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Chapter 7 - Attitudes, Beliefs, and Consistency

Chapter 7 - Attitudes, Beliefs, and Consistency. What Are Attitudes and Why Do People Have Them? How Attitudes Are Formed? Consistency Do Attitudes Really Predict Behavior? Beliefs and Believing. Attitudes and Beliefs. Attitudes Global evaluations toward some object or issue Beliefs

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Chapter 7 - Attitudes, Beliefs, and Consistency

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  1. Chapter 7 - Attitudes, Beliefs, and Consistency • What Are Attitudes and Why Do People Have Them? • How Attitudes Are Formed? • Consistency • Do Attitudes Really Predict Behavior? • Beliefs and Believing

  2. Attitudes and Beliefs • Attitudes • Global evaluations toward some object or issue • Beliefs • Information about something; facts or opinions

  3. Attitude • Attitude = one's evaluative orientation toward a person, thing, idea, etc. • Do you like Shredded Wheat? • Do you prefer lecture course or seminars? • What's your favorite Friday evening activity? • Is Seinfeld funny?

  4. Three Parts of Attitudes • Cognitive • Our knowledge of the attitude target • Affective • Our feelings or beliefs toward the attitude target • Behavioral • Our intention to act toward the attitude target

  5. Dual Attitudes • Different evaluations of the same target • Implicit attitude • Automatic evaluative response • Explicit attitude • Conscious evaluative response

  6. Dual Attitudes • Some attitudes are not shared with others • Stigma • We may not be aware of all our own attitudes • We may unconsciously dislike something we consciously like.

  7. Measuring Attitudes • Self-Report Measures • Open Ended Scales • Likert Scales • Issues with Self-Report • Reliability / Validity • Assumes you know your attitudes • Ambivalent Attitudes • Self-Report Biases

  8. Non-Verbal Measures • Behavioral Measures – Overt behavior to infer attitude • Physiological Measures – Arousal and muscle action • Implicit Attitudes – Reaction time

  9. Implicit Association Test (IAT) • Measures implicit attitudes • Those we are unwilling or unable to report • Attitudes about stigmatized groups

  10. Why People Have Attitudes • Attitudes help us deal with complex world • Attitudes are evaluations (like or dislike) • Initial evaluations are immediate and unconscious • Attitudes are helpful in making choices • Two Functions • Object Appraisal • Value-Expressive

  11. Attitude Formation • Genetic • Affective • Cognitive • Behavioral

  12. Attitude Formation - Genetic • Genetic • Tesser (1993) believed that some attitudes are heritable. • Some possibilities: • Sensory • Body Chemistry • Intelligence

  13. Attitude Formation - Affective • Mere-exposure effect - Zajonc (1968) • Repeated exposure increases liking for an object • Exception - If you dislike something initially, repeated exposure will not change that attitude

  14. Attitude Formation - Affective • Classical Conditioning • Can form both explicit and implicit attitudes • Develop a positive attitude toward the conditioned stimulus • Helps explain prejudiced attitudes • Negative information in the media linked to social groups • Advertisers link celebrities and products

  15. Attitude Formation - Affective • Operant Conditioning • Develop a positive attitude toward something being reinforced • Social Learning • Learn attitudes acceptable through observation (Bobo Dolls)

  16. Attitude Formation - Cognitive • Evaluation of the merits of an object • Polarization - Attitudes become more extreme as we think about them • Especially true in strong initial attitude • Evaluate evidence in a biased manner • Accept evidence that confirms attitude • Accept evidence from ingroup members

  17. Attitude Formation - Behavioral • Bem’s Self-Perception Theory • At work when we don’t have a well-defined attitude • “If I said it, it must be true” • “If I ate it, I must like it” • We are making an attribution about our behavior.

  18. Consistency • Commonalities in theories about consistency • Specify conditions required for consistency and inconsistency • Assume inconsistency is unpleasant • Specify conditions required to restore consistency

  19. Balance Theory • P-O-X Theory • Person – Other Person – Attitude Object • Relationships among P-O-X • Unit relationships – Things that belong together • Sentiment relationships – Liking or Disliking (Attitudes)

  20. Balance Theory • Individuals prefer balanced to unbalanced • Jim likes Sally (P + O) • Jim is a vegetarian and dislikes eating meat (P - X); • Jim believes Sally to dislike meat (O - X). • What happens when Jim realizes Sally likes to eat meat?

  21. Balance Theory balanced (consistent) psychological states - - + + + - + - - - + + imbalanced (inconsistent) psychological states - - - - + + + + - - + +

  22. Balance Theory • When we are balance, there is not need to change. • “I don't like John. • John has a dog. • I don't like the dog either.” • When we are unbalanced, we are motivated to change • "I love my child. • She made this ashtray. • I hate the ashtray."

  23. Cognitive Dissonance Theory • Cognitive dissonance refers to unpleasant state when attitude and behavior are inconsistent • If there is an inconsistency between thoughts, you will feel an unpleasant state of arousal (i.e., cognitive dissonance) as a result. • Causes people to rationalize their behavior and bring their attitude into line with actions • Festinger & Carlson (1959)

  24. Cognitive Dissonance Theory Festinger & Carlson (1959) Stage 1 • First, participants were asked to twist wooden pegs placed in a board for 30 minutes. • Second, participants were asked to put spools of thread on to pegs and take them off again for 30 minutes.

  25. Cognitive Dissonance Theory Festinger & Carlsmith (1959) Stage 2 • Participants were told that to test the effects of motivation in this study tell the next participant that the study was enjoyable and fun. • Two experimental groups. • Group A paid $1.00 for doing the “briefing”. • Group B paid $20.00 for doing the “briefing”. • Then, after they talked to the next participant, the participants were asked how they felt about the study.

  26. Festinger & Carlsmith (1959) Results

  27. Traditional models of decision making: Operant Conditioning • Operant Conditioning suggest the bigger the reinforcer, the more likely someone is to change their Attitude. • Cognitive Dissonance theory/research shows that Attitudes are changed more when reinforcer is less. Choices should be driven by future consequences, not past expenditures

  28. Cognitive Dissonance Theory • Effort Justification • Aronson & Mills, 1959 • People seek to justify and rationalize any suffering or effort they have made

  29. Effort JustificationInitiation rites: Aronson & Mills (1959) • Three screening conditions • Control (e.g. chair, table, sad, book) • Mild (e.g. prostitute, virgin) • Extreme (obscene words--sorry, I can’t put these up!) • All participants then listen to sample tape of discussion group • Discussion is horribly boring! (pre-tested) • Dependent variable: expressed liking for the discussion group and desire to join

  30. Example You and a companion plan to go skiing at a resort. You each have paid 100 dollars for lift tickets and rental. When you arrive, the conditions are horrible—it’s cold, icy, and even the best lifts are not operating because of the wind. In addition, you both feel lousy physically and out of sorts psychologically. Your companion turns to you and says, “It’s too bad that the money is not refundable, we’d have a much better time back home, relaxing in front of the fire. But I can’t afford to waste 100 dollars.” You agree. But you also both agree that it’s unlikely that you will have a better time struggling with the bad conditions on the slopes, compared to being inside. What do you do? Stay and ski, or go home?

  31. Paid 100 dollars for tickets and equipment (decrease in net assets by $100) Give up and go home Decision? Stay and ski Staying at home feels aversive, because of the sense that you have “wasted” the 100 dollars. However, the past expenditure is irrelevant to your decision, because it is a constant in both cases. Better day at home (minus 100 dollars) Lousy day skiing (minus 100 dollars)

  32. Cognitive Dissonance Theory • While people have desire to be consistent in their own private mind, they have stronger desire to be viewed consistent by others • Self-presentation plays a role in cognitive dissonance

  33. Consistency • Drive for consistency • Rooted in our biology • Strengthened by learning and socialization • Consistency involves both automatic and conscious parts of the mind

  34. Do Attitudes Really Predict Behavior?

  35. Attacking Attitudes • Wicker (1969) argued against Allport and suggested we abandon the study of Attitudes. • Review of attitude-behavior studies (approx 50 studies) • Average correlation [r] = .30 • % of variance in behavior explained = 9% (r2) • Link between attitudes and behavior is weak. • A – B Problem • Inconsistency between attitude (A) and behavior (B)

  36. When do Attitudes predict behavior? • Predictions of behavior based on attitudes is best when • Measures of attitude are very specific • Behaviors are aggregated over time and situations (not one situation) • Attitudes are consciously prominent and influence thought regarding the choice (priming) • Attitudes are easily accessible

  37. What else influences Behavior Personality traits Ability Motivation Attitude Habit Needs Social pressure Other attitudes Behavior

  38. Examples Personality Self-monitoring (Snyder & Swann, 1976) Private self-consciousness (Scheier et al., 1978) Need for cognition (Cacioppo et al., 1986)

  39. Self-monitoring (Snyder, 1974) • Concern for social appropriateness • Sensitive to self-presentation of others • Used as guidelines for monitoring own self-presentation • Two components of self-monitoring • Interest in social information • Ability to control self-presentation

  40. Self-monitoring and attitude-behavior correlations • High self-monitors have lower attitude-behavior correlations • Their behavior is less reflective of their actual attitudes; more in line with what they think is socially appropriate

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