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Myers Chapter 4 PPT New Rev

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© KidStock/Blend Images/Corbis RF Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education.

Permission required for reproduction or


Attitude

Favorable or unfavorable evaluative reaction


toward something or someone
For many years, the assumption is social
psychology has been that if you know someone’s
attitude toward something, you can predict this
person’s behavior
That is, the assumption has been that the attitude
will be translated into behavior.

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


How Well Do Our Attitudes Predict
Our Behavior?
People’s expressed attitudes hardly predicted
their varying behaviors
Student attitudes toward cheating bore little
relation to the likelihood of their cheating
Attitudes toward the church were only
modestly linked with worship attendance on
any given Sunday
Self-described racial attitudes provided little
clue to behaviors in actual situations

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


How Well Do Our Attitudes Predict
Our Behavior?
When Attitudes Predict Behavior
When social influences on what we say are
minimal
 Implicit
 Implicit association test (IAT)

 Implicit biases are pervasive

 People differ in implicit bias

 People are often unaware of their implicit biases

 Explicit

When other influences on behavior are minimal

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


How Well Do Our Attitudes Predict
Our Behavior?
When Attitudes Are Specific to the Behavior
When attitudes specific to the behavior are
examined
When attitudes are Potent
 Bringing Attitudes to Mind
 Forging Strong Attitudes Through Experience

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Theory of planned behavior
When Does Our Behavior Affect
Our Attitudes?
Role Playing
Role
 Set of norms that defines how people in a given
social position ought to behave
Philip Zimbardo’s Stanford’s prison study
 Abu Ghraib controversy

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


When Does Our Behavior Affect
Our Attitudes?
When Saying Becomes Believing: When
people are asked to present a position that
they do not agree with:
When there is no compelling external
explanation for one’s words, saying becomes
believing
People often adapt what they say to please
their listeners
 Foot-in- the-door phenomenon: if you want
people to do a big favor for you, you ask them
first to do a small favor.
Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or
Cont-d
Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon
Tendency for people who have first agreed to a
small request to comply later with a larger
request
The initial compliance created a commitment
to the cause
 Low-ball technique
 Tactic for getting people to agree to something.

People who agree to an initial request will often still


comply when the requester ups the ante:
 Used by some car dealers
When Does Our Behavior Affect
Our Attitudes?
Evil and Moral Acts
Wartime
 Actions and attitudes feed on each other
 When evil behavior occurs we tend to justify it as

right
Peacetime
 Moral action, especially when chosen rather than
coerced, affects moral thinking

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


When Does Our Behavior Affect
Our Attitudes?
Interracial Behavior and Racial Attitudes
Racial behaviors help shape our social
consciousness
 By doing, not saying racial attitudes were changed
 Legislating morality

Social Movements
Political and social movements may legislate
behavior designed to lead to attitude change
on a mass scale

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Why Does Our Behavior Affect Our Attitudes?
Self-Presentation: Impression Management
Assumes that people, especially those who self-
monitor their behavior hoping to create good
impressions, will adapt their attitude reports to
appear consistent with their actions
But there is more to attitudes than self-
presentation, so 2 other theories try to explain
this phenomenon.
Why Does Our Behavior Affect Our
Attitudes?
Self-Justification: Cognitive Dissonance
Tension that arises when one is simultaneously
aware of two inconsistent cognitions
 To reduce this tension, we adjust our thinking or
change our behavior
Insufficient justification
 Reduction of dissonance by internally justifying
one’s behavior when external justification is
“insufficient”

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Dissonance Means Disagreement
Dissonance theory pertains mostly to
discrepancies between behavior and attitudes
A person who smokes cigarettes may be aware
of the studies linking smoking to lung-cancer
The person may either stop smoking, or
downplay the quality of the study
Festinger argued that to reduce the
discrepancy between behavior and cognition
(knowing smoking is dangerous) , the person
will change either the behavior of the cognition.
Insufficient Justification: Festinger’s
Milestone Study (1959)
Festinger asked subjects to participate in a
very boring experiment (turning wooden knobs
again and again)
 When finished, the experimenter tells the
subjects that the study concerns how
expectations affect performance. She asked
the subjects to tell the students waiting outside
to participate in the experiment that this was a
very interesting experiment!
For telling this lie, the participants are being
paid. Some are paid $1 and some $20.
Festinger’s Study (cont-d)
Later these participants were asked to indicate how
much they have actually enjoyed the experiment.
Festinger and Carlsmith had predicted that those who
were paid $1 for telling a lie to their friends may
experience a greater dissonance, as they had
insufficient justification to their lie to their friends.
Those who were paid $20 have not experienced
dissonance: “For $20 I will say anything!”
The results supported the prediction(the hypothesis):
Those who were paid $1 indeed change their attitude
came to view the experiment as enjoyable!
Cont-d
In later experiments, this attitudes- follow-
behavior effect was the strongest when
people felt some choice for their actions.
Attitudes follow behavior for which we feel
some responsibilty.
Why Does Our Behavior Affect Our
Attitudes?
Self-Justification: Cognitive Dissonance
Dissonance after decisions
When faced with two alternatives that are
equally attractive we usually upgrade the
alternative we have chosen and downplay the
.alternative we had given up
 Deciding-becomes-believing effect
 Can breed overconfidence

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Why Does Our Behavior Affect Our
Attitudes?
Self-Perception Theory
When we are unsure of our attitudes, we infer them
much as would someone observing us, by looking at
our behavior and the circumstances under which it
occurs
 Expressions and attitudes: When people were asked
to manipulate their facial muscles in a smiling or
sad expression, after couple of minutes they
reoprted an internal emotional state corresponding
to their facial expression.
 Imitating other people’s expression help us sense how

they are feeling


 Emotional contagion: It is fun to be around happy people.

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Overjustification and intrinsic motivations

 When you pay or reward people to do something that they


actually do on their own (have intrinsic motivation) you
find that they perform this behavior less.
 The reason: This is explained in the context of self-
perception theory: You observe your own behavior, and the
conditions under which this behavior is performed: You
perform because you are being paid, you attribute your
behavior to the reward rather than to your enjoyment.
 Your actions are seen as externally controlled rather than
externally appealing.
 However, unanticipated reward does NOT diminish
intrinsic interest, because people can still attribute their
behavior to intrinsic motivation.
Why Does Our Behavior Affect Our
Attitudes?
Comparing the Theories
Dissonance Theory
Self-Perception Theory
Dissonance as Arousal
Self-Perceiving when Not Self-Contradicting
Changing Ourselves Through Action

Copyright 2016 © McGraw-Hill Education. Permission required for reproduction or


Comparing the theories

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