Chapter 6: Attitudes, Behaviour And Rationalization Flashcards
What are attitudes? (Three components)
Attitude: evaluation of an object in a positive or negative fashion that includes three components.
1) affect: an object (landscape, politician, shoe, etc…)
2) cognition: thoughts that reinforce a persons feelings
3) behaviours: your evaluation of good vs bad that will lead you to approach or avoid an object
When attitudes are primed, what happens?
People behave similarly to that!
Attitudes are from the motor cortex
How do we measure attitudes?
Attitudes are commonly reported with self report measures (like survey questions)
What is the likert scale?
A numerical scale used to access people’s attitudes; a scale that includes a set of possible answers labelled with each extreme.
Ex
1= strongly disagree
7= Strongly agree
How can social psychologists better capture other dimensions of attitude?
- They measure the accessibility of the attitude (how easily it comes to mind)
To do this, researchers use response latency
What is response latency?
The amount of time it takes to respond to a stimulus.
Ex. If they can answer a question about Covid in less then a second they’ll have a stronger attitude towards Covid
What is the centrality of attitude, and why do we measure it?
You should react similarly to most important issues. But if you spend too much time on gay marriage it can expose your attitudes
What is the implicit attitudes measure?
Use this when you feel like people may be unwilling to voice their true opinions
Affirmative priming and implicit association test
Ex.
Flowers. Vomit
(Good) (Bad)
-use something like guns to see if they feel it’s good or bad.
How do researchers use physical closeness as signals of attitudes?
Closer a person gets, the better impression they have
What are physiological indicators of attitudes?
Heart rate and sweat can indicate people’s fearful attitudes
Can we predict behaviour from observed attitudes?
Not really? Attitudes don’t tend to directly predict behaviour. There are many situational factors that influence behaviour.
Ex. 1930s study with Chinese couple
What happens when we introspect the reasons for our attitudes?
Sometimes we make assumptions about why we do things- which can mislead us.
Ex. Liking someone
Thinking about why we like someone can mislead us into believing we like their most easy to identify traits. Which may not be why we really like them.
Is introspection always bad?
No!
Sometimes the reasons driving attitudes are easy to identify IF the attitude is mostly cognitive (easy to identify).
What is the mismatch between general attitudes and individual targets?
Highly specific attitudes tend to explain behaviours
Ex. Willingness to help a gay men is determined if he fits the prototype of a gay man.
What is the cognitive dissonance theory?
The inconsistency between a persons thoughts and actions create an averse emotional state.