Title: Social Influence and Persuasion
1Chapter 8
- Social Influence and Persuasion
2Chapter Outline
- Attitude Change via Persuasion
- Compliance with Threats and Promises
- Obedience to Authority
- Resisting Influence and Persuasion
3Social Influence
- Social influence occurs when one person engages
in some behavior (persuading, threatening,
promising, or issuing orders) that causes another
person to behave differently from how he or she
would otherwise behave.
4Attitude Change
- Attitude change is a fairly common result of
social influence. - The influencing source may produce a change in
the targets beliefs and attitudes about some
issue, person, or situation.
5Forms of Social Influence
- Influence attempts can be either open or covertly
manipulative. - In open influence, the attempt is readily
apparent to the target. - In manipulative influence, the attempt is hidden
from the target.
6Forms of Open Influence
- The use of persuasive communication to change the
targets attitudes or beliefs. - The use of threats or promises to gain
compliance. - The use of orders based on legitimate authority
to gain compliance.
7Attitude Change Via Persuasion
- Persuasion may be defined as changing the
beliefs, attitudes, or behaviors of a target
through the use of information or argument. - Persuasion is widespread in social interaction
and assumes many different forms.
8Reactions to Persuasive Messages
- Ignore it.
- Dismiss the communicator.
- Listen to the message but suspend judgment on the
issue. - Misperceive or misconstrue the content of the
message. - Attempt counterpersuasion.
9Elaboration Likelihood Model
- Holds that there are two basic routes through
which a message may alter a targets existing
attitudes - central route
- peripheral route
10Central Routes
- Persuasion via the central route occurs when
- a target actively scrutinizes the arguments
contained in a persuasive message - interprets and evaluates them (taking into
account what he or she already knows) - and integrates them into a coherent position.
11Peripheral Routes
- Occurs when the target pays attention primarily
to extraneous cues linked to the message. - The target does not carefully think about the
message but appraises peripheral cues and uses
them as a basis for accepting or rejecting the
message.
12Communication-Persuasion Paradigm
- Fundamental components of the communication-persua
sion paradigm - Source
- Message
- Target
- Response
13Communication-Persuasion Paradigm
14Source
- The identity of the source provides the target
with information above and beyond the content of
the message itself. - Because some sources are more credible than
others, the target may pay attention to the
sources identity when assessing whether to
believe the message.
15Credibility of the Source
- Communicator credibility denotes the extent to
which the communicator is perceived as
believable. - Factors that influence the extent to which a
source is credible include - Expertise
- Trustworthiness
- Attractiveness
- Likeability.
16Social Impact Theory
- The impact of an influence attempt is a function
of - strength (social status or power)
- immediacy (physical or psychological distance)
- number of influencing sources.
- A target will be more influenced when the sources
are strong, when the sources are physically
close, and when the sources are numerous.
17Message
- A discrepant message advocates a position that is
different from what the target believes. - Emotional appeals try to arouse basic drives and
stimulate a need where none was present. - The most common emotional appeals involve fear.
18Attitude Change Communicator Credibility and
Message Discrepancy
19Media
- Mass media refers to channels of communication
that enable a source to reach a large audience. - A media campaign is a systematic attempt by a
source to use the mass media to change attitudes
and beliefs of a target audience.
20Target
- Involvement with the issue affects the way the
target processes a message. - A need for cognition, or how much an individual
enjoys puzzling through problems and thinking
about issues, plays an important role in
persuasion attempts. - Distraction, or anything that prevents the target
from giving full attention to the argument, will
affect the persuasion attempt.
21The Effects of Personal Involvement on Persuasion
22Compliance with Threats and Promises
- Compliance is behavioral conformity by the target
to the sources requests or demands. - Threats and promises are two types of social
power that can be used to induce compliance.
23Threats and Promises
- A threat is a communication from one person to
another that takes the general form, If you
dont do X, then I will do Y. - A promise involves a reward controlled by the
source. A person using a promise says, If you
do X , then I will do Y.
24Social Power and Compliance
- Promise of reward - rewarding desired behavior.
- Coercion through threat - negative outcome used
to assure compliance. - Referent power - desire to be like others that we
admire compels behavior.
25Social Power and Compliance
- Legitimate power - accepted authority.
- Information - providing information about desired
behavior. - Expertise - expert compels behavior.
26Subjective Expected Value
- A threats subjective expected value (SEV) is a
measure of the pressure that the target feels
from the threat.
27Compliance with Threats
28Bilateral Threat and Negotiation
- Negotiation is communication between opposing
sides in a conflict wherein the parties make
offers and counteroffers and a solution occurs
only when the parties reach an agreement. - A bilateral threat situation is one where both
participants issue threats and inflict damage on
one another.
29Deterrence and Conflict Spiral
- Mutual deterrence is a kind of armed standoff.
- Conflict spiral is a form of escalation in which
the participants insist on compliance to their
demands, even though they realize the other can
inflict damage.
30Obedience to Authority
- Authority refers to the capacity of one member to
issue orders to others. - They direct or regulate the behavior of other
members by invoking rights that are vested in his
or her role.
31Resisting Influence and Persuasion Attitude
inoculation
- Enables target persons to defend their beliefs
against persuasion attempts. - A refutational defense consists of giving the
target exposing a target to weak attacks with an
opportunity to refute them so they can build up
resistance and prepare for stronger attacks.
32Resisting Influence and Persuasion Forewarning
- Forewarning is simply warning people that they
are about to be exposed to a persuasion attempt. - In order for the forewarning process to work, the
targets of the persuasion attempt must care about
and be psychologically involved in the issue. - If they do not care about the issue, the
forewarning may have little effect and, in some
instances, can even produce greater attitude
change.
33Resisting Influence and Persuasion Reactance
- Occurs when the target of the persuasion attempt
begins to feel that their independence and
freedom being threatened reacts in opposition. - Feeling the need to reassert control, the targets
will behave in a way counter to the persuasion
attempt in order to demonstrate their
independence.