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Causal Attribution and Social Judgment. Outline. Causal Attribution—how we make sense of other peoples’ behaviour Self-knowledge—how we make sense of who we are and our own behaviour Social Judgment—strategies, errors and biases in social decision making.
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Outline • Causal Attribution—how we make sense of other peoples’ behaviour • Self-knowledge—how we make sense of who we are and our own behaviour • Social Judgment—strategies, errors and biases in social decision making
Optimistic attributional style predicts future physical health Even controlling for earlier health
Why Attribution Matters Attribution – Explanatory style – internal/external stable/unstable global/specific
Why Attribution Matters Optmistic attributional style Negative events are viewed as External, unstable, specific Pessimistic attributional style Negative events are viewed as Internal, stable, global
Attributional Biases • Fundamental attribution error:overestimating internal factors and underestimating external factors when explaining other people’s behaviour • “Castro Study”
Attributional Biases • Fundamental attribution error:
Attributional Biases • Fundamental attribution error:explanations • Perceptual: • Cognitive: • Motivational: • Cultural:
Cultural differences in causal attributions Sports articles: US newspapers, more dispositional attributions Hong Kong newspapers, more situational attributions Cultural differences disappeared for editorials Lee, Hallahan, & Herzog, 1996
Cultural Differences in Perceptions of Personality Malleability (Norenzayan, Choi, & Nisbett, 2002)
Just World Beliefs(Lerner & Miller, 1978) Just-world beliefs- • “By and large, people deserve what they get in life” • “Basically, the world is a just place” • “People who do their job will rise to the top” • “People who meet with misfortune have often brought it on themselves” • Injustice in the world is a perceived threat to self • JWB allows individuals to maintain a sense of purpose and control—bad things couldn’t happen to me • Outcomes reflect personal traits – more FAE • One pernicious consequence: blaming victims
Just World Beliefs Blaming the victim—experiments by Lerner & colleagues • Participants watch another person suffer (victim) • Restore Justice Condition: Participant can help the victim • JWB Condition: participant cannot help the victim • Outcome: Participants’ evaluation of the victim • Results: RJ condition: positive evaluation of victim • JWB condition: derogation of the victim
Just World Beliefs Victim derogation is less likely Who believes in a just world?
Attributional Biases • Actor-observer effect: • Example: • Explanations: • 1) point-of-view: • 2) Knowledge of situational inconsistency for self, but not others
Attributional Biases • Self-serving bias: • Cultural differences in this tendency: • Explanation:
Self-Knowledge • How and how much do we know ourselves? • Barriers to self-knowledge • Conscious vs. unconscious self-knowledge • Strategies for self-knowledge
Escape from the Self • Our defenses stop us from knowing ourselves, esp. undesirable aspects • We escape self-awareness through
Self-Knowledge • We may have limited ability to know ourselves • Ways into self-knowledge • Introspection • Observing our own behaviour • Learning about how others see us
Introspection • Look inward to observe • 1) Feelings, thoughts, desires • 2) Reasons behind our actions • More successful with 1) then 2) • The causes behind our tendencies are not readily visible—psychological research better way to know this
Introspection--do we know the causes of our behavior? • Confabulation: studies with split-brain patients (Gazzaniga & Ledoux) • Pantyhose study (Nisbett & Wilson)
Flash images of emotion arousing object to left visual field--right hemisphere • Observe p’s reaction • Record p’s explanation • Confabulation! Language centres in Left Hemisphere
Introspection--do we know the causes of our behavior? • Confabulation: studies with split-brain patients (Gazzaniga & Ledoux) • Pantyhose study (Nisbett & Wilson) • Cognitive dissonance studies, studies of discrimination—peoples explanations of their own behaviour have little to do with observed causes
Observing our own behaviour • Self perception theory: • Visualizing a situation and observe our reactions to it
How Others See Us • Our defenses prevents us from wanting to know ourselves • But others who know us well can see through these defenses • They can also be good observers of our behaviour • Ex:
Strategies that facilitate self-knowledge • Self-acceptance • Connecting with our feelings and observing our thoughts without identifying with them • Find out how knowledgeable others see us • Visualizing our reactions to future situations • Psychological research
Heuristics in Social Judgment • Heuristic: • They usually operate outside of awareness • Helps us make decisions under uncertainty
Heuristics in Social Judgment • I have a friend: he loves art, enjoys classical music, travels a lot, and is temperamental. Is he a) French chef b) civil engineer?
Heuristics in Social Cognition • Which is a more likely killer: a) airline crash b) car accident • Which is more dangerous to your health: a) terrorism b) smoking
The statistics • By number of deaths: • Deaths due to car transportation: 40,000/year • Deaths due to airline transportation: 200/year • By number of passengers • Car: 1/6800 deaths per year • Airline: 1/1.6 million per year • Controlling for distance covered • 10-40 times more likely to die driving than flying
The statistics • But media coverage is incredibly skewed: • 0.02 cancer stories/1000 cancer deaths • 1.7 murder stories/1000 homicides • 2.3 AIDS stories/1000 AIDS deaths • 138 plane crash stories/1000 airplane deaths
Social Cognition: Conclusions • Naïve realism: belief that one’s own perspective reflects objective reality, whereas others are biased • People are not objective observers of the social world; they construe their world in particular ways–heuristics and self-protective defenses to make sense of the social world