social proof - My Teacher Pages
Download
Report
Transcript social proof - My Teacher Pages
Social Psychology
Social
Psychology looks at both intrapersonal (attitudes,
persuasion, social cognition, cognitive dissonance) and
interpersonal (relations with others, group dynamics, social
influence, interpersonal attraction) phenomena
Discovering Psychology - The Power of the Situation
Attribution Process and Theory
How we attach meaning to other’s
behavior, or our own, is called
attribution
Attribution theory (Fritz Heider)
People naturally see cause and
effect relationships and seek to
explain behavior
Attribution Process and Theory
Attribution theory (Fritz Heider)
Dispositional versus situational attribution
Fundamental attribution error (others)
Self-serving bias (also defensive attribution) self only
Actor-observer effect
Why were you late for class? Why was Jimmy late for class?
Why did you fail the Psych test? Jimmy?
Just-world hypothesis
Cognitive Dissonance
Cognitive
dissonance The tension
caused by holding two contradictory
ideas
simultaneously.
Includes
attitudes and beliefs, and actions
The theory of cognitive dissonance
proposes that people seek to reduce
dissonance by changing their attitudes,
beliefs, or behaviors, or by justifying or
rationalizing their attitudes, beliefs, and
behaviors in order to seek cognitive
consistency (Festinger)
Cognitive Dissonance: Attitudes and Actions
According to Leon Festinger we seek cognitive consistency by
bringing our attitudes closer to our actions called theory of cognitive
dissonance or balance theory
Tedious task experiment $$ (Festinger)
Festinger CD
A(ttitude)-B(ehavior) Problem – To what extent do behaviors affect
attitudes? Can one predict the other?
Cognitive Dissonance and Behavior
Role playing Subjects in a role often begin to “become” the
role. Behavior affects attitudes and reduces dissonance (e.g.
role playing – “I’m a teacher, dad, scholar…”)
Zimbardo prison pathology experiments
Foot-in-the-door theory The tendency for people who agree to
a small request to comply later with a larger one (cheating,
lying, drug use, torture…it’s a slippery slope!). Reduces initial
dissonance. Milgram experiment
Effort justification the tendency to find something more
attractive if you have to work hard to achieve it, Examples?
Role Playing and Zimbardo
• Zimbardo prison experiments
• Role playing and deindividuation and
situational influences
•ZimbardoPE
•Zimbardo DN
•The Stanford Prison Experiment
Deindividuation
Deindividuation into a group results
in a loss of individual identity and a
gaining of the social identity of the
group. Examples?
Anonymity
Diffused responsibility
Group size
The Lucifer Effect: Abu Ghraib
Daily Show Zimbardo
Social Influence and Conformity &
Obedience
Conformity influences the maintenance
of social norms and allows society to
function smoothly
Behavior is contagious, modeled by one
followed by another. We follow behavior of
others to conform
Other behaviors may be an expression
of
compliance
authority
(obedience)
Conformity
toward
Obedience
Social Conformity (Asch)
Asch’s conformity experiments
Asch study
What are the factors which affect
degree of conformity?
Normative social influence v.
Informational social influence
Reasons for Conformity
Normative Social Influence Results from a person’s desire to gain
approval or avoid rejection. Public compliance, but doubt. Number,
strength and immediacy. Asch Conformity Studies
Two polar bears are sitting in a bathtub. The first one says, "Pass the
soap". The second one says, "No soap, radio!" (anti-humor – false
and negative understanding)
ConformityCC
Reasons for Conformity
Informational Social Influence Look
to group
judgments
to
make
accurate
Also called social proof occurs
most often when
The situation is ambiguous.
There is a crisis. We have no
time to think and experiment.
A decision is required now!
Other Types of Conformity Phenomena
Chameleon effect
Mood linkage (emotional or
social contagion)
Suggestibility
Obedience to Authority
The Milgram Experiments
Milgram Video
The Power of the
Situation
Social Obedience (Milgram)
Results and Explanations for Milgram’s Obedience to Authority
experiments
Socialization (normative influence)
Foot in the door phenomenon
Perception of legitimate authority
Diffusion of responsibility
Inaccessibility of values
Lack of social comparison
Physical and psychological buffers (proximity, depersonalization)
Ethicality of the experiment?
Social Identity Theory and Prejudice
Social Identity Theory
Identity is formed through the groups to
which we belong. We are motivated to improve the image and
status of our own group in comparison with others (Tajfel)
Categorizing people (including oneself) into ingroups or outgroups
affects perceptions, attitudes, and behavior
We join any group readily and go out of our way to make our own
group look better than others (source of prejudice and
discrimination) Tajfel and Social Identity Theory
Social Identity Theory and Prejudice
Group Dynamics and Prejudice
Sherif’s Robbers Cave experiment (1961)
Realistic Conflict Theory Limited resources lead to conflict
between groups and result in prejudice, discrimination and
stereotypes within a society
In Group homogeneity and Out Group bias (basis of
stereotype and prejudice). Stages: 1) In Group formation 2)
friction and competition and 3) integration
Superordinate goals
Contact hypothesis
GRIT
PsyBlog: War, Peace and the Role of Power in Sherif's
Robbers Cave Experiment
Prejudice and Discrimination
Prejudice is an unjustifiable (usually negative) attitude toward a
group and its members. Prejudice underlies the behavior of
discrimination
Components of Prejudice
1.
2.
3.
Beliefs (stereotypes)
Emotions (hostility, envy, fear)
Predisposition to act (to discriminate)
Social, Emotional and Cognitive Roots
of Prejudice
Social inequality, social division
and emotional outgroup and
ingroup bias
An outlet for blame, anger and
resentment Scapegoat Theory
Just world phenomenon
Unconscious Prejudice
Prejudice works at the conscious and [even more at] the
unconscious level. Prejudice is more a knee-jerk response than a
conscious decision which then results in behavior (discrimination)
Implicit Association Test
Discrimination – A Class Divided
Group Dynamics
How does the presence of others
influence individual behavior?
Social loafing
Social facilitation
Group polarization
(incestuous amplification and
risky shift) not groupthink
Deindividuation
Groupthink (rationalized
conformity) and mindguard
Groupthink and Mindguard
Groupthink When the norms for
conforming in a homogeneous
group become so strong, and
members are highly concerned
about maintaining unanimity, that
they fail to critically evaluate their
options and consequently make
a poor decision
Examples...Iraq invasion, Bay of
Pigs, Challenger disaster…
Role of mindguard
Bystander Effect
Bystander
intervention
v.
bystander
apathy/effect
(Kitty
Genovese)
First demonstrated by Darley and Latane (1968) Participants are
assigned to alone or group condition (comprised of
confederates). A crisis situation is staged; a person getting
injured, a person having a seizure...How do participants react?
Consistent Results: The presence of others inhibits helping…
Diffusion of responsibility/social loafing
Pluralistic ignorance
Bystander intervention
The Psychology of Helping
Altruistic and Prosocial behavior
Social norms theory States that much of people’s behavior is
influenced by their perception of how other members of their
social group behave
Social
exchange theory An economic-social theory that
assumes human relationships are based on choice and costbenefit analyses
Social benefits
If one partner's costs begin to outweigh his or her benefits, that
person may leave the relationship, especially if there are good
alternatives available
Theory of Social Comparison
Theory
of Social Comparison
(Festinger) Humans gain information
about themselves, and source selfesteem, by comparison to others
Upward
social
comparison
Individuals compare themselves
to others who are “socially better”
to view self more positively
Downward social comparison A
defensive tendency to evaluate
oneself in comparison with others
whose troubles are more serious
than one's own
Persuasion and the Elaboration
Likelihood Model
Persuasion can be divided into two
separate processes based on the
"likelihood of cognitive elaborations,"
that is, whether people think critically
about the content of a message, or
respond to superficial aspects of the
message and other immediate cues
Central and
persuasion
peripheral
routes
to
The Psychology of Aggression
Bio-psychosocial model
Biological Sources/Causes (brain, hormones, genetics,
evolutionary - instinct theory)
Psychological sources
Social scripts
Observational learning and reinforcements
Frustration-aggression hypothesis
Psychology of Attraction
Factors affecting attraction
Proximity/propinquity – mere exposure effect
Primacy (first impressions)
Physical attractiveness (facial matching)
Similarity
Complementarity (not dissimilarity)
Reward theory of attraction/social exchange
Intimacy
Theories of interpersonal attraction – reinforcement, equity and
cognitive consistency (balance)
Passionate v. companionate love (Sternberg’s triarchic
includes?)