logging in or signing up ch4 Davide Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1451 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (2) Dislike it (0) Added: January 13, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: marangu (11 month(s) ago) this site as helped me so much in my teaching hope to continue benefiting from site thanks Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close By: SYNERGEE (11 month(s) ago) Hello ! Can I have your PPT. I am taking lectres for third year BMS students at Mumbai. My email id is vikram@synergeecapital.com Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close By: rtrikha (12 month(s) ago) seems to be great preentation Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Attitudes: Attitudes What is an attitude?: What is an attitude? Attitude: an evaluation, either positive or negative, of a person, object, event, etc., that is exhibited in thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Three parts: 1. Cognition (thoughts) 2. Affect (feelings) 3. Behavior (intentions) Are attitudes useful: Are attitudes useful Does knowing people’s attitudes buy us anything in predicting their behavior?Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Please indicate the extent to which you agree with each of the statements below, with 1 being “strongly disagree” and 5 being “strongly agree” 1. Engaging in regular physical exercise 3 times a week promotes good health. 2. Eating a variety of foods each day, including 5 or more servings of fresh fruits and vegetables, contributes to wellness.Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? 1=“strongly disagree”; 5=“strongly agree” 3. It is essential that all citizens exercise their right to vote if government is to effectively reflect the will of the people. 4. Homelessness is a serious social problem that needs attention Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Indicate whether each of the following statements are true or false: 1. I take time to engage in regular physical exercise at least three times a week. 2. I regularly eat at least five servings of fresh fruits and vegetables each day. Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? True or false? 3. I voted in the last election for which I was eligible. 4. Within the last year, I have personally done something to address the problem of homelessness (e.g., made a charitable contribution, talked with a homeless person, wrote my congressman regarding the problem of homelessness).Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Did your attitudes predict your behavior? Why did they? Why didn’t they?Attitudes are not useful: Attitudes are not useful LaPiere (1934): wrote to ask 251 restaurants and hotels whether they would accept Chinese people as guests --> 92% of 128 respondents say no --> BUT, 6 months previously, all but one of these places had accepted Chinese people as guestsAttitudes are not useful: Attitudes are not useful Wicker concluded, in a meta-analysis (statistical review and summary of studies), that attitudes do not add much to the prediction of behaviorAttitudes are useful: Attitudes are useful Fishbein & Ajzen: attitudes and behavior must be measured at the same level of specificity Will attitude toward religion predict whether one will go to church on a particular Sunday? Will attitude toward attending church predict whether one will go to church on a particular Sunday? Attitudes are useful: Attitudes are useful Will attitude toward attending a particular church on a particular Sunday predict whether one will attend a particular church on a particular Sunday? B=f(P,E)When are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? 1. Other influences on behavior are minimized 2. Attitude and behavior are measured at the same level of specificityWhen are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? What else might increase the effects of attitudes on behavior? You’re grocery shopping: Are you more likely to act in line with your attitude toward healthy eating if: You’ve just filled out a questionnaire about how you feel toward vegetables? You’re in a hurry to finish grocery shopping so you can rush home to study social psychology?When are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? So, the salience of our attitudes can affect whether we act in accordance with them. The more our attitudes are on our minds, the more our behavior will follow. How can attitude salience be increased? Have people think about their attitudes Have people focus on themselves -- e.g., by putting them in front of a mirrorAttitude salience: Attitude salience Are some attitudes naturally more salient than others? Which of your attitudes are more salient -- tend to be more on your mind? How did you get these attitudes? Did you have discussions with others? Did they come from direct experience? If our attitudes come from direct experience, they tend to be more salientAttitudes lead to behavior: Attitudes lead to behavior If other possible influences (e.g., impression management concerns) are minimized If the specificity of the attitude and behavior match If the attitude is salientCan behavior lead to attitudes?: Can behavior lead to attitudes? cognitive dissonance theory: we feel a sense of anxiety if our behavior does not match our attitudes; we have a drive to ensure that they do matchCognitive dissonance: Cognitive dissonance If our behavior does not match our attitudes, what can we do? Change behavior Frequently, we cannot take back our behavior So, what can we do? 1. Change cognitions 2. Add new cognitions 3. Change the importance of relevant cognitionsThe boring task study: The boring task study How to test cognitive dissonance? Set up situation in which behavior and cognition do not match See if people change their cognitions Festinger and Carlsmith’s boring task study What would you predict would happen to the attitudes of the $20 people? What would you predict would happen to the attitudes of the $1 people? What did they find?Cognitive dissonance and boring task: Cognitive dissonance and boring task Rating of enjoyment of experiment (+5- -5) Other examples of cognitive dissonance: Other examples of cognitive dissonance Toothbrushing essay study Write essay to be shown to elementary students for or against toothbrushing When will cognitive dissonance occur?: When will cognitive dissonance occur? Insufficient justification for our behavior Lying for $1 vs. $20 People feel responsible for their behavior People feel they had a choice People think they should have foreseen the consequences Post-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance Post-decisional dissonance is a state of psychological dissonance that often occurs after making an important decision.Post-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance Brehm (1956) - the first published dissonance experiment: studied postdecisional change in the ranking of productsPost-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance original postdecisional 1 = radio 1 = radio 2 = blender 2 = blender 3 = mixer 3 = toaster 4 = toaster 4 = mixer 5 = hair dryer 5 = Cuisinart 6 = Cuisinart 6 = pie pan 7 = pie pan 7 = hair dryer 8 = cookie sheet 8 = cookie sheet This is an example of the spreading of alternatives Examples of post-decisional dissonance: Examples of post-decisional dissonance Choosing a college Other examples?When does post-decisional dissonance occur?: When does post-decisional dissonance occur? 1) important decisions arouse more dissonance than unimportant ones 2) the more equal the attractiveness of the alternatives, the more difficult the decision 3) the less similar the alternatives, the more dissonance will be aroused Dissonance assumptions: Dissonance assumptions People have many pre-existing attitudes. People prefer consistency among attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors Inconsistency creates an aversive state of arousal People may resolve the dissonance (i.e., get rid of the arousal) by changing their attitudes Non-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-perception theory: Bem (1972): We do not change our attitudes in response to our behavior; instead, we infer our attitudes from our behavior Do I like Chinese food? I eat it fairly frequently, even when I have the choice of other food. Therefore, I must like it. Self-perception is a theory of attitude formation; dissonance is a theory of attitude changeExample of self-perception: Example of self-perception Fazio et al. (1981): Had people answer questions that highlighted either their introverted or extroverted aspects, then had them rate their personality Predictions? If people infer their attitudes from their behavior, who would rate themselves as more extroverted? … as more introverted?Example of self-perception theory: Example of self-perception theory extra. 50 48 People's 46 Ratings of Their 44 Own Personalities 42 intro. 40 answered answered extroverted introverted questions questions Assumptions of self-perception theory: Assumptions of self-perception theory People do not have many pre-existing attitudes We infer others’ attitudes from their behavior, so we also infer our own attitudes from our own behavior Implication of self-perception theory: Implication of self-perception theory Overjustification effect: If people think they had external reasons for behaving as they did, they will underestimate the role of their attitudes in their behaviorExample of overjustification effect: Example of overjustification effect Lepper & Greene (1979): Two groups of children: One group rewarded for playing with magic markers Other group not rewarded After reward no longer given, who continued to play with the magic markers? The rewarded group? The non-rewarded group?Non-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-presentation: We do not have a drive to be consistent; instead, we simply want to see ourselves and have others see us as a consistent person. How is this different from cognitive dissonance? Motivation: We are not driven by arousal; instead, we want to have an identity as a consistent personNon-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-affirmation: Steele: We need to assert self-adequacy We feel foolish when we think we’re being inconsistent, so we try to restore our self-esteem This can be done in ways other than changing our attitudesExample of self-affirmation: Example of self-affirmation Steele had people write an essay that was either consistent or inconsistent with their attitudes Half the participants were then given the opportunity to affirm their self-esteem (by filling out a survey about a different attitude that was important to them) Participants then answered questions about their attitude concerning the essay topic Example of self-affirmation: Example of self-affirmation If there is a drive to maintain consistency, self-affirmation opportunity should not matter Those who feel they had a choice in writing the essay, regardless of whether they had a self-affirmation opportunity, should subsequently report more attitude changeExample of self-affirmation: Amount of attitude change: Example of self-affirmation: Amount of attitude changeSummary of behavior-attitude theories: Summary of behavior-attitude theories Cognitive dissonance: people have a drive to be consistent Self-perception: people infer their attitudes from their behavior Self-presentation: people do not have a drive to be consistent, but want to present themselves -- to themselves and others -- as consistent Self-affirmation: people want to feel good about themselvesBalance theory: Balance theory So, attitudes can affect behavior and behavior can affect attitudes. One of the bottom lines of behavior affecting attitudes is a desire for consistency This desire for consistency can also lead to predictions about the relationships between attitudes and our relationships with other peopleBalance theory: Balance theory Balance theory: The relationship between my view of a person, my attitude toward an object, and their attitude toward an object should all be consistent Is there consistency if my friend and I both like a painting? Is there consistency if my friend loves a painting that I hate? What about if my enemy hates a painting that I love?Balance theory: Balance theory A triangle can be created from these elements: person A person B objectBalance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A + + person B + object Balance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A - + person B + object Balance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A - + person B - object Next class: Next class Will discuss prejudice and discrimination Before this class: go to IAT website – there is a link to it on the class website You do not have the permission to view this presentation. In order to view it, please contact the author of the presentation.
ch4 Davide Download Post to : URL : Related Presentations : Share Add to Flag Embed Email Send to Blogs and Networks Add to Channel Uploaded from authorPOINTLite Insert YouTube videos in PowerPont slides with aS Desktop Copy embed code: (To copy code, click on the text box) Embed: URL: Thumbnail: WordPress Embed Customize Embed The presentation is successfully added In Your Favorites. Views: 1451 Category: Entertainment License: All Rights Reserved Like it (2) Dislike it (0) Added: January 13, 2008 This Presentation is Public Favorites: 1 Presentation Description No description available. Comments Posting comment... By: marangu (11 month(s) ago) this site as helped me so much in my teaching hope to continue benefiting from site thanks Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close By: SYNERGEE (11 month(s) ago) Hello ! Can I have your PPT. I am taking lectres for third year BMS students at Mumbai. My email id is vikram@synergeecapital.com Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close By: rtrikha (12 month(s) ago) seems to be great preentation Saving..... Post Reply Close Saving..... Edit Comment Close Premium member Presentation Transcript Attitudes: Attitudes What is an attitude?: What is an attitude? Attitude: an evaluation, either positive or negative, of a person, object, event, etc., that is exhibited in thoughts, feelings, and behaviors. Three parts: 1. Cognition (thoughts) 2. Affect (feelings) 3. Behavior (intentions) Are attitudes useful: Are attitudes useful Does knowing people’s attitudes buy us anything in predicting their behavior?Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Please indicate the extent to which you agree with each of the statements below, with 1 being “strongly disagree” and 5 being “strongly agree” 1. Engaging in regular physical exercise 3 times a week promotes good health. 2. Eating a variety of foods each day, including 5 or more servings of fresh fruits and vegetables, contributes to wellness.Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? 1=“strongly disagree”; 5=“strongly agree” 3. It is essential that all citizens exercise their right to vote if government is to effectively reflect the will of the people. 4. Homelessness is a serious social problem that needs attention Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Indicate whether each of the following statements are true or false: 1. I take time to engage in regular physical exercise at least three times a week. 2. I regularly eat at least five servings of fresh fruits and vegetables each day. Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? True or false? 3. I voted in the last election for which I was eligible. 4. Within the last year, I have personally done something to address the problem of homelessness (e.g., made a charitable contribution, talked with a homeless person, wrote my congressman regarding the problem of homelessness).Are attitudes useful?: Are attitudes useful? Did your attitudes predict your behavior? Why did they? Why didn’t they?Attitudes are not useful: Attitudes are not useful LaPiere (1934): wrote to ask 251 restaurants and hotels whether they would accept Chinese people as guests --> 92% of 128 respondents say no --> BUT, 6 months previously, all but one of these places had accepted Chinese people as guestsAttitudes are not useful: Attitudes are not useful Wicker concluded, in a meta-analysis (statistical review and summary of studies), that attitudes do not add much to the prediction of behaviorAttitudes are useful: Attitudes are useful Fishbein & Ajzen: attitudes and behavior must be measured at the same level of specificity Will attitude toward religion predict whether one will go to church on a particular Sunday? Will attitude toward attending church predict whether one will go to church on a particular Sunday? Attitudes are useful: Attitudes are useful Will attitude toward attending a particular church on a particular Sunday predict whether one will attend a particular church on a particular Sunday? B=f(P,E)When are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? 1. Other influences on behavior are minimized 2. Attitude and behavior are measured at the same level of specificityWhen are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? What else might increase the effects of attitudes on behavior? You’re grocery shopping: Are you more likely to act in line with your attitude toward healthy eating if: You’ve just filled out a questionnaire about how you feel toward vegetables? You’re in a hurry to finish grocery shopping so you can rush home to study social psychology?When are attitudes related to behavior?: When are attitudes related to behavior? So, the salience of our attitudes can affect whether we act in accordance with them. The more our attitudes are on our minds, the more our behavior will follow. How can attitude salience be increased? Have people think about their attitudes Have people focus on themselves -- e.g., by putting them in front of a mirrorAttitude salience: Attitude salience Are some attitudes naturally more salient than others? Which of your attitudes are more salient -- tend to be more on your mind? How did you get these attitudes? Did you have discussions with others? Did they come from direct experience? If our attitudes come from direct experience, they tend to be more salientAttitudes lead to behavior: Attitudes lead to behavior If other possible influences (e.g., impression management concerns) are minimized If the specificity of the attitude and behavior match If the attitude is salientCan behavior lead to attitudes?: Can behavior lead to attitudes? cognitive dissonance theory: we feel a sense of anxiety if our behavior does not match our attitudes; we have a drive to ensure that they do matchCognitive dissonance: Cognitive dissonance If our behavior does not match our attitudes, what can we do? Change behavior Frequently, we cannot take back our behavior So, what can we do? 1. Change cognitions 2. Add new cognitions 3. Change the importance of relevant cognitionsThe boring task study: The boring task study How to test cognitive dissonance? Set up situation in which behavior and cognition do not match See if people change their cognitions Festinger and Carlsmith’s boring task study What would you predict would happen to the attitudes of the $20 people? What would you predict would happen to the attitudes of the $1 people? What did they find?Cognitive dissonance and boring task: Cognitive dissonance and boring task Rating of enjoyment of experiment (+5- -5) Other examples of cognitive dissonance: Other examples of cognitive dissonance Toothbrushing essay study Write essay to be shown to elementary students for or against toothbrushing When will cognitive dissonance occur?: When will cognitive dissonance occur? Insufficient justification for our behavior Lying for $1 vs. $20 People feel responsible for their behavior People feel they had a choice People think they should have foreseen the consequences Post-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance Post-decisional dissonance is a state of psychological dissonance that often occurs after making an important decision.Post-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance Brehm (1956) - the first published dissonance experiment: studied postdecisional change in the ranking of productsPost-decisional dissonance: Post-decisional dissonance original postdecisional 1 = radio 1 = radio 2 = blender 2 = blender 3 = mixer 3 = toaster 4 = toaster 4 = mixer 5 = hair dryer 5 = Cuisinart 6 = Cuisinart 6 = pie pan 7 = pie pan 7 = hair dryer 8 = cookie sheet 8 = cookie sheet This is an example of the spreading of alternatives Examples of post-decisional dissonance: Examples of post-decisional dissonance Choosing a college Other examples?When does post-decisional dissonance occur?: When does post-decisional dissonance occur? 1) important decisions arouse more dissonance than unimportant ones 2) the more equal the attractiveness of the alternatives, the more difficult the decision 3) the less similar the alternatives, the more dissonance will be aroused Dissonance assumptions: Dissonance assumptions People have many pre-existing attitudes. People prefer consistency among attitudes, beliefs, and behaviors Inconsistency creates an aversive state of arousal People may resolve the dissonance (i.e., get rid of the arousal) by changing their attitudes Non-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-perception theory: Bem (1972): We do not change our attitudes in response to our behavior; instead, we infer our attitudes from our behavior Do I like Chinese food? I eat it fairly frequently, even when I have the choice of other food. Therefore, I must like it. Self-perception is a theory of attitude formation; dissonance is a theory of attitude changeExample of self-perception: Example of self-perception Fazio et al. (1981): Had people answer questions that highlighted either their introverted or extroverted aspects, then had them rate their personality Predictions? If people infer their attitudes from their behavior, who would rate themselves as more extroverted? … as more introverted?Example of self-perception theory: Example of self-perception theory extra. 50 48 People's 46 Ratings of Their 44 Own Personalities 42 intro. 40 answered answered extroverted introverted questions questions Assumptions of self-perception theory: Assumptions of self-perception theory People do not have many pre-existing attitudes We infer others’ attitudes from their behavior, so we also infer our own attitudes from our own behavior Implication of self-perception theory: Implication of self-perception theory Overjustification effect: If people think they had external reasons for behaving as they did, they will underestimate the role of their attitudes in their behaviorExample of overjustification effect: Example of overjustification effect Lepper & Greene (1979): Two groups of children: One group rewarded for playing with magic markers Other group not rewarded After reward no longer given, who continued to play with the magic markers? The rewarded group? The non-rewarded group?Non-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-presentation: We do not have a drive to be consistent; instead, we simply want to see ourselves and have others see us as a consistent person. How is this different from cognitive dissonance? Motivation: We are not driven by arousal; instead, we want to have an identity as a consistent personNon-dissonance explanations: Non-dissonance explanations Self-affirmation: Steele: We need to assert self-adequacy We feel foolish when we think we’re being inconsistent, so we try to restore our self-esteem This can be done in ways other than changing our attitudesExample of self-affirmation: Example of self-affirmation Steele had people write an essay that was either consistent or inconsistent with their attitudes Half the participants were then given the opportunity to affirm their self-esteem (by filling out a survey about a different attitude that was important to them) Participants then answered questions about their attitude concerning the essay topic Example of self-affirmation: Example of self-affirmation If there is a drive to maintain consistency, self-affirmation opportunity should not matter Those who feel they had a choice in writing the essay, regardless of whether they had a self-affirmation opportunity, should subsequently report more attitude changeExample of self-affirmation: Amount of attitude change: Example of self-affirmation: Amount of attitude changeSummary of behavior-attitude theories: Summary of behavior-attitude theories Cognitive dissonance: people have a drive to be consistent Self-perception: people infer their attitudes from their behavior Self-presentation: people do not have a drive to be consistent, but want to present themselves -- to themselves and others -- as consistent Self-affirmation: people want to feel good about themselvesBalance theory: Balance theory So, attitudes can affect behavior and behavior can affect attitudes. One of the bottom lines of behavior affecting attitudes is a desire for consistency This desire for consistency can also lead to predictions about the relationships between attitudes and our relationships with other peopleBalance theory: Balance theory Balance theory: The relationship between my view of a person, my attitude toward an object, and their attitude toward an object should all be consistent Is there consistency if my friend and I both like a painting? Is there consistency if my friend loves a painting that I hate? What about if my enemy hates a painting that I love?Balance theory: Balance theory A triangle can be created from these elements: person A person B objectBalance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A + + person B + object Balance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A - + person B + object Balance theory: Balance theory Is this balanced? person A - + person B - object Next class: Next class Will discuss prejudice and discrimination Before this class: go to IAT website – there is a link to it on the class website