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SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY. Before we begin…. Are you pondering what I’m pondering?. Are you pondering what I’m pondering?. Why do you obey some rules and disobey others? Are people essentially good or evil? Do we learn to be good or evil… or are we born that way?

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SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

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  1. SOCIAL PSYCHOLOGY

  2. Before we begin… Are you pondering what I’m pondering?

  3. Are you pondering what I’m pondering? • Why do you obey some rules and disobey others? • Are people essentially good or evil? Do we learn to be good or evil… or are we born that way? • Do you consider yourself a conformist? A nonconformist? • Have you ever been convinced by friends to do something you knew was wrong? To do something you knew was right?

  4. People • Solomon Asch • Robert Cialdini • John Darley • Leon Festinger • Irving Janis • Bibb Latané • Stanley Milgram • MuzaferSherif • Philip Zimbardo

  5. Key Terms • Social trap • Mirror-image perceptions • Self-fulfilling prophecies • Superordinate goals • GRIT

  6. SOCIAL THINKING • Social cognition • Why people act as they do.

  7. Attribution Theory • Internal Dispositions - Lazy (dispositional) • External situations – Sleepy (situational)

  8. Attribution Theory • FUNDAMENTAL ATTRIBUTION ERROR • Overestimating the influence of personality and underestimating the influence of situations • We attribute others’ behavior to their personality

  9. Fundamental Attribution Error • Napolitan & Goethals (1979) • Students from Williams College converse with a woman they either know is acting spontaneously, or is instructed to act warm or aloof. • Students assumed she was cold and aloof even when they were TOLD she was instructed to act that way. • CULTURAL NOTE: Western cultures are more prone to this error. Eastern cultures are more likely to interpret the situation.

  10. Fundamental Attribution Error • What about ourselves? • Self-serving bias • We recognize how the situation affected our OWN behavior

  11. Fundamental Attribution Error • So… • When explaining the behavior of OTHERS, we usually disregard the situation and leap to a conclusion about their personality traits • When explaining our OWN behavior, we explain in terms of the situation we were in more than we explain in terms of our personality traits

  12. Other Factors • Optimists are more likely to attribute good events to dispositions and bad events to situations • d • Pessimists will make dispositional attributions for bad events and situational attributions for good events

  13. Attribution

  14. Attitudes • Feelings, often influenced by our beliefs, that predispose our reactions to people, objects, and events.

  15. SOCIAL THINKING A – Affect B – Behavior C - Cognition

  16. Attitudes Affect Action • Central Route to persuasion • When people think for themselves and become involved in issues because of logic and reason. • Peripheral Route to persuasion • When people respond to things such as endorsement by people they like/respect, and often make snap judgements

  17. Compliance Techniques Foot-in-the-door Door-in-the-face Small  LargeLarge Small That’s not all Low-ball Initial offer, then throw in for free Low price  high Bait and Switch Guilt or Pressure Low price, trade up Self-explanatory Techniques of ingratiation Others • Flattery - Exchange • Agreeing with other person’s views - Build Alliances • Self-enhancement - Rational Appeal • Self-deprecation - Inspirational • Self-disclosure - Ask for Input • Authority

  18. Attitudes Affect Action *** Looking-glass effect

  19. LOOKING GLASS EFFECT Nearly all college students say that cheating is morally wrong. IQ test - stop when the bell sounds Left alone, 71 percent cheated Working in front of a mirror only 7 percent cheated. Diener, E., & Wallbom, M. (1976). Effects of self-awareness on antinormative behavior. Journal of Research in Personality, 10, 107-111.

  20. LOOKING GLASS EFFECT • People who can see their reflections eat less unhealthy food than those who can’t see themselves. • College students to try full-fat, low-fat, and fat-free cream cheese. • Participants in a room with a mirror ate less of the full-fat spread than did those with no mirror Haugen, P. (1999, May/June).Thelooking glass effect. Psychology Today, p. 24.

  21. OTHER COOL FINDINGS

  22. I’M WATCHING YOU! http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC1686213/ Bateson, Nettle & Roberts (2006)

  23. I’M WATCHING YOU! http://pss.sagepub.com/content/18/9/803.short Shariff & Norenzayan (2007)

  24. Mwahahaha

  25. LIGHTING

  26. Lighting http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/20424061 These people will donate a combined total of $14 over the next five years. Mostly by accident. None of those dim kids have their hands raised. Zhong, Bohn & Gino (2010)

  27. Another… Fill in the missing letters of these words: W_ _H SH_ _ER S_ _P

  28. Another… Fill in the missing letters of these words: W_ _H SH_ _ER S_ _P Boil the lies from your filthy bones.

  29. Another… http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/16960010 http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2008/07/05/the-lady-macbeth-effect-how-physical-cleanliness-affects-moral-cleanliness/ Time to go inconvenience some cripples… Zhong & Liljenquist (2006)

  30. Citrus http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2010/02/08/clean-smells-promote-generosity-and-fair-play-dark-rooms-and-sunglasses-promote-deceit-and-selfishness/ http://www.kellogg.northwestern.edu/faculty/galinsky/Smell%20of%20Virtue%20Psych%20Science%20in%20press.pdf Zhong & Liljenquist

  31. Citrus If only they’d had these in Nazi Germany.

  32. LARGE TREES http://eab.sagepub.com/content/44/1/3.short http://content.usatoday.com/communities/greenhouse/post/2010/11/city-trees-fight-crime/1#.UEnKpu3HLQU Donovan & Prestemon (2012)

  33. LARGE TREES People don’t know we still have a forestry service. Nothing like big trees to deter street crime…

  34. Signs of other miscreants

  35. Signs of other miscreants http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/19023045 http://blogs.discovermagazine.com/notrocketscience/2011/08/10/the-spread-of-disorder-a-repost-in-wake-of-londons-riot-cleanup/ Keizer, Lindenberg, & Steg (2008)

  36. BUT… • Social Pressures can reduce the attitude-behavior connection. • Approval for a war by the Democratic leaders, despite their own private reservations, because of a general demand by the public.

  37. Actions Affect Attitudes • People will also come to believe an idea they have supported • Foot-in-the-Door • Korean War Prisoners • Chinese war camps • Captors secured prisoners’ participation in various activities

  38. Actions Affect Attitudes • People will also come to believe in an idea that they have acted upon • Role Playing • Stanford Prison Experiment

  39. Stanford Prison Experiment • Zimbardo (1972) • Random assignment: guards or prisoners • Guards became cruel and degraded prisoners • Prisoners broke down, rebelled, or resigned to their fate • Study was called off after 6 days “No man, for any considerable period, can wear one face to himself and another to the multitude without finally getting bewildered as to which may be true.” - Nathaniel Hawthorne http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FkmQZjZSjk4&feature=related

  40. Cognitive Dissonanceleonfestinger • When we become aware that our actions and attitudes don’t coincide, we experience tension. • Tension = cognitive dissonance. • We seek to REDUCE that tension.

  41. Cognitive Dissonanceleonfestinger

  42. Cognitive Dissonance- leonfestinger • We often bring our attitudes into line with our actions • The less coerced and more responsible we feel for an action, the more dissonance and tension we feel.

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