Title: Perceiving Persons
1Perceiving Persons
Tom Farsides 08/10/03
2Lecture Overview
- Attribution theories
- Cognitive heuristics, errors, and biases
- Priming effects
- Implicit personality theories
- Primacy effects
- Confirmation biases
3Social perception
- This subject concerns the qualities that people
perceive in others and the factors...that
contribute to these perceptions - Zebrowitz (1995, p. 583)
4Nonverbal behavior
- The six innate and universal basic emotions
(SHAFDS)
5Attribution theories
- Attribution theories describe how people attempt
to explain the causes of behaviour. - Heider (1958) differentiated between personal
and situational attributions. - Another common distinction is between stable and
unstable causes of behaviour. - Another is made in terms of controllability.
6Correspondent inference theory (Jones Davis,
1965)
- What is a correspondent inference?
- Influenced by
- Perceived choice (CI if high)
- Intended effects (CI if few benefits to actor)
- Expectedness (CI if unexpected)
7Kelleys (1967) covariation theory
- We attribute causality to factors that co-vary
with behaviours. - Behaviour can be attributed to the actor, a
stimulus they are reacting to, or the situation
they are acting in. - Three types of covariation information may be
used. - Consensus
- Same stimulus Different people.
- Distinctiveness
- Same person Different stimuli.
- Consistency
- Same person Same stimulus.
8Kelleys (1967) covariation theory
LOW Other people do not stroke Defor.
LOW You tend to stroke any dog you see.
HIGH You stroke Defor every time you meet.
PERSONAL ATTRIBUTION You like dogs.
You stroke Defor (a dog).
HIGH Other people tend to stroke Defor.
HIGH You tend not to stroke dogs.
HIGH You stroke Defor every time you meet.
STIMULUS ATTRIBUTION Defor is cute.
LOW Other people do not stroke Defor.
HIGH You tend not to stroke dogs.
LOW You have never stroked Defor before or since.
SITUATION ATTRIBUTION You were locked in a room
with Defor.
CONSENSUS DISTINCTIVENESS CONSISTENCY
x-persons x-stimuli
x-situations
9Cognitive heuristics
- Cognitive heuristics (rules of thumb)
- effective
- often adequate
- a greater chance of being wrong
- E.g., The availability heuristic
10The fundamental attribution error (Ross, 1977)
- In explaining anothers behavior, we
over-emphasise personal factors and downplay
situational factors.
Jones Harris (1967)
11Miller (1984) Individualism and the
correspondence bias
12Gilbert Malone (1995) A two-step model of the
attribution process
13The actor-observer effect (Jones Nisbett, 1972)
- Actors tend to attribute their behaviour to
situational factors while observers tend to
attribute the same behaviours to dispositional
factors. - Differential information explanation.
- Differential focus explanation.
14Primacy effect
- The tendency for information presented early in
a sequence to have more impact on impressions
than information presented later. - Asch (1946)
- Intelligent, industrious, impulsive, critical,
stubborn, and envious leads to more positive
impressions than the other way around. - Lazy and stubborn explanations.
15Implicit personality theories
- The network of assumptions commonly made about
relationships among types of people, traits and
behaviours. - Knowing one trait a person has leads us to assume
or infer the person has other traits and
behaviors. - e.g., blondes...
- Asch (1946)
- Intelligent, skillful, industrious, _____,
determined, practical and cautious.
16Priming
- The tendency for frequent or recent concepts to
easily come to mind and influence the way we
interpret new information. - Higgins et al. (1977)
- Impressions of same adventurer affected by
positive or negative primes. - Bargh Pietromonaco (1982)
- Subliminally presented primes have most influence
on subsequent impression formation. - Bargh Chartrand (1999)
- Primes affect subsequent behaviour.
- Bargh et al. (1996)
- Primes influence subsequent social behaviour too.
17Bargh et al. (1996) Priming of social behavior
18Biases confirming expectancies from stereotypes
Darley Gross (1983) Viewing Hannahs mixed
performance led to perceived verification of both
low and high expectations, with evidence of the
opposite ignored or rationalised
19Confirmatory hypothesis testing
- Darley Gross (1983)
- demonstrate that people will interpret ambiguous
or mixed information in ways to confirm existing
theories. - Snyder Swann (1978)
- demonstrate that people with existing theories
will bias the information they collect when
evaluating those theories. - The evidence collected is biased enough to cause
others shown it to confirm the original
persons existing theory. - Cf. Adorno et al.s (1950) validation of the
authoritarian personality.
20Resisting confirmation biases
- Elaborate alternative theories, reasons they
might be true, and potential evidence for them. - Be sceptical about the truth of existing beliefs
and seek accuracy instead of confirmation. - Be wary of information and information-seeking
tools provided by others. - Bias information-seeking in favour of trying to
disconfirm your expectations.
21The self-fulfilling prophecy
- Perceivers expectations can lead to their own
fulfilment (Merton, 1948). - Rosenthal Jacobson (1968)
- Pygmalion in the Classroom
- Teachers told late bloomers had IQ scores
indicating an imminent growth spurt. - Eight months later, these randomly selected
children had higher IQ increases and received
better teacher evaluations than control children. - Remember Darley Gross (1983) and Snyder Swann
(1978).
22Rosenthal Jacobson (1968)Average gain in IQ
23Challenging the self-fulfilling prophecy
- Rosenthal (1985)
- Teacher expectation successfully predicts student
performance 36 percent of the time. - Brehm et al. (2002) report this as confirmation
of the self-fulfilling prophesy. - Jussim et al. (1996)
- Point out that - unlike in Rosenthal Jacobson
(1968) - teachers often have good reasons for
their expectations. - Students perform in accordance with these
expectations because both the performance and the
expectations are caused by some third factor,
e.g. talent and application. - Is Rosenthal (1985) evidence against the
self-fulfilling prophesy, i.e., only 36 (with
64 of expectations not being fulfilled)?