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Understudied Areas of Cognitive Dissonance Theory

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Title: Understudied Areas of Cognitive Dissonance Theory


1
  • Understudied Areas of Cognitive Dissonance Theory
  • Daniel R. Stalder
  • Ph.D. Personality and Social Psychology
  • University of Iowa

2
  • The test of a first-rate intelligence is the
    ability to hold two opposed ideas in the mind at
    the same time, and still retain the ability to
    function.                               
    - F. Scott Fitzgerald

3
Definition and Examples
  • Cognitive dissonance - tension or psychological
    discomfort that arises from an inconsistency in
    cognitions (e.g., beliefs, self-concepts) and/or
    behaviors
  • Ex., Claim to believe in something, but dont
    practice it (say one thing, do another)
  • Q Do all people feel or deal with dissonance in
    the same way?

4
Understudied Areas
  • 1. Individual differences (Wicklund Brehm,
    1976)
  • - Attributional complexity (Stalder Baron,
    1998a)
  • - Attitude importance (Stalder Devine, 2002)
  • - Reactance (Stalder Devine, 2001)
  • 2. Alternate modes of reduction (Harmon-Jones,
    2000)
  • - Attitude change
  • - External justification (Stalder Baron,
    1998a)
  • - Perceived choice (Stalder Devine, 2001,
    2002)
  • - Self-affirmation (Stalder Devine, 2001)
  • - Trivialization (Stalder Baron, 1998a)
  • - Social comparison?

5
Understudied Areas (cont.)
  • 3. Connections to social comparison theory
  • - Social comparisons can reduce dissonance
    (Stalder Baron, 1998b, 2001 Stalder Devine,
    2002)
  • but why? (external justification,
    trivialization,)
  • - Are high social comparers more likely to
    use/create comparison information? (Stalder
    Baron, 1998b Stalder Andrews, 2004)

6
Stalder Baron (1998a)
  • Undergrads (Ns 88, 58) completed the
    Attributional Complexity Scale (Fletcher et al.,
    1986)
  • Wrote essays favoring tuition increase (w/o
    deception)
  • IVs Low vs. High Choice
  • Attributional Complexity (AC) 2 x 2 design
  • DVs Attitudes toward tuition increases (4 items)
  • (Exp.2) External Justification (open-ended)
  • Trivialization
  • Discomfort with Ambiguity
  • Hyp High AC people will show less attitude change

7
Main Results Experiment 1
  • - Choice manipulation was effective (10-pt scale)
  • Low choice M 1.1, High choice M 5.3, p lt
    .001
  • - Attitude items intercorrelated single factor
  • - Typical attitude change (main effect of
    choice)
  • Low choice M 4.9, High choice M 5.5 (10-pt
    scale) F(1, 84)
    4.88, p lt .05
  • - Only low AC participants showed attitude
    change from low to high choice

8
Main Results Experiment 2
  • - Replicated Experiment 1
  • Choice x AC interaction F(1, 54) 5.28, p lt
    .03
  • - High AC participants showed more external
    justification
  • - No support for trivialization or discomfort
    with ambiguity

9
Attitude as a Function of Choice and AC
10
External Reasons as a Function of Choice and AC
11
Secondary Result (Exp. 1)
  • DV Perceived consensus for attitude
  • How many people do you know who (0 to 3 or
    more)
  • Q Another mode of dissonance reduction?
  • Choice x AC interaction F(1, 82) 3.07, p lt
    .09
  • Low AC participants created more consensus from
    low (M 1.3) to high choice (M 1.9), p lt .08
  • Q Could social comparison information reduce
    dissonance?

12
Quotes in the News
  • Teen asked why he took down stop signs.
  • A Because it was something that everybody
    does.
  • Police chief asked about side business.
  • A Hundreds of thousands of cops take 20 cash
    for side jobs all the time. This is a lot better
    than that
  • Britney Spears asked about recent party behavior.
  • A just like anybody else my age

13
Stalder Baron (2001)
  • Undergrads (N 184) wrote essays favoring
    tuition increase (w/o deception)
  • IVs Low vs. High Choice
  • No, one, or multiple comparison others
    (actual previous essay provided) 2 x 3
  • DVs Attitudes toward tuition increases (4 items)
  • External Justification (closed-ended 3
    items)

14
Main Results
  • Manipulations of choice and consensus effective
  • External justification dropped from low to high
    choice
  • External justification did not rise with
    comparison others
  • No attitude change (from low to high choice)
  • - real recent tuition increase on campus
  • - salient cues to tuition attitudes during
    sign-up
  • - some participants expected to be able to
    complain
  • Attitude and external justification correlated
    negatively in control/high choice condition

15
Stalder Devine (2002)
  • Modified Stalder Barons (2001) procedure
  • - again used tuition essay paradigm, but
  • - used deception
  • - preselected participants with strongly
    negative attitudes
  • - DVs prior to actual essay writing
  • - simplified comparison other information
    (provided no or high consensus information)
  • 2 x 2 (Choice x Consensus Information)

16
Main Results Experiment 1
  • - Manipulation checks
  • Low choice M 2.8, High choice M 9.7, p lt
    .001 (15-pt scale)
  • No info M 39, High consensus M 54, p
    .06
  • - Typical attitude change (main effect of
    choice)
  • Low choice M 4.4, High choice M 6.2 (15-pt
    scale) F(1, 58)
    6.64, p lt .02
  • - Choice x Consensus Information interaction
  • F(1, 58) 4.29, p lt .05

17
Attitude as a Function of Choice and Consensus
Information
18
Why Does Social Comparison Work?
  • Other Experiment 1 DVs
  • - External justification (2 items)
  • - Social validation (2 items comfort,
    mistake)
  • (change perception of behavior shouldnt have
    done it)
  • No evidence for these mechanisms

19
Discussion Experiment 1
  • Social comparison reduced dissonance
  • No support for external justification (2nd time)
  • No support for social validation

20
Experiment 2
  • DVs Modified Social Validation (3 items)
  • e.g., perceived acceptance by fellow students
  • Trivialization (3 items)
  • e.g., perceived responsibility, seriousness
  • Results Largely replicated attitudinal results,
    but
  • no evidence for either mechanism

21
Why Does Social Comparison Work?
  • Could still be social validation or
    trivialization but
    difficult to detect
  • - new measures
  • - new paradigm ask participants in 3rd-person
  • Could be self-affirmation (Steele Liu, 1983)
  • Social comparison could represent a distinct mode
    of reduction (Bolger, Zuckerman, Kessler, 2000
    Schachter, 1959)
  • - manipulate introspection after receiving
    consensus information

22
Application
  • Q Why is the divorce rate so high?
  • Q Shouldnt divorce be dissonance arousing?
  • (e.g., given conseqs and the wedding vows)
  • Q Could the high divorce rate (social
    comparison information) reduce the dissonance?
  • Q Is there a difference in how much some of us
    care about what other couples do?

23
Stalder Andrews (2004)
  • Undergrads and community members (Ns 95, 105)
    completed a survey on interpersonal relations
  • IVs Vow Reminder
  • Divorce Rate information (gt 50)
  • Social Comparison Orientation (SCO)
    (Gibbons Buunk, 1999) 2 x 2 x
    2
  • DVs Divorce acceptability (13-20 items/reasons)
  • e.g., spouse gains weight, emotional abuse
  • Divorce comfort (1-2 items)

24
Main Results
  • Acceptability items formed reliable scale (a gt
    .90) (15-pt scale)
  • Vow reminder lowered acceptability/comfort
    (main effect)
  • Divorce rate information increased
    accept./comfort
  • only in the absence of vow reminder
    (Vow Reminder x Divorce Rate interaction)
  • High social comparers showed higher
    accept./comfort (main effect only)
  • Some gender differences

25
Future Dissonance Directions
  • Why does social comparison reduce dissonance?
  • - self-affirmation
  • - distinct mode
  • Other connections between dissonance and social
    comparison theory
  • (e.g., dissonance from disagreement)
  • Processes of social communication and social
    influence are inextricably interwoven with
    processes of creation and reduction of
    dissonance.
  • - Festinger (1957)

26
Future Dissonance Directions (cont.)
  • Applications of connections
  • - Facilitate the effects of good dissonance
  • - between self-concept and low school
    performance
  • (e.g., note academic disidentification)
  • - between personal morals and peer group
    behavior
  • - Better understand some social psychological
    phenomena
  • conformity, deindividuation, false consensus
    effect, group polarization, projection,
    social categorization,
  • - Possibly resolve dissonance theoretical issues

27
Future Dissonance Directions (cont.)
  • Individual differences in dissonance processes
  • (can maximize reach of application efforts)
  • - Social Comparison Orientation
  • - Need for Closure subfactors
  • - Attitude importance

28
Future Individual Difference Research
  • Social Comparison Orientation
  • (Gibbons Buunk, 1999 Stalder, 2003 Stalder
    Andrews, 2004)
  • Need for Closure subfactors
  • (Neuberg et al., 1997 Stalder, 1998 Stalder
    Kozel, 2002)

29
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