1 / 27

Emotions and Social Judgment

Emotions and Social Judgment. Class 16. Moods and Social Behavior. Anxiety and affiliation Happiness and helping Mood and social judgment Subliminal Priming of Emotions Midterms . Stanley Schachter: Anxiety and Affiliation Studies. Enter "Gregor Zilstein"

more
Télécharger la présentation

Emotions and Social Judgment

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. Emotions and Social Judgment Class 16

  2. Moods and Social Behavior Anxiety and affiliation Happiness and helping Mood and social judgment Subliminal Priming of Emotions Midterms

  3. Stanley Schachter: Anxiety and Affiliation Studies Enter "Gregor Zilstein" "Punishment and Learning Study" Severe Electric Shocks -- but be assured--"No permanent tissue damage" OR Mild Electric Shocks -- sort of like a light tickling sensation Please wait while we set up materials. Would you like to wait alone or with others?

  4. Schachter Measures of Anxiety and Affiliation • Anxiety measure • “How do you feel about the prospect of getting shocked?” • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 • I enjoy it I dislike it • very much very much • Affiliation measure ____ I prefer being alone ____ I prefer being with others ____ I really don’t care

  5. Effects of Anxiety Manipulation on Self-Reported Anxiety

  6. Anxiety Condition and Choosing to Be Alone or With Others

  7. Why Might People Facing Threat Seek Out Others? • Information • Find out if their own reactions are normal • Social solidarity—belongingness (attunement?)

  8. Anxiety and Affiliation Follow-on Studies Do people ONLY seek out information? a. Will prefer opportunity to be with others, even if not allowed to talk. b. However, want to talk to: 1. Check out reality of situation 2. Gauge normalcy of own responses Do threatened people want to be with ANY others, or only those in sim. situation? Prefer those in sim. situation Do threatened prefer being with non threatened, or being alone Prefer being alone

  9. Feeling Good and Helping(Alice Isen, 1987) Does positive mood  helping others? Prior research suggests it does: Ss in good mood more willing to help Exptr. Ss in good mood feel more empathy for others Problems with prior research Is it really pos. mood, or just arousal? Help is requested, not spontaneous Isen conducts studies to better understand mood and helping

  10. Cookie Distribution in Isen “Cookies and Kindness” Study C = Received Cookie X = Didn’t Receive Cookie Shaded = asked to help Un-shaded = asked to distract

  11. Percent Willing to Help/Distract Another Student Due to Receiving or Not Receiving a Cookie Note: Percents are not cumulative. Represent compliance within each condition (I.e., graph bar)

  12. Number of Minutes Agreeing to Volunteer Due to Cookie Condition and Task Solicited

  13. Problems with Cookies Study? Invocation of reciprocity norm: you give me cookie, I owe you What did it feel like to NOT get a cookie? Maybe effect occurred b/c non-cookie Ss felt rejected What were Ss’ actual moods? We don’t know Help is solicited, not spontaneous

  14. Dime in Payphone Study Setting: Shopping Mall Subjects: Shoppers Procedure: 1. Confed #1 goes to payphone, leaves or doesn’t leave dime in slot 2. Subject is next person who uses phone 3. If subject completes call AND checks slot, OK 4. Confed #2 walks in front of S, drops papers Outcome Measure? Does subject help confed pick up papers.

  15. Number of People Helping a Stranger After Finding/Not Finding a Free Dime in a Pay Phone

  16. Weather Asked After QOL Weather asked Before QOL Weather is pos Life is good Life is so-so Weather is neg Life is so-so Life is good Emotional Discounting and Judgment(N. Schwarz & G. Clore, 1988) 1. People phoned in diff. parts of USA, asked about life quality 2. In some cases, people first asked “how’s weather out there?” 3. Researchers already know if weather is positive or negative People know weather affects mood, and mood affects judgment When asked about weather, they discount mood effect on QOL

  17. Mood type Influence on Opinions Happy Movie More positive opinions Happy Movie More negative opinions Aggressive Movie Not sure Mood and Social Judgment Study Predictions

  18. Opinion Questions Asked Political questions How rate the prime minister? The opposition leader? Likelihood of future events Nuclear war, future of the economy Responsibility and Punishment Drunk driving, heroin traffic Quality of own lives Private, social, working

  19. Opinions Following Movie Viewing

  20. The Negative Side of Positive Moods Bargh & Chartrand: Mood is "rolling average" of things you encounter, even things you are not aware of. Subliminal Priming: Presenting stimuli too fast to be consciously perceived, but quick enough to be subliminally perceived (about 60 milliseconds "ms")

  21. Subliminally Priming Moods Bargh & Chartrand, 1996 Ss told: Interested in how fast people can react to visual stimuli. Procedure 1. Four stimulus words, all of which are: a. Very Pos: music, friends b. Mildly pos: clown, parade c. Very neg: war, cancer d. Mildly neg: worm, Monday 2. Backward mask: XBMEMENGYRYRBHXM 3. Mood measure

  22. Effect of Subliminal Prime on Mood

  23. Subliminal Moods and Stereotyping Bargh & Chartrand, Study 2 Who are more likely to apply stereotypes? People in good moods? Wait and see. People in bad moods? Procedure: 1. Ss subliminally primed with strong pos, strong neg, or neutral words. 2. Ss complete stereotyping task: John/Jane fed the baby because __________ Sally/Steve changed the motor oil because ______ Effort to "explain away" gender-inconsistent action = stereotyping.

  24. Effect of Mood on Stereotyping Why do positive moods --> stereotyping? Stereotypes are mental short-cuts. People take short cuts in positive moods.

  25. Do Subliminally Primed Emotions Affect Liking for Things You Consume? Winkielman, Berridge, & Wilbarger, 2005

  26. Midterm Score Distribution

More Related