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Lecture 3. Social Perception

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Title: Lecture 3. Social Perception


1
  • Lecture 3. Social Perception

2
  • Do attractive people have any advantages?
  • Are they treated better than less attractive?
  • Is it important to look good on an application
    photo?
  • According to investigations the answer to these
    questions is yes. We could show that people are
    perceived more positively the more attractive
    they are. 

3
Attractive female faces
4
Unattractive female faces
5
Attractive male faces
6
Unattractive male faces
7
(No Transcript)
8
  • The results are alarmingly clear. We found an
    enormously influencing attractiveness-stereotype
  • The more attractive the presented faces were, the
    more successful, content, friendly, intelligent,
    socialble, accessible, exciting, creative and
    busy the persons were estimated.
  • The opposite applies to unattractive faces The
    more unattractive the faces were the more
    negative characteristics were attributed to the
    person. 

9
Social perception
  • refers to the processes through which we use
    available information to form impressions of
    other people, to assess what they are like.
  • the study of how we form impressions of and make
    inferences about other people
  • Social perceptions can obviously be flawed - even
    skilled observers can misperceive, misjudge, and
    reach the wrong conclusions.
  • Once we form wrong impressions, they are likely
    to persist.

10
  • In a study by Rosenhan, eight pseudopatients who
    were actually research investigators gained entry
    into mental hospitals by claiming to hear voices.
    During the intake interviews, the pseudopatients
    gave true accounts of their backgrounds, life
    experiences, and present (quite ordinary)
    psychological condition. They falsified only
    their names and their complaint of hearing
    voices. Once in the psychiatric ward, they ceased
    simulating any signs of abnormality. They
    reported that the voices had stopped, talked
    normally with other patients, and made
    observations in their notebooks. Although some of
    the other patients suspected that the
    investigators were not really ill, the staff did
    not. Even upon discharge, they were still
    diagnosed as schizophrenic, though now it was
    "schizophrenia in remission".
  • Rosenhan described his results to other mental
    hospitals, and their administrators said they
    could not be taken in by such a ruse. Rosenhan
    then told them that they would be visited by a
    pseudopatient in the next 3 months, and he
    challenged them to identify who it was. During
    the 3 month period, 193 patients were admitted,
    and the psychologists identified 41 they thought
    were pseudopatients. In reality, Rosenhan had not
    sent anybody!

11
  • How do we form impressions of others? How do we
    combine the diverse info we receive about someone
    into a coherent overall impression?
  • Nonverbal Communication
  • Impression Formation and Management
  • Attribution

12
Nonverbal communication
  • the way in which people communicate,
    intentionally or unintentionally without words -
    tone of voice, touch, gestures, facial
    expressions, etc.
  • Nonverbal behavior is used to express emotion,
    convey attitudes, communicate personality traits,
    and to facilitate or modify verbal communication

13
Happy - Sad
14
Angry - Fearful
15
Disgust - surprise
16
  • Charles Darwin believed that human emotional
    expressions are universal - that all humans both
    encode decode expressions in the same way
  • Modern research has confirmed Darwin's assertion
    for 6 major emotional expressions anger,
    happiness, surprise, fear, disgust, sadness
  • Culture plays a significant influence in
    emotional expression. Display rules that are
    unique to each culture dictate when different
    nonverbal behaviors, e.g., crying are appropriate
    to display by whom
  • It is sometimes difficult to accurately interpret
    facial expressions because people often display
    blends of multiple affects simultaneously

17
  • Other Channels of Nonverbal Communication
  • Eye contact gaze are also powerful nonverbal
    cues
  • Personal space is a nonverbal behavior w/ wide
    variation across cultures
  • Emblems are nonverbal gestures that have
    well-understood definitions w/in a given culture
  • Body movement
  • Multichannel Nonverbal Communication
  • We usually receive information from multiple
    channels simultaneously in our everyday
    interactions
  • Archer Alert's (1991) Social Interpretation
    Task (SIT) people are able to interpret such cues
    fairly accurately by utilizing multiple cues,
    though some people e.g., extroverts are better
    decoders than others, e.g., introverts

18
Gender Differences in Nonverbal Communication
  • When people are telling the truth, women are
    better both at decoding and encoding nonverbal
    behavior than males. However, men are better at
    detecting lies
  • The social-role theory, which posits that sex
    differences in social behavior are due to the
    division of labor between the sexes in society,
    can be used to explain these male-female
    differences

19
Detecting deceptions from nonverbal cues
  • Not all nonverbal cues are equally instructive
    revealing the lie.
  • Smiling smiling is a common device used by
    deceivers
  • microexpressions of face avoid gaze of others,
    blink frequently
  • Voice and body movements liars have a higher
    pitch and pause a lot
  • Fidgety movements of feet and hands, restless
    shifts in body posture

20
Forming Impressions
  • Kelley (1967) did a study in which two different
    sketches of a guest lecturer were given to
    students. Sketches were identical, except that
    half the people were told the guest was cold and
    the rest were told he was warm. Those who had
    read that the guest professor was cold rated him
    as less considerate, sociable, popular, good
    natured, humorous, and humane than those who had
    read he was warm. Why did this happen?

21
  • People make assumptions about how personality
    traits are related - which ones go together and
    which do not.
  • These assumptions are called Implicit Personality
    Theories. It is a special kind of stereotyping -
    we assume that warm people or cold people have
    particular attributes.
  • EX Upon learning that a person is a pessimist,
    we also tend to assume she is humorless,
    irritable, and unpopular.
  • We tend to judge persons who have one good trait
    as generally good, and who have one bad trait as
    generally bad. This tendency to perceive
    personalities as clusters of either good or bad
    traits is called the halo effect.

22
Individual differences in IPTs.
  • We don't all form our IPTs the same way. Our
    unique experiences direct our attention to
    particular trait categories when we form
    impressions.
  • EX Some of us pay more attention to
    intelligence, others to friendliness or
    attractiveness. Peoples impressions reflect as
    much about their own modes of perception as they
    do about the characteristics of the person being
    perceived.
  • Suppose two people meet the same intelligent,
    friendly individual. If one attends more to
    intelligence, she is likely to form an impression
    that the individual is industrious, imaginative,
    and skillful - all traits associated with
    intelligence in most people's mental maps. If the
    other attends more to friendliness, she if likely
    to form an impression that the individual is
    popular, good-natured, and warm - traits
    associated with friendly. Both impressions may be
    valid, and they are not necessarily
    contradictory, but they are very different.

23
Why do we need to form impressions?
  • Ordering the world
  • We often try to simplify the complex flow of
    incoming info by putting people into useful
    categories. These classifications help to specify
    how various objects or events are related or
    similar to each other.

24
Why do we classify people and things?
  • 1. Simplify perception by grouping together
    similar experiences. We can pay attention to some
    stimuli while ignoring others.
  • EX If we perceive a neighborhood as friendly, we
    can walk down the street without attending
    carefully to every look from every passerby.
  • 2. Allow us to go beyond the info that is
    immediately available - can infer additional
    facts.
  • EX When we recognize a discussion as a
    bargaining session, we infer that the
    participants represent groups with conflicting
    interests. We may also infer that the opening
    statements are merely initial bargaining
    positions, and that vicious verbal attacks do not
    necessarily signify personal animosity.

25
Why do we classify people and things?
  • 3. Help us know how to relate to people and
    object.
  • EX In friendly neighborhoods, we can smile at
    strangers and don't have to hold on to our wallet
    so tightly.
  • EX We can tell secrets to people who are
    trustworthy, and remain tight-lipped in the
    presence of gossips.
  • 4. Allow us to predict behavior.
  • EX A friend will help us to change a flat tire.
  • EX A vegetarian will turn down a steak dinner.

26
How do we decide how to classify people and
things?
  • 1. Can classify people in any number of ways -
    male, midwesterner, tennis player, introvert.
    What determines which will be used?
  • a. Purposes of the perceiver. We use concepts to
    determine how people will affect the pursuit of
    our goals.
  • EX Airport security guard must decide if rushing
    travelers are dangerous or safe, require a close
    search, or merely a cursory check. Hence, she
    classifies passersby as tourists or smugglers,
    terrorists or vacationers. She looks for traits
    that fit her concept of a potentially dangerous
    person.
  • EX In contrast, travelers are more likely to
    look at each other in terms of ways that reveal
    the potential for rewarding interaction - age,
    sex, physical attractiveness, smoking habits -
    and classify people in terms of these things.

27
How do we decide how to classify people and
things?What determines which will be used?
  • b. Social context. Refers to activities that are
    appropriate in a given setting, to the roles
    ordinarily enacted there, and to the people who
    are present. The social context strongly
    influences the ways we label people and their
    behavior.
  • EX If we are at the beach, and somebody comes
    along wearing a swimsuit, spreads out a towel and
    lies down on it, we might label their behavior
    are "relaxation" and perhaps think the person is
    a vacationer. If a person did the same thing in a
    department store, we might think they are crazy.
  • c. Accessibility in memory. How easily can the
    classification be summoned from memory?
    Experience may make some classifications more
    accessible than others.
  • EX Suppose a student learns that her roommate
    has broken both legs while mountain climbing. If
    she has recently been discussing with her parents
    or friends how foolhardy some students are, she
    may be more likely to perceive her friend as
    reckless than as adventurous.

28
Impressions can be self-fulfilling prophesies.
  • Because our own actions evoke appropriate
    reactions from others, our initial impressions
    are often confirmed by the reactions of others.
  • EX Men were given photographs of relatively
    attractive or relatively unattractive women. They
    then had phone conversations with the woman they
    thought was in the picture. They tended to act
    differently towards the women they thought were
    attractive, and the women, in turn, tended to act
    differently towards them - the "attractive" women
    tended to act more poised, confident, amiable,
    sociable and outgoing.

29
Using Mental Shortcuts When Forming Impressions
  • The Role of Accessibility Priming
  • When a person's behavior is ambiguous, it is
    unclear which theory or trait applies to that
    person. Under those circumstances, impressions
    may be determined by the accessibility of trait
    categories, i.e., the ease with which different
    thoughts and ideas can be brought to mind
  • Some traits are chronically accessible due to a
    person's past experience
  • Other traits can become accessible through
    priming, a process whereby a particular trait
    become more accessible due to recent experiences
  • Higgins et al., (1977) illustrate the operation
    of priming in their study. When people memorized
    positive or negative words and later read a
    ambiguous paragraph about a character named
    Donald formed an impression those who
    memorized positive words formed a more positive
    impression of him than their counterparts who
    memorized negative words

30
Attribution (Heider, 1958)
  • is the process through which we link behavior to
    its causes - to the intentions, dispositions and
    events that explain why people act the way they
    do.
  • Internal attribution the inference that a
    person is behaving in a certain way because of
    something about him or her, such as personal
    attitudes, character or personality
  • External attribution - the inference that a
    person is behaving in a certain way because of
    situation he or she is in the assumption that
    most people would respond the same way in that
    situation

31
Dispositional vs. situational attributions (or
internal vs. external).
  • Must decide whether behavior should be attributed
    to characteristics of the person who performed it
    (dispositional) or to the surrounding situation.
    Put another way, are the causes of an action
    internal to the actor or external?
  • EX Suppose neighbor is unemployed. You might
    judge that he is lazy, irresponsible or unable
    (dispositional attribution). Alternatively, you
    might attribute unemployment to racial
    discrimination, evils of capitalism, poor state
    of the economy (situational).

32
Social consequences
  • 1. Dispositional attributions define suffering
    due to personal problems - solutions involve
    treating the individual
  • 2. Situational defines suffering as a social
    problem - prescribes changes in the social
    structure.
  • EX Status of women may be attributed to personal
    dispositions (fear of success, poorer skills).
    Solution is psychotherapy, assertiveness
    training, etc. Or, it could be due to sexual
    prejudice and discrimination - solution may be
    the ERA (Equal Rights Amendment), adequate
    daycare, etc.

33
Individual consequences
  • 1. Depressives have a different attributional
    style than non-depressives. They are often more
    realistic in their attributions, which may be why
    they are depressed!
  • 2. Successes are more likely to endure if we
    attribute the success to our own internal
    characteristics, rather than external causes.
  • EX Suppose you lose weight. If you attribute
    your success to a diet program, once you are off
    the program you may regain the weight. If you
    think you "did it yourself," then you'll be less
    likely to need outside help to maintain the
    weight loss.

34
Two Theories of Attribution
  • Correspondence Inference Theory (Jones Davis,
    1965)
  • Kelleys Covariation Model Theory (Kelley, 1972)

35
  • Correspondent Inference theory from Acts to
    Dispositions
  • The theory that we make internal attribution
    about a person when there are (a) few noncommon
    effects of his or her behavior and (b) the
    behavior is unexpected
  • The Role of Noncommon Effects
  • Noncommon Effects effects produced by a
    particular course of actions that could not be
    produces by alternative course of actions

36
The Role of Expectations
  • We learn more about people when they behave in
    unexpected ways than when they behave in expected
    ways.


37
Expectancies
  • Category-based expectancies expectations about
    people based on the groups to which they belong,
    such as expecting someone to love going to
    parties because he or she belongs to party-loving
    fraternity (Mick Jagger has graduated from London
    School of Economics)
  • Target-based expectancies expectations about a
    person based on his or her past actions, such as
    expecting someone to go to the beach on vacation
    because he or she has always gone to the beach in
    the past

38
The Covariation Model Internal versus External
Attributions
  • The theory which states that in order to form an
    attribution about what caused a persons
    behavior, we systematically note the pattern
    between the presence (or absence) of possible
    causal factors and weather or not the behavior
    occurs.
  • What kind of information do we examine for
    covariation?

39
3 types of information
  • Consensus information refers to how other
    people behave towards the same stimuli
  • Distinctiveness information refers to how the
    actor responds to other stimuli
  • Consistency information refers to the frequency
    with which the observed behavior between the same
    actor and the same stimuli occurs across time and
    circumstances
  • Internal attribution consensus and
    distinctiveness are low, but consistency is high
  • External attribution if consensus,
    distinctiveness and consistency are high

40
Attributional biases
  • Fundamental attribution error
  • When looking at the behavior of others, we tend
    to underestimate the impact of situational forces
    and overestimate the impact of dispositional
    forces. Most people ignore the impact of role
    pressures and other situational constraints on
    others and see behavior as caused by people's
    intentions, motives, and attitudes.

41
The Actor-Observer Effect
  • The tendency for people to attribute their own
    behavior to external causes but that of others to
    internal factors.
  • The role of perceptual salience we notice other
    behavior more than their situation, so too we
    notice our own situation more than our own
    behavior.
  • The role of Information availability actors
    have more information about themselves than
    observers do, they are far more aware than
    observers are of both the similarities and
    differences in their behavior across time and
    across situations

42
SelfServing Attributions(used when self-esteem
is threatened)
  • Explanation of ones successes that credit
    internal, dispositional factors and explanations
    for ones failure that blame external,
    situational factors
  • Defensive attributions explanations for
    behavior that avoid feeling of vulnerability and
    mortality
  • Unrealistic optimism a form of defensive
    attribution wherein people think that good things
    are more likely to happen to them than to their
    peer and vise versa
  • Belief in a Just World a form of defensive
    attribution wherein people assume that bad things
    happen to bad people and that good things happen
    to good people
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