed an in-group, defined as the group with which an individual identifies. • The blue-eyed kids saw the brown-eyed ones as outsiders—different and inferior. • To the blue-eyed children, the brown-eyed kids were the out-group, the group with which the individual does not identify. Source of image: Microsoft Office Online.

  32. IN-GROUP BIAS  In-Group Bias Positive feelings and special treatment for people we have defined as being part of our in-group and negative feelings and unfair treatment for others simply because we have defined them as being in the out-group.

  33. IN-GROUP BIAS The major underlying motive is self-esteem: • Individuals seek to enhance their self-esteem by identifying with specific social groups. • Self-esteem will be enhanced only if the individual sees these groups as superior to other groups.

  34. IN-GROUP BIAS To get at the pure, unvarnished mechanisms behind this phenomenon, researchers have created entities that they refer to as minimal groups. • In these experiments, complete strangers are formed into groups using the most trivial criteria imaginable. • For example, in one experiment, participants watched a coin toss that randomly assigned them to either group X or group W.

  35. IN-GROUP BIAS The striking thing about this research is that despite the fact that the participants were strangers before the experiment and didn’t interact during it, they behaved as if those who shared the same meaningless label were their dear friends or close kin. • They liked the members of their own group better. • They rated the members of their in-group as more likely to have pleasant personalities and to have done better work than out-group members. • Most striking, participants allocated more rewards to those who shared their label.

  36. OUT-GROUP HOMOGENEITY OUT-GROUP HOMOGENEITY THE BELIEF THAT “THEY” ARE ALL ALIKE. IN-GROUP MEMBERS TEND TO PERCEIVE THOSE IN THE OUT-GROUP AS MORE SIMILAR TO EACH OTHER (HOMOGENEOUS) THAN THEY REALLY ARE, AS WELL AS MORE HOMOGENEOUS THAN THE IN-GROUP MEMBERS ARE.

  37. If you know something about one out-group member, you are more likely to feel you know something about all of them.

  38. THE FAILURE OF LOGIC EVEN PEOPLE WHO ARE USUALLY SENSIBLE BECOME RELATIVELY IMMUNE TO RATIONAL, LOGICAL ARGUMENTS WHEN IT COMES TO THEIR PREJUDICE. WHY IS THIS SO? • It is primarily the emotional aspect of attitudes that makes a prejudiced person so hard to agree with. LOGICAL ARGUMENTS ARE NOT EFFECTIVE IN COUNTERING EMOTIONS.

  39. THE FAILURE OF LOGIC EVEN PEOPLE WHO ARE USUALLY SENSIBLE BECOME RELATIVELY IMMUNE TO RATIONAL, LOGICAL ARGUMENTS WHEN IT COMES TO THEIR PREJUDICE. WHY IS THIS SO? • As discussed in earlier chapters, an attitude tends to organize the way we process relevant information about the targets of that attitude.

  40. THE FAILURE OF LOGIC Specifically, information consistent with their notions about these target groups will be: • Given more attention • Rehearsed (or recalled) more often, and • Therefore remembered better than information that contradicts these notions.

  41. THE PERSISTENCE OF STEREOTYPES STEREOTYPES REFLECT CULTURAL BELIEFS. EVEN IF WE DON’T BELIEVE THESE STEREOTYPES, WE CAN EASILY RECOGNIZE THEM AS COMMON BELIEFS HELD BY OTHERS.

  42. THE ACTIVATION OF STEREOTYPES

  43. Automatic and Controlled Processing of Stereotypes • An automatic process is one over which we have no control. • Stereotypes are automatically triggered under certain conditions—they just pop into one’s mind. • Since the process is automatic, you can’t control it or stop it from occurring. • However, for people who are not deeply prejudiced, their control processes can suppress or override these stereotypes.

  44. The Justification-Suppression Model of Prejudice • According to Crandall and Eschleman’s (2003) model, most people struggle between their urge to express prejudice and need to maintain positive self-concept (as a non-bigot). • However, it requires energy to suppress prejudiced impulses. • Because people are programmed to avoid the constant expenditure of energy, we seek information that can convince us there is a valid justification for holding a negative attitude toward a particular out-group. • Once we find a valid justification for disliking this group, we can act against them and still feel as though we are not bigots—thus avoiding cognitive dissonance.

  45. THE ILLUSORY CORRELATION Illusory Correlation When we expect two things to be related, we fool ourselves into believing that they are actually unrelated.

  46. CAN WE CHANGE STEREOTYPICAL BELIEFS? • Researchers have found that when people are presented with an example or two that seems to refute their existing stereotype, most do not change their general belief. • Indeed, in one experiment, some people presented with disconfirming evidence actually strengthened stereotypical belief because the disconfirming evidence challenged them to come up with additional reasons for holding on to that belief.

  47. How We Assign Meaning: Attributional Biases

  48. DISPOSITIONAL VERSUS SITUATIONAL EXPLANATIONS • ONE REASON STEREOTYPES ARE SO INSIDIOUS AND PERSISTENT IS THE HUMAN TENDENCY TO MAKE DISPOSITIONAL ATTRIBUTIONS. • RELYING TOO HEAVILY ON DISPOSITIONAL ATTRIBUTIONS OFTEN LEADS US TO MAKE ATTRIBUTIONAL MISTAKES.

  49. DISPOSITIONAL VERSUS SITUATIONAL EXPLANATIONS Ultimate Attribution Error Our tendency to make dispositional attributions about an individual’s negative behavior to an entire group of people. Source of image: www.clipart.com

More Related