LaPiere Flashcards

1
Q

What is the background of US attitudes to the Chinese in the 1930s?

A
  • Chinese immigration restricted
  • Chinese are barred from landownership
  • Intermarriage with other races such as ‘Yellows’ was forbidden
  • strong stereotypes against ‘Yellow Devils’
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2
Q

What was the procedure of his experiment?

A
  • traveled extensively across the US with a young Chinese couple
  • visited 251 establishments (67 hotels/auto-camps/tourist homes and 184 restaurants/cafes
  • sent a questionnaire to the 250 establishments, 6 months after it had been visited by the group (sent 128 establishments not visited by group)
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3
Q

What happened on the trip?

A
  • only refused service once

- received more than ordinary consideration in 72 out of 184 restaurants/cafes

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4
Q

What were the responses of the questionnaire?

A
  • got 128 responses back (51% rate)
  • asked Will you accept members of the Chinese race as guests in your establishments?
  • 118 establishments visited said no, 9 said not sure, 1 said yes
  • 113 establishments no visited said no, 14 said not sure, 1 said yes
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5
Q

What is the interpretation of the responses?

A
  • answers reflected prejudiced attitudes of the time but not actual behaviour
  • may be that behaviour was driven by the economic self-interest of hotel/restaurant owners (may be other explanations)
  • need to consider what is found today, the opposite of LaPiere: significant number of people try to speak in ‘politically correct’ ways but then discriminate against foreigners in subtle and hard to challenge ways
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6
Q

What’s the methodological criticism?

A
  • 6-month gap between observed actions and reported attitudes (change over time)
  • whether the attitudes and action came from the same person (e.g. manager/waiter)
  • LaPiere’s presence (couple served 31 times in his absence)
  • Chinese couple don’t conform to stereotype (they were personable and charming, well-dressed, spoke in unaccented English and were skillful smilers
  • survey and observed attitudes were different (survey was of a more vague member of Chinese race, should’ve asked about what was actually observed
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7
Q

What’s the conceptual criticism?

A
  • attitude is a positive or negative evaluation of an attitude object (LaPiere measured behavioural intention instead)
  • social norms: whether politeness face-to-face norms outweigh social norms to express societal prejudice, also concerns over whether politeness norms were salient when letter was answered
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8
Q

What is the ethical criticism?

A

-lack of informed consent by the Chinese couple and service providers

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9
Q

What impact did the study have on attitude-behaviour relationship?

A
  • led to more research testing the attitude-behaviour relationship
  • though Wicker (1969) found average correlation between attitudes and behaviour is very low
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10
Q

What is the theory of reasoned action?

Fishbein and Ajzen, 1975

A
  • to predict behaviour you need to know the intentions of the people first
  • attitudes affect intentions, then intentions translate into behaviour
  • subjective norms (social context has influence)
  • relative importance (salience of subjective norms may be stronger in face-to-face)
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11
Q

What is the theory of planned behaviour?

Ajzen and Madden, 1986

A
  • improved upon theory of reasoned action
  • behaviour is predicted by intentions and intentions are influenced by attitudes and subjective norms
  • perceived behavioural control (self-efficacy: ability to perform the behaviour) that affects intentions
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12
Q

What impact did the study have on how attitudes should be measured?

A
  • principle of compatibility/correspondence: measure actual action rather than abstract construct
  • need to consider the action, target, context, time
  • attitude and behaviour need to be measured at the same level of specificity/generality
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13
Q

What is the privacy paradox?

Acquisti et al, 2015

A
  • attitude: most people think formal websites are more secure than informal ones
  • behaviour: people are more likely to disclose private information on informal websites than formal ones
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14
Q

What are explicit and implicit attitudes?

A
  • explicit: what people state aloud, thought to be conscious awareness and under conscious control, assessed directly via surveys
  • implicit: what people feel inside, thought to be outside of conscious awareness and conscious control, assessed indirectly via reaction time tasks
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