Lecture 2 Flashcards
What effect can schemas have when interpreting ambiguous information?
A biasing effect depending on what the schema is leading us to see
Outline the Hostile Media Phenomenon
- 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
What effect can schemas have when searching for information?
- 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
Outline the self-fulfilling prophecy
You produce the same info you look for
What effect can schemas have on Cognitive Stability?
- 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
Describe Heider’s “naive psychology” approach
- 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
True or False
External attributions allow better prediction of future behaviour
FALSE
Internal attribution allows better prediction of future behaviour
Behaviour is informative about internal states when it….
- has fewer ‘non-common effects’ (fewer unique consequences)
- Has fewer alternative causes (confounding)
- Violates social norms - because social norms provide explanations for behaviour
- Is unexpected or counter-schematic
- Is negative
- Has impact on the perceiver (hedonic relevance)
- Is intentional and freely chosen (personalism)
What is hedonic relevance?
Causes significant or emotional impact on the receiver
In Kelly’s Covariation Model, attributions depend on the assessment of information source of what three things?
- Consistency
- Distinctiveness
- Consensus
Describe Consistency
Does the actor behave in this way ACROSS DIFFERENT SITUATIONS, or only in this situation?
Describe Distinctiveness
Does the actor behave this way towards ALL TARGETS, or only to this target?
Describe Consensus
Do OTHER ACTORS behave this way TOWARDS THE TARGET, or only to this actor?
When you don’t have information over time when making attributions what must you take into account?
- Discounting principle = discounting the validity of other causes based on info which gives evidence to direct to cause
- Augmenting principle = role of a potential cause is enhanced in the presence of other inhibiting factors
Finish the sentence
Depending on the way we attribute behaviour impacts….
The emotional response