Lecture 2 Flashcards

1
Q

What effect can schemas have when interpreting ambiguous information?

A

A biasing effect depending on what the schema is leading us to see

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2
Q

Outline the Hostile Media Phenomenon

A
  • An example of the bias a schema can cause us

- People thought the media portrayed their side e.g. political party more negatively than their opponents side

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3
Q

What effect can schemas have when searching for information?

A
  • Another biasing effect
  • Participants were asked to question a person and find out if they were introverted/extroverted/neutral. They were given one to find out. Depending on this influenced what questions they asked the individual
  • Their schemas of I/E/N people lead them to look for values associated with these in the individual
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4
Q

Outline the self-fulfilling prophecy

A

You produce the same info you look for

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5
Q

What effect can schemas have on Cognitive Stability?

A
  • Schemas make the world look more stable than it is
  • In a study participants took a ‘test’ to reveal their social sensitivity. They were randomly given positive or negative results.
  • Participants were debriefed that the results were forged.
  • When asked to predict how well they actually did and how well they would do in a future test, those with negative first test results had lower self scores (vice versa)
  • Shows that info persists in your mind despite being discounted
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6
Q

Describe Heider’s “naive psychology” approach

A
  • Said we are driven to determine causes of others’ behaviours in effort to predict and control their environment
  • We can attribute behaviour to internal or external factors
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7
Q

True or False

External attributions allow better prediction of future behaviour

A

FALSE

Internal attribution allows better prediction of future behaviour

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8
Q

Behaviour is informative about internal states when it….

A
  1. has fewer ‘non-common effects’ (fewer unique consequences)
  2. Has fewer alternative causes (confounding)
  3. Violates social norms - because social norms provide explanations for behaviour
  4. Is unexpected or counter-schematic
  5. Is negative
  6. Has impact on the perceiver (hedonic relevance)
  7. Is intentional and freely chosen (personalism)
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9
Q

What is hedonic relevance?

A

Causes significant or emotional impact on the receiver

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10
Q

In Kelly’s Covariation Model, attributions depend on the assessment of information source of what three things?

A
  1. Consistency
  2. Distinctiveness
  3. Consensus
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11
Q

Describe Consistency

A

Does the actor behave in this way ACROSS DIFFERENT SITUATIONS, or only in this situation?

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12
Q

Describe Distinctiveness

A

Does the actor behave this way towards ALL TARGETS, or only to this target?

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13
Q

Describe Consensus

A

Do OTHER ACTORS behave this way TOWARDS THE TARGET, or only to this actor?

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14
Q

When you don’t have information over time when making attributions what must you take into account?

A
  1. Discounting principle = discounting the validity of other causes based on info which gives evidence to direct to cause
  2. Augmenting principle = role of a potential cause is enhanced in the presence of other inhibiting factors
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15
Q

Finish the sentence

Depending on the way we attribute behaviour impacts….

A

The emotional response

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16
Q

What do people do to make others see the best in them?

A

They adjust their behaviour

17
Q

Describe self-handicapping

A

People intentionally sabotage their behaviour to manage attributional consequences of the actual cause of behaviour
e.g. didn’t do well on a test because dusty, but really it’s because they don’t understand the test