1 / 31

Lecture 4

Lecture 4. The Self. Outline. Introduction The Self Concept Self-concept and self-construals Sources of Self-Knowledge Self-Observation and Social Comparison Interpersonal Relations Group Membership and Social Identity Self-Presentation Self-Esteem Self-Enhancement Theories

Download Presentation

Lecture 4

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Lecture 4 The Self

  2. Outline • Introduction • The Self Concept • Self-concept and self-construals • Sources of Self-Knowledge • Self-Observation and Social Comparison • Interpersonal Relations • Group Membership and Social Identity • Self-Presentation • Self-Esteem • Self-Enhancement Theories • Self-Verification Theory

  3. Boring Worthwhile Full Discouraging Interesting Friendly Disappointing Green Round Angry Cautious Honest Agreeable Normal Burgundy Foreign Patriotic Ill Sociable Immoral Valuable Sad Active Right Exercise

  4. The Self Concept • Self-schemata are cognitive generalizations about the self, derived from past experience, that organize and the processing of self-related information contained in the individual’s social experiences. (Markus, 1977, p. 64)

  5. Functions of the Self • Organizational function • Helps us organize and interpret information • Managerial function • regulates behaviour and plans for future • Emotional function • Helps us to determine our emotional responses

  6. The Self Concept, continued • Independent self-construals • Interdependent self-construals

  7. Independent and Interdependent Self-Construals (Markus & Kitayama, 1991) Coworker Mother Coworker Mother SELF SELF Friend Neighbour Friend Neighbour Independent Interdependent

  8. Independent Separate from social context Bounded, unitary, stable Internal, private (feelings, thoughts) Life tasks: Be unique, express self, self-actualization Direct communication Self-esteem depends on ability to express self, validate internal attributes Interdependent Connected with social context Flexible, variable External, public (roles, statuses, relationships) Life tasks: belong, fit-in, engage in appropriate action, promote others’ goals Indirect communication Self esteem depends on ability to adjust, maintain harmony, restrain self Independent and Interdependent Self-Construals (Markus & Kitayama, 1991)

  9. Cousins (1989) Proportion of attributes in self-description

  10. Self-Construals and Motivation (Iyengar & Lepper, 1999) Seconds spent on anagrams during free play

  11. Sources of Self-Knowledge • Self-Observation • Self-Perception (Bem, 1967, 1972) • Intrinsic motivation and the Overjustification Effect • Social Comparison Theory

  12. Self-Perception Theory • Individuals come to “know” their own attitudes, emotions, and other internal states partially by inferring them from observations of their own overt behavior and/or the circumstances in which this behaviour occurs (Bem, 1972)

  13. Intrinsic Motivation and the Overjustification Effect • Intrinsic Motivation • Desire to perform an activity because were enjoy it. • Extrinsic Motivation • Desire to perform an activity because of external pressures or rewards • Overjustification Effect • People view their behavior as caused by compelling extrinsic reasons, and underestimate the extent to which the behaviour was caused by intrinsic reasons

  14. Sources of Self-Knowledge: Social Comparison Theory • Social Comparison (Festinger, 1954) • We have an innate drive to evaluate our opinions and abilities • If there is no objective index, then we compare ourselves with others • We generally want and accurate evaluation • We compare ourselves to similar others with regards to opinions. • We compare ourselves to similar (but slightly better) others with regards to abilities.

  15. Social Comparison Theory, continued • Wood (1989) • Self-Evalutation (self-assessment) • Accurate assessment • Compare with similar other • Self-Improvement • Learn how to improve • Compare with others in better circumstances • Self-enhancement • Enhance or protect self-esteem • Compare with others in worse circumstances

  16. Sources of Self-Knowledge: Interpersonal Relations • Direct Interpersonal Influence • Indirect Interpersonal Influence • Reflected self-appraisals • Rejected Interpersonal Influence

  17. Reflected Self-Appraisals(adapted from Schafer & Keith, 1985) .05 Wife’s Evaluation Of Husband’s Self-Esteem .46 Husband’s Perception Of Wife’s Evaluation .71 Husband’s Self-Esteem .00 Husband’s Evaluation Of Wife’s Self-Esteem Wife’s Perception Of Husband’s Evaluation .39 .77 Wife’s Self-Esteem

  18. Group Membership and Social Identity Social Identity • That part of the individual’s self-concept which derives from knowledge of his or her membership in a social group, together with the value and emotional significance associated to that membership. (Tajfel, 1972)

  19. Group Membership and Social Identity, continued Self-Categorization Theory (Turner et al., 1989) Human Social (Group) Personal

  20. Self-Presentation and Impression Management • Strategic Self Presentation • Ingratiation • Intimidation • Self-promotion • Exemplification • Supplication

  21. Self-Presentation and Self-Disclosure • Self-disclosure: The act of revealing personal information about oneself to others. • Quantity of information • Depth of information • Reciprocity

  22. Self-Esteem • Self-esteem refers to affective evaluations of one’s worth, value or importance. Synonymous with self-worth, self-regard, self-respect, self-acceptance. • Various theories have been proposed to explain how people work to maintain a stable, positive self-concept.

  23. Self-Discrepancy Theory (Higgins, 1987, 1989, 1996) • Feel distressed when our “actual” self is different from our “ideal” (the type of person we desire to be) or “ought” (the type of person we feel we should be) self, on a criterion that is important to us. • “Actual-ideal” discrepancies are associated with dejection, sadness, dissatisfaction, and depression-related emotions. • “Actual-ought” discrepancies are associated with fear, worry, tension and anxiety-related emotions.

  24. Self-Completion Theory (Gollwitzer & Wicklund, 1985) • When people experience a threat to a valued aspect of their self-concept, they become highly motivated to seek social recognition of that aspect of the self. • When an important identity has been challenged, we behave in ways to legitimate our claim to that identity.

  25. Self-Evaluation Maintenance Theory (Tesser et al., 1995) • Aspects of our self-concept can be threatened by another person’s behaviour. • Two factors are important: • The immediacy of the other person • The personal importance of the behaviour

  26. Basking in Reflected Glory (BIRGing) • We take pride in the achievements of certain people and groups, even when we had nothing to do with attaining them.

  27. Self-Enhancement and Self-Verification • Self-enhancement is the tendency to hold unrealistically positive views about ourselves • Self-verification is the tendency to seek veridical information about the self, whether positive or negative.

  28. Self-Verification Theory (Swann 1990, 1996) • We are motivated to have stable, coherent self-concepts. • Information from others (both positive and negative) that is contrary to our self-concept • threatens the stability of the self-concept. • makes it comfortable to interact with someone who doesn’t share our self-concept

  29. Self-Verification Theory, continued • When do we self-verify • In close relationships • When we are highly certain of our self-concept • Consequences of being “discovered” are high

More Related