attitudes Flashcards
how did Allport (1935) define attitudes?
- the concept of attitudes is probably the most distinctive and indispensable concept in contemporary American social psychology
- no other term appears more frequently in the experimental and theoretical literature
examples of research that looks at attitudes
- prejudice
–> negative attitudes towards outgroups - interpersonal attraction
–> attitudes towards specific others - self-esteem
–> attitude towards oneself
what is the single component (unidimensional) definition of attitudes?
- generally focused on affect (feelings)
- the term attitude should be used to refer to a general, enduring positive or negative feeling about some person, object or issue
what is the tri-component/tripartite definitions? (Rosenberg & Hovland, 1960)
- affective
–> positive or negative feelings about object - behavioural
–> tendencies to act toward object - cognitive
–> beliefs and thoughts about object
what is an ‘attitude object’
- refers to the person, place, issue, thing (etc…) towards which we hold the attitude
how do we measure attitudes?
- self report measures
- covert measures
- physiological measures
self report measures to measure attitudes
–> interviews
–> focus groups
–> attitude scales (e.g. Likert scales & semantic differentials)
covert measures to measure attitudes
- behavioural measures
–> based on behavioural observation
–> e.g., seating distance, eye contact, body posture, approach and avoidance measures - affective measures
–> The Implicit Association Test
–> in the IAT, we are faster to classify things that are related in memory than things that are unrelated
–> e.g. positive attitude to cats= faster response to pictures of cats paired with positive words vs. negative words
physiological measures to measure attitudes
- pupillary response (dilation and constriction)
- facial electromyography (facial EMG)
what is facial electromyography (facial EMG)?
- electrodes used to measure facial muscle activity (even very small changes in activity)
- activation of zygomatic major muscle (cheeks - smiling) vs. corrugator supercilli muscle (forehead - frowning) indicative of more positive vs. negative attitudes, respectively
define explicit attitudes
attitudes that people can report and whose expression can be consciously controlled
define implicit attitudes
attitudes to which people do not initially have conscious access and whose activation cannot be controlled
how are attitudes formed?
- behavioural approaches
- mere-exposure
- evaluative conditioning - cognitive approaches
- self-perception
what is the mere-exposure effect? (behavioural approach)
- tendency to develop more positive feelings towards more familiar objects
- advertising example:
–> Ps exposed to banner ads at the top of a web article rated their reaction to the banner as more positive when they saw it 20 times vs. 5 times vs. 0 times - interpersonal attraction:
–> students rated women who had attended their class as more attractive when the women had attended 15 classes vs. 10 classes vs. 5 classes
what is evaluative conditioning (behavioural approach)?
- pairing a new, neutral, stimulus with an already positive thing = positive attitude
- pairing a new, neutral stimulus with an already negative thing = negative attitude
- when a new stimuli is paired with an a old stimulus with an existing attitude, its likely to be tied to the previous attitude
- when paired in small time duration
examples of evaluative conditioning
- advertising example:
–> demonstrated that participants rated a fictitious anti-flu drug as more effective, safe and beneficial when it was paired with positive vs. negative images - healthy eating example:
–> demonstrated that participants showed more negative implicit attitudes to energy-dense snack foods after images of these snack foods were paired with images of potential adverse health consequences