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Emotions as Foundations for Social Behavior

Emotions as Foundations for Social Behavior. Emotions as social signals facial expressions universal serve as signals to influence behavior the happy smile see often when socially engaged not as often when not socially engaged Emotional contagion spread of mood from one person to another

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Emotions as Foundations for Social Behavior

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  1. Emotions as Foundations for Social Behavior • Emotions as social signals • facial expressions • universal • serve as signals to influence behavior • the happy smile • see often when socially engaged • not as often when not socially engaged • Emotional contagion • spread of mood from one person to another • group laughter & group playfulness

  2. Self-Conscious Emotions • Emotions linked to thoughts about the self or one’s own actions • pride, guilt, shame, embarrassment • Guilt as a motivator of relationship repair • focuses attention on others’ feelings • Shame as a motivator of social withdrawal • focuses attention on real or imagined flaw in ourselves

  3. Self-Conscious Emotions • Embarrassment • inadvertent violation of social norm • receipt of unexpected or undesired attention • function is communicative value • Pride • directly opposite to shame • attention focused on own beauty and successes • increases self-esteem • motivates us to promote social acceptance

  4. Social Pressure • Set of psychological forces exerted on an individual by other people or by the individual’s beliefs about other people

  5. The life space Force 3 Person Force 1 Goal 1 Goal 2 Force 4 Force 2 Lewin’s Field Theory • Field of forces that push or pull us in certain directions • Some internal • wishes/desires • Some external • social pressure

  6. Latane’s Social Impact Theory • Want to identify factors that increase/decrease social pressure • Wish to predict the impact of social pressure at any given time • number of sources • strength of a source • immediacy of a source

  7. Impression Management • How we present ourselves to others • tend to try to look better than we really are • want to look good, modest, sincere – we are intuitive politicians • we also tend to engage in more impression management with new acquaintances than with old friends

  8. Self-Monitoring • Attention paid to the impressions being made, then fine tuning the performance • high self monitors • watch themselves vigilantly • constantly modify behavior • low self monitors • less vigilant • more consistent from audience to audience • Differences between cultures

  9. Facilitating/Interfering Effects of an Audience • Do we do better in groups or alone? • Social facilitation • enhancing effect of an audience on task performance • occurs with well-learned tasks • Social interference (social inhibition) • decline in performance when observers are present • occurs with new or difficult tasks

  10. Presence of others Increased drive or arousal Improved performance of dominant responses (social facilitation) Worsened performance of nondominant responses (social Interference) Zajonc’s Theory • Linked social interference and facilitation to arousal level • High arousal improves simple or well-learned tasks • High arousal worsens complex or poorly-learned task

  11. Deindividuation • Social loafing • when behavior is not monitored, performance goes down • e.g., group projects • Deindividuation • sense of reduced accountability and shifted attention away from the self that occurs in groups • responsible for riots, lynchings, gang rapes, and other group violence

  12. Following Others’ Examples – Conformity • Adopting attitudes or behaviors of others because of pressure to do so • the pressure can be real or imagined • 2 general reasons for conformity • informational influence • other people can provide useful and crucial information • normative influence • desire to be accepted as part of a group leads to that group having an influence

  13. Asch’s Experiments on Conformity • When? • 1951 • Previous research had shown • people will conform to others’ judgments more often when the evidence is ambiguous • Asch set out to prove that people will not conform when evidence is clear-cut or unambiguous • his question - will people still conform when group is clearly wrong?

  14. 1 3 2 Standard lines Comparison lines Asch’s Experiments on Conformity • All but 1 in group was confederate • Seating was rigged • Asked to rate which line matched a “standard” line • Confederates were instructed to pick the wrong line 12/18 times

  15. Asch’s Experiments on Conformity • Results • Asch found that 75% participants conformed to at least one wrong choice • subjects gave wrong answer (conformed) on 37% of the critical trials • Why did they conform to clearly wrong choices? • informational influence? • subjects reported having doubted their own perceptual abilities which led to their conformance – didn’t report seeing the lines the way the confederates had

  16. Asch’s Experiments on conformity • Variations to test informational influence hypothesis • had subject come late • confederates voted out loud, but subjects wrote their vote down • Results • conformity dropped significantly • Suggests that the original subjects conformed due to normative influences, not informational

  17. Effects of a Nonconformist • If everyone agrees, you are less likely to disagree • If one person disagrees, even if they give the wrong answer, you are more likely to express your nonconforming view • Asch tested this hypothesis • one confederate gave different answer from others • conformity dropped significantly

  18. Summary • Emotions & Social behavior • emotions are social signals & regulators of behavior • self-conscious emotions • Social Pressure • Lewin’s Field Theory • Latane’s Social Impact Theory

  19. Summary • Impression Management • how we present ourselves to others • self-monitoring • Audience Effects • facilitating vs. inhibiting • Conformity • Asch’s experiments • effects of nonconformists

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