Lecture 5: Reading Flashcards
Evidence of people forming attitudes from direct experience - Eiser, Shook & Fazio (2007)
Reasearcers created a game called “Beanfest”. This included Ps exploring a map and collecting good and bad beans. Good beans provided energy while bad beans took away energy. If they ran out of energy they died. However the map needs to be explored to understand whats a good bean and bad bean.
Results:
* Ps learned better about which beans were bad compared to beans that were good. Also, Ps were more likely to assume that new beans were bad. Ps feelings about their performance depended on more on how many bad objects they encountered rather than how many good ones they found
O’brein & Klein (2017) +ve and -ve info
people reach decisions quicker about changing of an attitude object from small amounts negative info compared to small amounts of positive info. This magnitude of weighting bias for negative information varied across people
Evidence of Role play behaviour effecting attitudes (Janis & Mann, 1965)
Had 14 Ps who smoked role play either a lung cancer patient or listen to an audio tape (control)
They found that those who roleplayed the patient reported more negative attitudes towards smoking than the smokers who didn’t participate in role play
High levels of fear and vigilance as a result of experimental condition
What is it about role-playing behaviour that causes the change in memory? (Janis & Kin, 1954)
These researchers suggested that role players search their memory for prior knowledge that supports their role. This search leads them to explore arguments that support the position they are advocating, ignoring arguments that contradict the position. They then may base their subsequent attitude on these arguments
Bem (1965) study on self-perception
Trained Ps to lie about the funniness of cartoons which have been previously rated as ‘neutral’ by another Ps. They were asked to lie when a certain light flashed (for example a green light) but to tell the truth when another light flashed (for example an amber light). Ps were then asked to rate their true attitudes towards a cartoon on an atttude scale.
Results:
* Ps attitudes were affected by the “accidental” exposure to the truth and lie lights. For example, if a Ps said that the cartoon was funny in the Presense of the truth light, then the Ps subsequently rated the carton funnier than if they made this statement in the presense of the lie light.
* Ps inferred the funniness of the cartoons from their behaviour and the context in which it occurred.
Practical demonstrations of Self-Perception theory
- Sales-people using the foot in the door technique
- Teachers and parents to rethink the use of rewards for teaching children (when children are rewarded for behaviour they already like to perform is where there is a problem)
- Consumer decisions - immediately accessible vs hidden and sought after items. The items sought after were rated as more popular: Ge at al.
Effort justification effect in cognitive dissonance seems dependent on reaching a certain level of cognitive development - Benozio & Diesendruck (2015)
Showed that this effect occurred in 6 year old s but not 4 year olds. The 4 year olds had not yet developed the cognitive skills to fool themselves.
In the Post decision spreading effect, what happens if people have the option to change their mind? - Gilbert & Ebert (2002):
Ps were asked to select one out of 2 art posters that had been rated as equally liked. Some Ps were told that their decision was final while others were told that the could reverse their decision at anytime in the next coming 4 weeks.
Results:
* Irreversible condition showed the classic spreading effect. People in the reversible condition showed the opposite effect and evaluated the chosen poster more negatively than the unchosen print. The researchers argued that this effect arose because having the chance to change your mind makes people more likely to think about the flaws of the selected item.
Effects of hypocrisy has been demonstrated for a variety of behaviours
- Discrimination (Son Hing et al., 2002)
- Recycling (Fried & Aronson, 1995)
- Water conservation (Dickerson et al., 1992)
- Donating to an ecological association (priolo et al., 2001)
- Cigarette smoking (peterson et al., 2008).
Effects that make hypocrisy more or less likely to occur
3 points
- People avoid seeing their own hypocrisy on topics that are moral (Batson et al., (2002))
- At the person level, research has shown that the magnitude of hypocrisy effects differs as a function of variation across people in constructs such as self esteem (Peterson et al., 2008) and self-concept complexity (McConnell & Brown, 2010).
- At group level research has shown that witnessing the hypocrisy of a member of ones group can affect a persons own attitudes and behaviour
Focella et al., (2016) and the effects of in group and outgroup members displaying hypocrisy
Exposed Ps to either a member of an ingroup with which they identified strongly, or a member of an outgroup. The person delivered a message about sunscreen, while making clear that they themselves rarely used it. Ps in the ingroup condition bolstered the percieved group norm (strengthening their attitude towards sunscreen usage, and acting in accordance with that attitude).
Goldstein & Cialdini (2007) - paper labelled “the Spyglass self” –> STUDY 1.
Aim to test whether individuals feeling a sense of merged identity with another individual, will come to see themselves as possessing the attributes demonstrated in that other individual’s behavior
* Ppts asked to read a transcript of an interview, and try to take the perspective of the person being interviewed
* Asked q’s about their perceptions of the overview
* Asked q’s about ppts attributes
Results: Ps came to perceive themselves as possessing attributes related to the interviewee’s behavior.
Self-perception only changed for the attribute helpfulness
Goldstein & Cialdini (2007) - paper labelled “the Spyglass self” –> STUDY 2.
Replicated study 1 but manipulated the sense of shared identity using attachment related cues
* Brain activity measure via EEG to assess similarities between themselves & person being interviewed
* Ps then viewed a series of images and words
* Merged identity condition: Ps saw a brainwave similarity report created by the computer, which contained a graphical representation of the Ps’ and the interviewee’s brainwave patterns
* No info condition: proceeded to interview without looking at EEG
* Ps heard short interview where research assistant interviewed a undergraduate interviewee on the topic of living on vs. off campus
* Ps then were asked a series of questions about their perceptions of the interview style used by the research assistant after several interruptions (the video they watched was of someone either similar to them or not, being rude to interviewer)
Results:
* Ppts who were informed that their brainwaves overlapped considerably - percieved themselves are more self sacrificing, more sensitive, less complaints
* Same Ps were more likely to agree to help the researchers by completing additional surveys
Critical Evaluation of Goldstein & Cialdini (2007)
Limitations:
* None of the behaviour took place longer than 20 mins after the observed behaviour
* Individuals are influenced by ppl in their life regarding helpfulness
* US sample; individualistic society
Future Directions: * Different attributes The extent to which vicarious self-perception processes are likely to occur when an observer views a close other willingly engaging in behaviors that the actor perceives to be counter to his or her own self-image
Goldstein & Cialdini (2007) - paper labelled “the Spyglass self” –> STUDY 3.
Self-perception to vicarious self-perception
2X2 between subjects design:
* merged identity information: merged identity vs. no information
* attribution: internal vs. external
EEG (same as study 1)
* read a transcript of the interview
* research assistant interviewer asked the interviewee to describe the last interaction that he or she had with a stranger
Results:
* Merged identity– internal attribution participants came to see themselves as being more self-sacrificing and were more likely to agree to help the researchers in comparison to those in the merged identity– external attribution condition