INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES: PERCEPTION
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Transcript INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES: PERCEPTION
INDIVIDUAL DIFFERENCES:
PERCEPTION
THE ORGANIZATION’S ENVIRONMENT
The Individual
•Skills & Abilities
•Perception
•Personality
•Attitudes
•Values
Interpersonal
Influence and
Group Behavior
Group
behavior
and work teams
Intergroup
conflict and
negotiations
Organizational
power and
politics
Communication
INDIVIDUAL
BEHAVIOR IN THE
ORGANIZATION
Organizational
Processes
Leadership
Communications
Decision
making
Reward System
Job Design
First law of human behavior:
“People are different. What one person
considers a golden opportunity another
considers a threat.”
Caveat
Perception
Perception is the process by which individuals
make sense of their world.
Individuals organize and interpret information
from their environments using perceptual
filters
personality, psychology, experience, preferences,
beliefs-based differences
Objective vs. perceived realities
Perception
People perceive the world uniquely
Differences in perceptions can cause
problems
Communication
Conflict
Motivation
Judgment
Decision Making
Object Perception
Proximity – things close together are seen as belonging
together.
Object Perception
Figure-Ground:
The figure and the
background “switch”
Social Perception
How we gather information about the
social world--about peoples’ behavior,
moods, motives, and traits
Similar to object perception, but
People are more dynamic than objects
We’re trying to figure out intentions,
motives, and causes of behavior
Attribution
Why did they do that?
internal causes
traits
skills
abilities
external causes
situational constraints
4 attributions for the cause
of performance
Stable
Internal
External
Unstable
How do we determine cause?
(Kelley)
Consensus - how do others behave
Consistency - this person on other
occasions
Distinctiveness - this person in other
situations
Errors/Biases
in Social Perception
Selective perception
notice stimuli which are salient due to our
interests, background, experiences
Closure
tendency to fill in the gaps when
information is missing
Assume what we don’t know is consistent
with what we do know
Errors/Biases
in Social Perception
Halo Effects
Contrast
Stereotyping
Impression on one dimension affects impression of
unrelated dimension
A person has beliefs about a class of stimulus
objects and generalizes those beliefs to
encounters with members of that class of objects.
Primacy/Recency effects
Disproportionately high weight is given to the
first/last information obtained about a stimulus
First Impressions
Influences what subsequent information we notice
and how it is interpreted
“Fill-in” information consistent with first impression
Anchoring
Confirmation Bias
Failure to adjust for subsequent information
Seek out information & perceive stimuli in ways that confirm
expectations
Discount contradictory information
Self fulfilling prophecy (2-way)
Recency—availability bias
Errors/Biases
in Social Perception
Actor-observer difference (aka “the
fundamental attribution error”)
Actors attribute their behavior to external
causes
Observer attribute actors’ behavior to
internal cause
Errors/Biases
in Social Perception
Fundamental Attribution Error
The tendency to attribute others' bad
performance to internal causes &
Attribute their good performance to
external causes
Errors/Biases
in Social Perception
Self-serving bias
attribute successes to ourselves - internal
attribute failures to the environment – external
Performance appraisal and
errors in social perception
Supervisor:
Subordinate:
Perception Implications
Guard against specific biases
Stereotypes
Be aware that stereotyping can occur with very
little information, remain open to new information
Recognize that stereotypes rarely apply to a
specific individual
Fundamental attribution error?
Primacy/recency?
Halo?
Confirmation?
Perception Implications