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Attitudes and Attitude Change. Social Psychology Lecture 3 Dr Amanda Rivis. Learning Outcomes. By the end of this lecture, and with independent study , you should be able to: Discuss the origins, structure and functions of attitudes Evaluate methods for measuring attitudes
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Attitudes and Attitude Change Social Psychology Lecture 3 Dr Amanda Rivis
Learning Outcomes By the end of this lecture, and with independent study, you should be able to: • Discuss the origins, structure and functions of attitudes • Evaluate methods for measuring attitudes • Discuss the link between attitudes and behaviour • Discuss theories of attitude change
Stimulus 1 (Moth Balls) Stimulus 2 (Visits to Grandmother) Pleasurable Feelings Stimulus 1 (Moth Balls) Pleasurable Feelings (B) The different origins of Attitudes: Classical Conditioning (A)
The Different Origins of Attitudes: Instrumental Conditioning Behaviour toward Attitude Object (e.g., playing with child of another Race) • Positive or Negative • Reinforcement • (+ive = parents approval • Ive = parents’ • Disapproval) Positive or Negative Attitude Toward Attitude Object
The Different Origins of Attitudes: Imitation Social Learning Theory (Bandura 1977): • Attitudes are learned through imitation and modelling. Parents and society influence attitude
Attitude Structure • Three-component model views attitudes as having three components: • Affective = feelings about the attitude object • Behavioural = predisposition to act towards the attitude object in a certain way • Cognitive = beliefs about the attitude object • Any given attitude may be based in lesser or greater amounts on any of these components
Functions of Attitudes • Value-Expressive function • enable us to express who we are and what we believe in • Ego-defensive function • enable us to project internally-held conflicts onto others (e.g., homophobia) • Knowledge function • enable us to know the world • Utilitarian Function • Enable us to gain rewards and avoid punishment
How are attitudes measured?Overt Attitude Measures Self-report (single-item) attitude measures • Advantages: • Easy and quick to administer • Relatively cheap • Disadvantages: • Responses may not be reliable, e.g., • Question wording • Mood • Social desirability (but see bogus pipeline technique) • Assume people have an attitude! (cf. “spontaneous” attitudes)
How are attitudes measured?Overt Attitude Measures Attitude scales • Multiple items are used to measure the same construct • Eliminate some of the problems of single-item measures (e.g., reliability) • Some of the more popular scales include: • Likert scale • Osgood’s Semantic Differential Scale • Expectancy-Value Scale (Fishbein, 1971)
How are attitudes measured?Example of Expectancy-Value Approach
How are attitudes measured? Covert Measures • Covert Attitude Measures (CAM). These measures use physiological arousal to infer attitudes: • Electro-myograph (EMG). (Petty & Cacioppo 1981) which may include heart rate & pupil dilation • Galvanic Skin Response (GSR) : measures physiological arousal detected through skin resistance (Porier & Lott 1967)
How are attitudes measured? Evaluation of Covert Measures • More objective than self-report measures • Physiological measures (e.g. GSR) can be caused by fear or anger • Physiological measures cannot assess the direction of affective responses
How Well Do Attitudes Predict Behaviour? • Early research evidence suggested a weak to moderate link between attitudes and behaviour (e.g., LaPiere, 1934; Wicker, 1969) • More recent research has examined moderators of the attitude-behaviour relationship, e.g., • Attitude strength • Direct experience with the attitude object • Attitudinal ambivalence • Correspondence of attitudinal and behavioural measures
How Well Do Attitudes Predict Behaviour? Correspondence of Attitudinal and Behavioural Measures Source: Davidson & Jaccard (1979)
How Well Do Attitudes Predict Behaviour: Ajzen’s (1991) Theory of Planned Behaviour (TPB) • This model posits an important mediator of the attitude-behaviour link, namely behavioural ‘intention’ • The TPB holds that attitudes combine with other important factors in predicting intentions and, in turn, behaviour:- • Perceived social pressure • Factors that may facilitate or inhibit performance of the behaviour
Behaviour Attitudes Intention Theory of Planned Behaviour (Ajzen, 1991) Perceived Social Pressure Perceived Behavioural Control
Theories of Attitude Change: The Yale Attitude Change Approach (Hovland, et al. 1953) According to this approach, attitude change/persuasion influenced by 3 factors:- • Source – originator of communication • Message – features of communication itself • Audience – characteristics of who is receiving the message
Theories of Attitude Change: The Yale Attitude Change Approach (Hovland, et al. 1953) • Characteristics of Source • Credibility • Expertise • Trustworthiness • Attractiveness • Similarity • Appearance
Theories of Attitude Change: The Yale Attitude Change Approach (Hovland, et al. 1953) • Message Factors • One-sided vs. Two-sided messages • Order of messages • Primacy Effects –v- • Recency Effects • Repetition
Theories of Attitude Change: The Yale Attitude Change Approach (Hovland, et al. 1953) • Characteristics of Audience • Distraction • Intelligence • Self-Esteem (?) • Age (18-25 year olds most susceptible) Problem: what conditions determine the relative importance of these factors?
Petty & Cacioppo’s (1986) Elaboration Likelihood (dual-process) Model of Persuasion (ELM) • ELM holds that there are two ‘routes’ to attitude change: • Central route to persuasion occurs when we think critically about message content and are swayed by the strength and quality of its arguments. • Peripheral route to persuasion occurs when we do not do much thinking but are swayed by employing heuristics on the basis of non-content cues (e.g., “experts know best”)
The Elaboration-Likelihood Model of Persuasion (Petty & Cacioppo, 1986) Whether persuasion results from the central or the peripheral processing route depends upon: • Ability • e.g., attention, ‘receptive’ • Motivation • Personal Involvement
The Elaboration-Likelihood Model of Persuasion (Petty & Cacioppo, 1986) Central Route to Persuasion Yes Attitude Change Persuasive Communication Ability & Motivation to pay attention? Peripheral Route To persuasion No
Theories of Attitude Change: Cognitive Dissonance Theory (Festinger, 1957) This theory of self-persuasion holds that: • Cognitive inconsistency creates a state of psychological tension (i.e., “dissonance”) • Such tension is aversive and motivating (where it poses a threat to the self) • Easiest form of dissonance reduction will be adopted
Cognitive Dissonance Theory and Attitude Change: Justifying Attitude-Discrepant Behaviour Festinger & Carlsmith (1959)
Theories of Attitude Change: Bem’s (1965) Self Perception Theory • According to Bem, attitude change does not need to result from dissonance • People infer their attitudes from their behaviour • Cognitive dissonance when attitude-behaviour discrepancy large self-perception when not so large (Fazio, et al. 1977)
Reading • Hogg, M. & Vaughan, G. (2005) Social Psychology (4th Edition) Prentice Hall: London - chapter 5 • Brehm, S, Kassin, S. & Fein, S. (2002) Social Psychology. Houghton Mifflin: London - Chapter 6 • Aronson, E., Wilson, T., & Akert, R. (2005) Social psychology (5th Edition) - chapter 7 • Morgan, C, King, R. & Robinson, N. (1979) Introduction to Psychology. McGrw-Hill: London- Chapter 14