3- Attitudes Flashcards

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1
Q

What are the two key features of attitudes?

A

They are in everyday life, and they are enduring

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2
Q

What is an attitude?

A

A psychological tendency that is expressed by evaluating a particular entity with some degree of favour or disfavour

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3
Q

What is the ABC of the three-component attitude model?

A

Affective, behavioural, cognitive

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4
Q

What is the affective part of attitudes?

A

Feelings about an attitude object

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5
Q

What is the behavioural part of attitudes?

A

Predisposition to act in a certain way to the attitude object

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6
Q

What is the cognitive part of attitudes?

A

Beliefs about an attitude object

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7
Q

What is the main definition of an object?

A

A relatively enduring organisation of beliefs, feelings and behavioural tendencies towards socially significant objects, groups, events, or symbols

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8
Q

What kind of component is an attitude?

A

A unitary one

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9
Q

How can we measure attitudes?

A

On a spectrum

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10
Q

What are the four main functions of attitudes?

A
  1. Knowledge
  2. Instrumentality
  3. Ego-defence
  4. Value-expressiveness
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11
Q

What is instrumentality as an attitude function?

A

Means to an end or goal

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12
Q

What is ego-defence as a function of attitudes?

A

To protect self-esteem

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13
Q

What is value-expresiveness as an attitude function?

A

To display values that uniquely identify and define us

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14
Q

What are two direct measures of measuring attitudes?

A

Self-report measures and attitude scales

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15
Q

What do we do with self-report measures?

A

Just ask people to report

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16
Q

What are the advantages of self-report measures?

A

Direct and straightforward

17
Q

What are the disadvantages of self-report measures?

A

They are not always accurate

18
Q

What are attitude scales?

A

Multi-item questionnaires designed to measure people’s attitudes

19
Q

What are the three indirect ways of measuring attitudes?

A

Monitor physiological indices, implicit association test, and measure the speed with which one responds to pairings of concepts and evaluations

20
Q

What is the advantage of monitoring physiological indices?

A

It is difficult to control physical responses

21
Q

What is a disadvantage of monitoring physiological indices?

A

Physical responses are sensitive to variables other than attitudes

22
Q

What does a facial electromyograph do?

A

Records facial muscle activity associated with emotions and attitudes

23
Q

Why do we measure facial muscle activity?

A

Certain muscles contract when we feel specific emotions

24
Q

How can priming be measured?

A

A prime is presented subliminally or supraliminally

25
Q

What does subliminally mean?

A

Stimulus may not be consciously perceived

26
Q

What does supraliminally mean?

A

Stimuli are perceived by the conscious mind

27
Q

What does priming activate?

A

Stereotypic judgemennts

28
Q

What does the implicit association test measure?

A

Reaction time

29
Q

What indicates a stronger mental association?

A

A faster and more accurate response