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1. Social Thinking: Attitudes & Prejudice
2. Attitudes What is an attitude?
Our beliefs and feelings about objects, people, and events that lead people to behave in certain ways.
Has three components
Cognitive—thoughts about given topic or situation
Affective—feelings or emotions about topic
Behavioral—your actions regarding the topic or situation
3. Components of Attitudes An attitude is a positive or negative evaluation of an object, person, or idea
4. How Attitudes Develop Conditioning – Children are reinforced for acting and thinking in ways that are consistent with their parents’ attitudes.
Observational Learning – We observe others and adopt their ways of acting.
Cognitive Evaluations – Evaluate evidence and then form a belief based on that. Do this when you have to justify your attitude.
Cognitive Anchors – beliefs that shape the ways we see the world and interpret events. We reject things that differ too much from our cognitive anchor.
5. The Effect of Attitudes on Behavior You’re most likely to behave in accordance with your attitudes when
Attitudes are extreme or are frequently expressed
Attitudes have been formed through direct experience.
You are very knowledgeable about the subject.
You have a vested interest in the subject.
You anticipate a favorable outcome or response from others for doing so.
6. Attitudes Affecting Actions Many studies suggest a person’s attitudes do not match their actions
Attitudes can predict behavior if:
Outside influences are minimal
People are aware of their attitudes
Attitude is relevant to behavior
7. Actions Affecting Attitudes Under some circumstances one’s actions can influence attitudes. They include:
Foot-in-the-door phenomenon
Role playing
Cognitive dissonance
8. Foot-in-the-Door Phenomenon The tendency for people who have first agreed to a small request to comply later with a larger request
9. Role Playing Playing a role can influence or change one’s attitude
Zimbardo’s Prison Study
College students played the role of guard or prisoner in a simulated prison.
The study was ended after just 6 days when the guards became too aggressive and cruel.
10. Cognitive Dissonance (Leon Festinger) The theory that people act to reduce the discomfort (dissonance) they feel when their thoughts (cognitions) are inconsistent with their actions
When our attitudes are inconsistent with our actions, we change our attitudes to reduce the dissonance.
11. How Cognitive Dissonance Leads to Attitude Change When your behavior conflicts with your attitudes, an uncomfortable state of tension is produced. However, if you can rationalize or explain your behavior, the conflict (and the tension) is eliminated or avoided. If you can’t explain your behavior, you may change your attitude so that it is in harmony with your behavior.
13. Insufficient-justification effect Festinger & Carlsmith (1959)
gave subjects a boring task, then asked subjects to lie to the next subject and say the experiment was exciting
paid ˝ the subjects $1, other ˝ $20
then asked subjects to rate boringness of task
$1 group rated the task as far more fun than the $20 group
each group needed a justification for lying
$20 group had an external justification of money
since $1 isn’t very much money, $1 group said task was fun
14. Cognitive Dissonance: A Review If you have a good excuse for a behavior that does not go with your attitude then you avoid dissonance.
If you do not have a good excuse for a behavior that is against your attitude you must change your attitude to fit your behavior.
15. Dissonance-Reducing Mechanisms Avoiding dissonant information
– we attend to information in support of our existing views, rather than information that doesn’t support them
Firming up an attitude to be consistent with an action
– once we’ve made a choice to do something, lingering doubts about our actions would cause dissonance, so we are motivated to set them aside
16. Prejudice
17. Prejudice Based on the exaggerated notion that members of other social groups are very different from members of our own social group
An unjustifiable attitude toward a group and its members
Usually involves stereotyped beliefs, negative feelings, and a predisposition to discriminatory action
Usually involves a negative attitude
18. Keep in Mind… Racial and ethnic groups are far more alike than they are different
Any differences that may exist between members of different racial and ethnic groups are far smaller than differences among various members of the same group.
19. Categorization The tendency to group similar objects
May be a means to explain stereotypes
20. Stereotype An unchanging, oversimplified and usually distorted belief about a group of people
We assume those different from ourselves must all be similar to each other.
Because stereotypes sometimes have a kernel of truth, they are easy to confirm, especially when you see only what you expect to see.
When stereotypic beliefs become expectations that are applied to all members of a given group, they can be both misleading and damaging
Creating special cases, or exceptions, allows people to maintain stereotypes in the face of contradictory evidence
Stereotypes limit the possibilities of individuals by discouraging them to explore their full range of talents.
21. Studying stereotypes 3 levels of stereotypes in today’s research
public
what we say to others about a group
private
what we consciously think about a group, but don’t say to others
implicit
unconscious mental associations guiding our judgments and actions without our conscious awareness
See The Hidden Prejudice video clip (Scientific American Frontiers (6 minutes)
22. Implicit Stereotypes Use of priming: subject doesn’t know stereotype is being activated, can’t work to suppress it
Bargh study
have subjects read word lists, some lists include words like “gray,” “Bingo,” and “Florida”
subjects with “old” word lists walked to elevators significantly more slowly
another study
flash pictures of Black vs. White faces subliminally
give incomplete words like “hos_____,” subjects seeing Black make “hostile,” seeing White make “hospital”
23. Implicit Stereotypes Devine’s automaticity theory
stereotypes about African-Americans are so prevalent in our culture that we all hold them
these stereotypes are automatically activated whenever we come into contact with an African-American
we have to actively push them back down if we don’t wish to act in a prejudiced way.
Overcoming prejudice is possible, but takes work I always discuss Devine's automaticity theory of stereotyping so that I can discuss the issue of overcoming prejudice
In addition, there is a web site (http://depts.washington.edu/iat/) that has an iat that students -- for a terrific in class demonstration, you can actually do an IAT (probably least controversial to use old/young stereotypes, although you can get the effect with good/bad valenced words and avoid controversy altogether) using word lists and students tapping on their desks, time them on the consistent vs. inconsistent conditions, and you will find a huge time differenceI always discuss Devine's automaticity theory of stereotyping so that I can discuss the issue of overcoming prejudice
In addition, there is a web site (http://depts.washington.edu/iat/) that has an iat that students -- for a terrific in class demonstration, you can actually do an IAT (probably least controversial to use old/young stereotypes, although you can get the effect with good/bad valenced words and avoid controversy altogether) using word lists and students tapping on their desks, time them on the consistent vs. inconsistent conditions, and you will find a huge time difference
24. Ingroup “Us” People with whom one shares a common identity
25. Outgroup “Them” Those perceived as different or apart form “us” (the ingroup)
26. Out-Group Homogeneity Effect Typically, we describe the members of our in-group as being quite varied, despite having enough features in common to belong to the same group
We tend to see members of the out-group as much more similar to one another, even in areas that have little to do with the criteria for group membership.
27. Ingroup Bias The tendency to favor one’s own group usually at the expense of the outgroup
We make favorable, positive attributions for behaviors by members of our in-group, and unfavorable, negative attributions for behaviors by members of out-groups.
Ethnocentrism - belief that one’s own culture or ethnic group is superior to others
28. The Basis for Prejudice In combination, stereotypes and in-group/out-group bias form the cognitive basis for prejudicial attitudes.
Prejudice also has a strong emotional component, which is intensely negative and involves hatred, contempt, fear, and loathing
Behaviorally, prejudice can be displayed in the form of discrimination
29. Discrimination Unfair treatment of individuals because they are members of a particular group.
Victims of discrimination may see themselves as inferior.
Low expectations + low self esteem = low chance for success.
See clip of Clark’s study from Separate but Equal.
See this modern example (2 min)
30. Prejudice and Discrimination Play “Attitudes and Prejudicial Behavior” (6:06) Segment #31 from Psychology: The Human Experience.
Play “Ethnocentrism and Prejudice” (5:06) Segment #32 from Psychology: The Human Experience.
31. Causes of Prejudice
32. Exaggerating Differences People exaggerate how different others are from themselves.
We tend to prefer people who look, act and think like us and see others as being more different than they really are.
33. Justifying Economic Status People of higher socioeconomic status tend to justify it by assuming that people of lower economic status are inferior to them.
Believe that lower status people are lazy and don’t work as hard.
This is also known as Just-World Phenomenon
34. Just-World Phenomenon The tendency to believe that people get what they deserve and deserve what they get
Reflects child’s attitude that good is rewarded and evil is punished
35. Social Learning Children will imitate their parents attitudes and parents will reinforce these attitudes in their children
This is how prejudice is passed on from generation to generation
36. Victimization Victims of prejudice try to gain a sense of power and pride by putting down another group that is even worse off them.
37. Scapegoat Theory Individual or group is blamed for a problem that is too complex, powerful or remote to be addressed.
Provides an outlet for anger by providing someone to blame
Example: Nazi Germany blaming the Jews for the troubles in Germany after WWI.
38. Accounting for Prejudice
39. Accounting for Prejudice: Two Theories Prejudice and intergroup hostility increase when different groups are competing for scarce resources
People are prejudiced against groups that are perceived as threatening important in-group norms and values
Social psychologists have increasingly come to believe # 2 is more correct.
40. Overcoming Prejudice
41. Reducing Prejudice Initially, researchers thought simple contact between conflicting groups would reduce prejudice (contact theory)
They now think that prejudice can be overcome when rival groups cooperate to achieve a common goal
42. Social Identity and Cooperation Social identity theory:
States that when you’re assigned to a group, you automatically think of that group as an in-group for you
Sherif’s Robbers Cave study
11–12 year old boys at camp
Boys were divided into 2 groups and kept separate from one another
Each group took on characteristics of distinct social group, with leaders, rules, norms of behavior, and names
43. Robbers Cave (Sherif) Leaders proposed series of competitive interactions which led to 3 changes between groups and within groups
within-group solidarity
negative stereotyping of other group
hostile between-group interactions
A fierce rivalry quickly developed
To restore harmony, Sherif created a series of situations in which the two groups would need to cooperate to achieve a common goal
After a series of joint efforts, the rivalry diminished and the groups became friends. For more detailed explanation of this study, here are my actual lecture notes:
Leaders then proposed a series of competitive interactions which led to 3 changes between groups and within groups
within-group solidarity – loyalty to own group increased, put aside internal strife to beat enemy
negative stereotyping of other group –other group as out-group, own group as in-group; engaged in stereotyping of other group
Hostile between-group interactions – called names, loss of good sportsmanship, accusations of cheating, raiding, “warfare”For more detailed explanation of this study, here are my actual lecture notes:
Leaders then proposed a series of competitive interactions which led to 3 changes between groups and within groups
within-group solidarity – loyalty to own group increased, put aside internal strife to beat enemy
negative stereotyping of other group –other group as out-group, own group as in-group; engaged in stereotyping of other group
Hostile between-group interactions – called names, loss of good sportsmanship, accusations of cheating, raiding, “warfare”
44. Robbers Cave Overcoming the strong we/they effect
establishment of superordinate goals
e.g., breakdown in camp water supply
overcoming intergroup strife - research
stereotypes are diluted when people share individuating information
This idea used in the classroom – The Jigsaw Method of cooperative learning. (see pg. 514)
45. Ways to Reduce Prejudice Increase contact among members of different groups
Individuals must decide that prejudiced responses are wrong and consciously reject their own and others’ prejudiced and stereotyped thinking
Individuals must learn to recognize automatic prejudicial reactions and deliberately replace them with nonprejudiced responses that are based on their personal standards