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Trying to make sense of others. Social cognition is the study of how people understand and make sense of others and themselves. (Feldman, 2001)Social perception is the process of trying to understand other people's (and sometimes our own) intentions, traits, motives, and behaviours.. Social percep
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1. SOCIAL COGNITION
2. Trying to make sense of others Social cognition is the study of how people understand and make sense of others and themselves. (Feldman, 2001)
Social perception is the process of trying to understand other peoples (and sometimes our own) intentions, traits, motives, and behaviours.
3. Social perception is a two way process, with a perceiver formulating impressions of a target, and a target busy managing the perceptual cues he or she displays.
Social perception is thus a dynamic and reciprocal process.
4. What is perception? Perception has to do with the taking in and making sense of a vast array of sensory information. The perceptive process converts sensations into mental representation of the experience.
SO WHAT ARE WE SAYING?
Just as we perceive things about the physical world such as color, sounds and objects, so too do we perceive things about our social world (ie) people and social situations. The perception of people is different from inanimate objects because we can manage the impression that a person makes of us.
5. Three approaches to understanding social perception Person perception approach
Schema approach
Attribution approach
6. Person perception approaches These approaches consider the ways we assess and combine the traits of persons to form overall impressions.
They are based on the view that people are thoughtful and fairly rational perceivers of others, who are able to pull together peoples traits to form their on impression
7. Impression formation and management Impression formation- refers to formulating tentative conceptions about others emotions, motivations and personalities by gathering and interpreting situational and behavioural cues.
Impression management/or self presentation- refers to influencing other peoples social perceptions by selectively revealing personal information to them; it includes both deliberate and unintentional attempts to establish, maintain or refine the impression others have.
8. Six General Principles minimal information
salience
context
categorization
enduring cognitive structures
needs and goals
9. What Information Do We Use? People often decide very quickly what others are like based on minimal information.
10. What Information Do We Use? Roles
People tend to think of others within a role context first and only then according to personality traits
11. What Information Do We Use? Person perception explores the idea that we use peoples outward appearance and behaviour to draw inferences
Physical appearance
Nonverbal behaviour
12. What Information Do We Use? Physical Cues
Appearance and behavior are key determinants of our first impressions
although we are taught that appearance can be deceiving, we act as though we have never heard that advice
13. What Information Do We Use? Nonverbal Communication
Social perception also involves trying to figure out or decode what other peoples nonverbal behaviour represents. We use nonverbal cues especially to asses someones emotional state or their personal motivation.
Even small amounts of nonverbal behavior can convey substantial information
Channels
Visible
Facial expressions, gestures, posture, appearance
Paralinguistic
Pitch, amplitude, rate, voice quality of speech
14. Nonverbal Communication The Visible Channel
Distance
Indicates friendliness
Gestures
Vary by culture
Eye Contact
Indicates interest (friendship or threat)
Facial Expressions
15. Nonverbal Communication Paralanguage
Paralanguage involves variations in speech other than verbal content
A simple statement can mean entirely different things depending on emphasis and inflection
16. Nonverbal Communication The more channels of communication people have access to, the more accurate they are in judging others emotions.
However, the verbal channel tends to be the most influential.
17. Nonverbal Communication Are people successful or unsuccessful liars?
True emotions tend to leak out through nonverbal channels
Some nonverbal channels leak more than others because they are less controllable
The body is more likely than the face to reveal deception
18. Nonverbal Communication People are more likely to perceive a deceptive message as less truthful, but on the whole, people are not wonderful lie-detectors
The Giveaways
Liars blink more, hesitate more, make more speech errors, speak in higher-pitched voices, and have more dilated pupils
19. Nonverbal Communication People use nonverbal behaviors to convey intended impressions
Display rules are cultural norms regarding how one conveys emotion to others
20. What Information Do We Use? Salience
People pay attention to the figure rather than to the ground or setting
The most salient cues are used most heavily
Brightness, noisiness, motion, and novelty
21. What Information Do We Use? Effects of Salience
Draws attention
Influences perceptions of causality
Produces evaluatively extreme judgments
Produce more consistency of judgment
22. What Information Do We Use? We move very quickly from observable information (appearance & behavior) to personality trait inferences
Traits are more economical to remember
Trait inferences occur automatically
We use implicit personality theories to infer traits from other traits
23. What Information Do We Use? Solomon Asch (1964)- stated that we can form immediate perceptions or impressions of persons when we encounter them. We do not spend much cognitive energy or time forming this first impression and we tend to maintain it after we receive additional information.
(Do first impressions really last????)
Aschs ideas about impression was that the whole is more than the sum of its parts. In other words we perceive things in combination rather than perceive each individual part in isolation. This theory was referred to as Implicit Personality theory.
24. What Information Do We Use? Which Traits?
We tend to evaluate others along two dimensions:
Competence
Interpersonal qualities
25. Cognitive math- 1+ 1 doesnt always equal 2 Asch formulated a hypothesis which stated that one particular trait, which he called a central trait, could be responsible for impression formed.
Central traits are characteristics that serve to organize an impression of another person and provide a framework for interpreting other information about that person even when other traits are stated.
26. Order effect in person perception: The first shall be the last? Does it matter what you hear first about a person?
1. intelligent, hardworking, impulsive, critical, stubborn, and envious
2.envious, stubborn, critical, impulsive, hardworking, and intelligent
27. Asch (1946) people who hear the list with the more positive attributes first form a more positive impression than those who hear it in the reverse order.
In subsequent studies done two concepts were coined.
Primacy effect- this occurs when early information has a stronger impact than later information.
Recency Effect- in which later information is given more weight than earlier information. This especially occurs if there is a large time gap between presentation of information and whether we are generally attentive to incoming information or not. This effect occasionally occur.
N.B. Please read up on Hypotheses put forward to explain the primacy and recency effect.
28. What Information Do We Use? Categorization
We automatically perceive stimuli as part of a group or category
29. What Information Do We Use? Consequences of Categorization
leads to category-based social judgments (stereotyping)
speeds processing time
can lead to errors
30. What Information Do We Use? The Continuum Model of Impression Formation
Impressions range from stereotypic, category-based impressions to individuated impressions (dual processing)
31. What Information Do We Use? Dual Processing
We generally tend to use category-based inference because it is easy and quick
We use individuated information when
we are motivated to be accurate
the person doesnt fit our categories
we have other reasons for wanting to know the person better
32. What Information Do We Use? Context Effects
Contrast biases judgments away from the context (sees them as different)
Assimilation biases judgments in the same direction as the context (sees them as similar)
33. What Information Do We Use? Context Effects
Assimilation occurs more when people are using category-based processing
Contrast occurs more when people are using individuated information
34. Integrating Impressions We move quickly from observations of appearance and behavior to inferences about personality
35. Integrating Impressions Negativity Effect
Negative traits tend to affect impressions more than positive ones (especially negative moral traits)
Positivity Bias
Overall we tend to evaluate others positively
36. Integrating Impressions We infer what others are like from what emotions they express
37. Integrating Impressions The Averaging Principle
averaging is used to combine separate pieces of information about people, some of which are positive and others of which are negative
A weighted averaging model, in which traits are weighted by importance, provides the best predictions
38. Integrating Impressions Our perceptions of others personal qualities undergoes a shift of meaning depending on context
39. Integrating Impressions People tend to form evaluatively consistent impressions of others (halo effect)
40. Integrating Impressions Resolving Inconsistencies
Information that is inconsistent with other impressions may be remembered especially well
However, being cognitively busy prevents us from thinking about inconsistent information so we forget it
We may differentiate incongruent information by context
Sometimes we just recognize incongruities without integrating them
41. Integrating Impressions Schemas are organized, structured sets of cognitions including knowledge about the object, relationships among its attributes, and specific examples
42. Integrating Impressions Schemas
Person schemas
Role schemas
Group schemas (stereotypes)
43. Integrating Impressions Schemas
Prototypes are the abstract ideal of a schema
Exemplars are particular instances of a category
44. Integrating Impressions Schemas
When we have little information about another, we use prototypes to make inferences about them
When we have a little more information, we use both exemplars and prototypes
When we have a great deal of information, we use more well-developed schemas as well as exemplars
45. Motivated Person Perception Our goals and feelings about other people influence the information we gather about them
46. Motivated Person Perception Need for accuracy about another leads to more systematic processing
We remember more about another when we expect to interact with him or her
47. Motivated Person Perception Communicating information about another leads to more evaluatively consistent impressions
48. Motivated Person Perception When we are preoccupied we are more likely to make trait inferences
49. Motivated Person Perception Factors influencing our reactions to others
Others similarity to self
Our prior experiences
Our prior expectations
Our beliefs about traits as stable or malleable
Our own emotional state or mood
50. Schema approach
51. The primary way we simplify and organize impressions of others is through schemas.
Schemas are organized bodies of information stored in memory.
This information assists us in understanding the ways the social world operates, and enables us to categorize and interpret new information related to the schema.
52. Social categorization process This is a classification of people into groups based on common attributes. We tend to form impressions through stereotypes. These are fixed ways of thinking about people that puts them into categories.
53. Value of schemas
They influence the ways we understand and interpret information about the social world.
They help determine how we remember material to which we have been exposed previously.
They influence the inferences we draw regarding incomplete information.
54. ATTRIBUTION APPROACH
55. Attribution refers to the process through which we seek to identify the causes of others behaviour, as a way to gain knowledge of their stable traits and dispositions.
It is also about explaining the causes of our own behaviour .
56. Historical background- Fritz Heider 1944, 1958 His work The Psychology of Interpersonal Relations was regarded as the origin of attribution theory in social psychology.
According to Heider, social perception is motivated by the need and desire to see the world in an orderly and predictable manner.
He believed that behaviour is a joint product of the actors enduring traits and external forces. The fundamental distinction was between dispositional and situational causes.
57. Dispositional vs. Situational DISPOSITIONAL- These are internal traits , motives, moods, aptitude of the actor.
Dispositional causes- reasons for behaviour that rests on the personality traits and characteristics of the individual carrying out the behaviour.
SITUATIONAL- These are external characteristics of the situation.
Situational causes- reasons for behaviour that rest on the demands and constraints of a given social setting.
58. THEORIES OF ATTRIBUTION Correspondent Inference Theory CI
Covariation Model
59. Correspondent Inference Theory CI Edward Jones and Keith Davis (1965) correspondents inferences are akin to internal attributions in Heiders framework.
The theory covers the more general case of how we use a persons behaviour to make inferences about enduring personality traits and motivations. (Feldman, 2001 pg. 51)
It examines observers notions of how closely an overt behaviour or action represents a specific underlying intention,trait or disposition. (pg. 52).
60. According to CI theory, what determines the attributions we make?
61. The degree of choice the actor was perceived to have.
If the actor is perceived as having no choice, then the act doesn't reveal his or her disposition.
62. 2. Whether the behaviour is expected or typical in the situation.
If the behaviour is atypical or unexpected in the situation, then it is more likely to reveal something about the actors disposition.
63. 3. Whether the behaviour is socially desirable
Social desirability is the degree to which the society
encourages and values the behaviour.
If the behaviour is socially desirable it is also less revealing of the actors disposition (unless it is unusually desirable).
64. 4. The number of unique consequences or noncommon effects associated with the act
According to Jones and Davis we learn most from
behaviours of others that lead to unique or noncommon
effects.
The theory assumes that any behaviour leads to
a particular set of consequences.
However, the behaviour that is most helpful in forming correspondent inferences are those that result in consequences that other, alternative behaviours would not have produced. (Feldman, 2001 pg. 52)
65. Covariation Model Kelly (1967) defines a cause as that condition which is present when the effect is present and which is absent when the effect is absent.
Kelley, says that people try to see if a particular cause and a particular effect go together across situations.
This theory focuses on three sources of information
66. Covariation Model Consistency
Is the persons response consistent over time?
Consensus
Do other people have similar responses?
Distinctiveness
Does the person respond similarly to other similar stimuli?
67. Consensus: the extent to which others react to some stimulus or event in the same manner as the person under consideration.
Do other people laugh at Oliver the comedian?
YES- high consensus
NO- low consensus
Consensus is high when actions generalize across other actors with situation held constant.
68. Distinctiveness: the extent to which an individual responds in a similar manner to different stimuli or event.
Do you laugh at other comedians and not just Oliver?
YES- low distinctiveness
No- high distinctiveness
Distinctiveness is high when action fails to generalize across situations with actor held constant
69. Consistency: the extent to which an individual responds to a given stimulus or situation in the same way on different occasions.
Do you laugh at Oliver the comedian on all other occasions?
YES- high consistency
NO- low consistency
70. Link between the sources and the fundamental distinctions When consensus and distinctiveness are low and consistency is high, we attribute behaviour to internal causes.
When consensus and consistency and distinctiveness are all high, we attribute behaviour to external causes
When consensus is low, but consistency and distinctiveness are high, we attribute behaviour to both situational and dispositional causes.
71. Covariation Model
72. Biases in Attribution The fundamental attribution error
Self- serving bias
The actor- observer effect
73. The fundamental attribution error The tendency to attribute behaviour to enduring dispositions, such as attitudes or personality traits
This refers to the fact that whenever people are making attributions about an action, they tend to over-emphasize dispositional factors about the actor, and under-emphasize situational factors.
An example is attributing a friend's recent car accident to the fact that the friend is a poor driver rather than to the fact that another car just happened to pull out in front of her. The former would be a dispositional attribution; the latter a situational attribution.
74. Self- serving bias It is sometimes called a "defensive attribution"
There is a tendency to attribute our successes to internal or dispositional factors but to attribute our failures to external or situational factors beyond our control.
This bias accounts for the consistent human tendency to take credit for success but to deny responsibility for failure
Example: doing well on an exam because of innate brilliance or studying hard versus failing an exam because it was unfair or tricky, lecturer didnt set it fair; winning a game because of athletic prowess versus losing a game because "the referees were blind".
75. The actor- observer effect The tendency to attribute our own behavior mainly to situational causes but the behavior of others mainly to internal (dispositional) causes.
Example: If you feel shy in a tutorial, you are more likely to attribute this to situational factors (the class is too big, the room is too open, ect.) than you do for other students (that how she/he is. She was born that way. Shes just stupid and shes always acting shy)