1 / 33

Advanced Placement Psychology

Social Psychology : The study of how people influence, and are influenced by, other people Social Cognition : The mental processes associated with the ways in which people perceive & react to other individuals & groups. Advanced Placement Psychology. Chapter 17: Social Cognition.

lindsay
Télécharger la présentation

Advanced Placement 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. Social Psychology: The study of how people influence, and are influenced by, other people Social Cognition: The mental processes associated with the ways in which people perceive & react to other individuals & groups Advanced Placement Psychology Chapter 17: Social Cognition

  2. Self-Concept – (noun.) Beliefs about who we are & WHAT CHARACTERISTICS WE HAVE Self-Esteem– (noun.) Evaluations of personal worth AS HUMAN BEINGS Two main theories about how we form our self-concept: - Social Comparison Theory - Social Identity Theory

  3. Social Comparison TheoryWe know who we are by comparing ourselves to others • Objective Measures: Things that can be measured • Ex: height, weight, age, etc. • Non-objective Measures: Things that cannot be measured • Ex: attractiveness, athletic prowess, etc. • Social Comparison– Evaluation of the self by comparing to others • Reference Groups– Categories of people to which individuals see themselves as belonging & to which they compare themselves • Relative Deprivation– Occurs when a person’s relative standing is poor compared to a social reference group (no matter how much you’re getting, it’s less than you deserve)

  4. Social Identity TheoryWe know who we are through our role in society (part of our self-concept) • Social Identity: our beliefs about the groups to which we belong • “I am _____________.” • Physical Attributes • Tall • Smart • Athletic • Social Attributes • a student • American • a [sport] player • Cultural Differences • Individualist Cultures – Tend to define themselves more by physical attributes • Collectivist Cultures – Tend to define themselves more by social attributes

  5. Linkages:Social Cognition and Psychological Disorders • Self-Schemas • Unified Self-Schemas – Same characteristics across situations • Differentiated Self-Schemas – Different characteristics across situations • Those with unified self-schemas are more prone to developing mental disorders Parts of the Self-Schema • Actual Self – What the person is like • Ideal Self – What the person wants to be • Ought Self – Who the person should be (morals) • Perceived discrepancies between the parts of the self may be the trigger for distress & then mental disorders

  6. Social PerceptionThe Role of Schemas, First Impressions, Attribution, & Self-Protective Functions • Social Perception: the process through which people interpret information about others, form impressions of them, & draw conclusions about the reasons for their behavior • Social perception influences our thoughts, feelings, & actions!

  7. Role of SchemasGestalt principles of perception: Top-Down Processing“Filling in the Blanks” about other people • Attention • Schemas affect what we pay attention to & what we ignore • Attributes consistent with our schemas get more attention than those inconsistent with schemas • Processing speed is quicker for characteristics that confirm our schemas • Memory • Schemas influence what we remember • Attributes consistent with our schemas are easier to remember than those inconsistent with schemas • You will remember more about a random person if you knew their profession ahead of time. • Attribution • Schemas affect how we judge behavior of others • A man and a woman doing the same thing get different judgments of their behavior

  8. First ImpressionsIs the first impression the most important? • Forming Impressions • Influenced heavily by schemas & top-down processing • Assumption: Others hold attitudes & values similar to your own • Negative information is more potent than positive information • Why? • There are many reasons for why someone might act positively • Only one reason for why someone might act negatively • Lasting Impressions • First impressions are very slow to change • New information is filtered by the existing framework through top-down processing • Self-Fulfilling Prophecies • Schemas that lead people to behave in line with our expectations

  9. Explaining Perception: AttributionAttribution – Process of explaining the causes of behavior • Attribution helps to understand the causes of behavior, predict future behavior, & decide how to control the situation itself • Scenario: A student asks Ms. de Bari for an extension on an assignment • Internal Attribution • Behavior caused by characteristics of the person • “Sigh… laziness…” • External Attribution • Behavior caused by situational factors • “Something must have happened that prevented him/her from being able to work on the assignment.” • Similar to locus of control, but what’s the difference?

  10. Sources of AttributionsKelley’s theory for understanding attributions • You ask Ms. de Bari for an extension on an assignment & she yells at you before refusing • Consensus • Degree to which other people’s behavior is similar to that of the actor •  Consensus = External •  Consensus = Internal • None of your other teachers ever give you extensions. • All your other teachers give you extensions when you ask. • Consistency • Degree to which the behavior is the same across time •  Consistency = Internal •  Consistency = External • Ms. de Bari has never given you an extensions before. • Ms. de Bari use to always give you extensions except this time • Distinctiveness • Degree to which similar stimuli elicit the same behavior from the actor •  Distinctiveness = External •  Distinctiveness = Internal • Ms. de Bari gives everyone extensions but you. • Ms. de Bari gives extensions to NO ONE!

  11. Attribution Errors & Biases Fundamental Attributional Error Other Attributional Biases • Fundamental Attribution Error • Tendency to over-attribute the behavior of others to internal factors, such as personality traits • Ultimate Attribution Error • Tendency to attribute negative behaviors of out-groups to stable traits, & positive behaviors as exceptions • Actor-Observer Bias • Tendency to over-attribute the behavior of self to external factors • Self-Serving Bias • Success  Internal attribution • Failure  External attribution • Explanation: Self-esteem • Claims success & disowns failures

  12. Self-Protective Functions • People are motivated to maintain their self-esteem • Ignoring negative information is one way to do it • Ex: If you just failed your last exam (hopefully not!) you are more likely to blame me as the teacher instead of painfully admitting that you got the grade you deserved • Unrealistic Optimism [Unique Invulnerability] • The tendency to believe that: • Positive events are more likely to happen to you than others • Negative events are more likely to happen others than you • Tends to persist even in the face of contradictory evidence • Can lead to unhealthy behaviors • Alcoholism • Reckless Driving • Drugs

  13. AttitudesThe Tendency to Think, Feel, or Act Positively or Negatively toward objects in our environment • Three components of attitudes • Cognitive – Beliefs held about something (Ex: you believe drunk driving is bad) • Affective – Emotional feelings toward something (Ex: you feel angry when people drive drunk) • Behavioral – The way one acts towards something (Ex: you participate in demonstrations against drunk driving) • People will consciously or subconsciously try to maintain consistency between the components of their attitude • Factors Affecting Consistency [of behavior] • Cognitive & affective consistency [What you believe and how you feel are consistent] • In line with subjective norm [View of how people around us want us to act] • There is a degree of perceived control [Belief one can actually perform said behavior] • Having had direct experience [Having first-hand experience]

  14. Forming AttitudesNo one is born with attitudes • Genetics • Inherited predispositions of temperament • Learning • Modeling & Social Learning – Children learn from parents not just what objects are, but also how they should feel about them • Classical / Operant Conditioning – Naturally associating positive or negative feelings with the object Mere-Exposure Effect • All else being equal, attitudes toward an object will become more positive the more frequently people are exposed to it • i.e. Spend enough time with the girl you like and maybe she’ll start liking you too.

  15. Changing Attitudes Two Routes to Attitude Change • Three factors affecting attitude change • Characteristics of the person communicating • Content of the message • Audience who receives it • Elaboration Likelihood Model • Peripheral Route • Persuasion Cues are important • How confident or attractive the persuader is • Central Route • Content of message is important • How logical the argument is • Which Route Will Be Taken? • Personal Involvement – How personally important the information is [C] • Cognitive Busyness – Thinking about other things [P] • Need for Cognition – Need for thoughtful mental activities [C] • Need for Closure – Discomfort with uncertainty [P]

  16. AdvertisementsBillions spent to change your attitude

  17. Attitude ChangeFestinger’s Cognitive Dissonance Theory Procedure / Results Explanation • Participants did mundane peg-turning activity • Advertised the task to others as “exciting & fun” • Group 1: $1 reward • Group 2: $20 reward • Group 1 • More favorable attitude towards the task • Group 2 • Small increase in attitude towards the task Group 1 Group 2

  18. Attitude ChangeFestinger’s Cognitive Dissonance Theory • People want their thoughts, beliefs, & emotions to be consistent with one another and with their behavior • In cases where the behavior & cognition can’t be changed, the attitude naturally shifts

  19. Attitude Change Self-Perception Theory • You’re not quite sure yet how you feel about a particular boy or girl • You examine • How excited you get when you are on your way to spend time with him or her • How upset you get when others speak poorly about the boy or girl • How unhappy you get when you see him or her with others of the opposite gender • Does not presuppose internal tension when attitudes are inconsistent with behavior • Under ambiguous situations, people examine their behavior to infer their attitude. • Self-Perception Theory • Best when there is weak/no prior attitude • Cognitive-Dissonance Theory • Best when there is strong/clearly defined attitudes and internal consistency is important for self-esteem

  20. First, some vocabulary • Some commonly interchange words • Stereotype –Perceptions, beliefs, and expectations about members of a group • Prejudice – Positive or negative attitude toward an individual because of his or her membership in a group • Discrimination – Differential treatment of individuals who belong to different groups • Group Dynamics • In-group – Group to which one identifies with and belongs to • Out-group – Everyone else

  21. Theories of Prejudice and Stereotyping:Motivational Theories • Motivational Theories • Prejudice may enhance one’s sense of security • Prejudice is especially likely among those with an authoritarian personality trait • Acceptance of conventional or traditional values • Willingness to unquestioningly follow the orders of authority • Inclination to act aggressively towards those identified by these authority figures as threatening the values held by one’s in-group • Prejudice may enhance one’s self-esteem by affirming their social identity with their in-group

  22. Theories of Prejudice and Stereotyping:Cognitive and Learning Cognitive Theories • Social relationships are so numerous and complex that we rely heavily on schemas • People are then sorted into social categories • Categories that replace the individual details of a person • Members of the same social category are perceived to be quite similar to each other [saves cognitive energies: less attention] • “All you ____________ people look the same.” Learning Theories • Children learn prejudice by watching parents, peers, and others • Children often know about the negative characteristics of groups before they ever meet a member

  23. Reducing Prejudice • Contact Hypothesis • Stereotypes and prejudice toward a group will diminish as contact with the group increases • Lessons Since 1954 [Brown vs. Board of Education] How to make desegregation work • Members of the two groups had to be roughly the same social and economic status • Members of the two groups had to work together on projects that required reliance and teamwork for success • Contact has to happen on a one-on-one basis • Members of each group must be seen as typical

  24. And now, what we’ve all been waiting for…

  25. Keys to AttractionAka: The Love Manual • The Environment • Mere-Exposure Effect (forming attitudes section) • Classical / Operant Conditioning • Similarity • Attitudes, age, habits • Balance • Similar attitudes towards mutual acquaintances • “If you wanna be my lover, you gotta get with my friends, make it last forever, friendship never ends…” – Spice Girls • Conclusion: Opposites don’t actually attract • Why? • We don’t know which direction the causality arrow points • Physical Attractiveness • Matching Hypothesis – People tend to form committed relationships with others of similar attractiveness • Why? • Balance between attraction and likeliness of rejection

  26. Analyzing LoveTriangular Theory of Love

More Related