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Chapter 7. Attitudes

Chapter 7. Attitudes. Definitions. “A general and enduring positive or negative feeling toward some person, object, or issue” “an association between an object and an evaluation in memory”. . How attitudes are measured. Attitudes can be measured (Thurstone, 1928)

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Chapter 7. Attitudes

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  1. Chapter 7. Attitudes

  2. Definitions • “A general and enduring positive or negative feeling toward some person, object, or issue” • “an association between an object and an evaluation in memory” 

  3. How attitudes are measured • Attitudes can be measured (Thurstone, 1928) • “The very title of this paper may strike the reader as a paradox, for how can one measure a value which is admitted to be psychological`?...“(ibid.) • Measurement of attitudes is uni-dimensional.

  4. Self-Report • Single item measures • Likert scales (after Renis Likert, 1932) • Indicate to what extent agree with each statement about an attitude object. 1. strongly disagree 5. strongly agree

  5. Bogus Pipeline Procedure Self-report measures can be biased by social desirability. Experiment: • Participants are connected to a „lie detector“ machine. • Participants are more honest when they expect the machine will detect lies.

  6. Explicit vs. Implicit Measures • Explicit or Overt measures, such as self-report, are potentially biased • Therefore, attempt to measure the attitude with Implicit or Covert measure • Implicit or Covert measures utilize: • Behavioral measures. • Physiological reactions. • Reaction time.

  7. Behavioral measures • Would you approach a snake? (Breckler, 1984) • Distance from another person (Hazlewood & Olson, 1986)

  8. Facial EMG • Attitudes are reflected by imperceptible muscle movements in the face • Agreement is indicated by increased activity in depressor and zygomatic muscles and decreased activity in frontalis and corrugator muscles.

  9. EEG Brain wave patterns change upon presentation of a disliked stimulus after a string of liked stimuli and vice versa

  10. Reaction-Time Measures • Affective priming procedure • prime facilitates participants' response when the prime and the target are of the same valence. • IAT: Implicit Association Test

  11. Attitude formation

  12. Basis of Attitudes Tripartite view of the basis of Attitudes: • Affective reactions (emotions and feelings) • Behavioral information • Cognitive information (beliefs) An attitude can be based on one or more sources of information

  13. Affectively Based Attitudes • Learning perspective • Classicial conditioning • Operant conditioning

  14. Classical Conditioning and Affective Persuasion

  15. Classical Conditioning - Olson and Fazio (2001) • Pictures of Pokemon cartoon character paired with positive • or negative images and words, apparently at random • CS US paired with OR ‘awesome’ paired with OR ‘awful’ IAT of Pokemon and an explicit evaluation showed effects of conditioning

  16. Evidence for Instrumental Conditioning of Attitudes • Spring festival at the University of Hawaii? (Insko, 1965) • You agree that this would bring in tourist dollars? “Good!”

  17. Didn’t They Run This Ad 5 Minutes Ago? Discovered by Robert Zajonc in 1968, the mere exposure effect relies on the power of repetition. Mere Exposure Effect: the finding that the more exposure we have to a stimulus, the more apt we are to like it. • When dealing with similar products familiarity makes a huge difference

  18. Cognitive Basis for Attitudes • Attitudes based primarily on the relevant facts. • Objective merits • Most often, attitudes about utilitarian objects.

  19. Behavioral basis for attitudes • Past experience • Bem, 1972. Ss. reported the shock to be more intense if they escaped it.

  20. Evaluative-cognitive consistency • I like it, but I think it is bad. • Low consistency • Less stability • More context-dependency • Lower persuasion resistance

  21. Attitudes to Acting • College students who disapprove of cheating do not cheat on test; it is only the students who view cheating as acceptable who do cheat. • When segregation was still legal, hotel and restarant owners with racial stereotypes toward CHineses people would not serve them food or allow them to stay at their establishments. • During the 1970-s, people who felt that the energy crisis was a significant problem used less energy than those peopel who did not really believe that ther was a crisis.

  22. When do attitudes guide Behavior? • The effect of Situation • Vested Interest • E.g. Michigan drinking age low (1982). Younger students were more involved – more attitude/behavior consistency. • Time Pressure • No time for careful examination. Reliance on the existing attitudes. • Social norms • Wish somebody is dead – low attitude/behavior consistency.

  23. Qualities of the attitude • Attitude accessability

  24. Accessibility of the Attitudes • Fazio (1986) presented attitude questions. • Do you favor a woman’s right to have an abortion? Yes No DV: Response time Other measure : attitude expression

  25. Accessibility of the Attitude • Attitudes that are accessible: • Guide attention • Influence interpretation and judgment • Determine behavior • Similar to schema? • More accessible – less deliberative processing. • Accessibility influenced by: • Direct experience with attitude object • Repeated use

  26. MODE (Fazio, 1990)Motivation and Opportunity as Determinants of the attitude-behavior consistency.

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