Unit 4: Perceiving Persons Flashcards
Define social perception.
Social perception refers to the processes by which people come to understand each other. The elements of social perception are people, situations, and behaviour.
Describe how the perception of other people can be influenced by their physical appearance.
- first impressions of others
- Judgments about character
- Inferences about what attitudes a person holds
- Judgments about trustworthiness
Define scripts.
Social scripts are the preset notions people have about certain types of situations that allows them to anticipate the goals, behaviours, and outcomes that are likely to occur in that certain setting. Scripts develop based on past experiences with more experience leading to more detailed scripts.
What are the functions of scripts in social perception?
- people see what they expect to see in a particular situation based on their existing script
- people use what they know about social situations from scripts to explain the causes of other people’s behaviour
Identify the six “primary” emotions expressed by the face, regardless of culture.
- Happiness
- Fear
- Sadness
- Anger
- Surprise
- Disgust.
Define body language.
Body language refers to the ways that people stand, sit, walk, and express themselves with different gestures. Body language can include conversational hand gestures, such as waving goodbye, to communicate with other people. It can also include more subtle gestures like walking style.
Describe how people use eye contact to judge others.
In many cultures, people who stare are seen as tense, angry and unfriendly. In contrast, someone who avoids eye contact is seen as evasive, cold, fearful, shy, or indifferent. Interpretation of eye contact is also sometimes influenced by the status of the relationship between thei individuals.
Describe how people use touch to judge others.
Physical touch can be used to express things like friendship, nurturance, and sexual interest. People also make impressions based on touch, e.g. handshakes. People may form first impressions based on qualities of a handshake like whether they are firm, limp, strong, weak, brief, lingering, clammy, etc.
Which channels of communication are most likely to reveal that someone is lying?
The channel of communication most likely to reveal that someone is lying is the voice.
People falsely assume that people who are lying will feel stress and that it will show in their face and body language. In reality, people are good at controlling their facial expressions and body language.
What are attribution theories?
Attribution theories are theories that describe how people explain the causes of behaviour. The goal of these theories is to understand people’s perceptions of causality rather than the true cause. Attribution theories typically fall into one of two categories: personal or situational.
What are personal attributions?
Personal attributions are causes of behaviour related to the internal characteristics of the actor such as ability, personality, mood, or effort.
What are situational attributions?
Situational attributions are causes of behaviour related to factors that are external to the actor such as the task, other people, or luck.
Briefly describe Jones’s correspondent inference theory.
People try to infer from an action whether the act itself corresponds to an enduring personal trait of the actor.
Three factors are considered when making these inferences:
- the actor’s degree of choice matters such that coerced behaviour is believed to be less informative about a person than a behaviour that is freely chosen.
- how expected a behaviour is impacts inferences such that unexpected behaviour tells more about a person that does behaviour that adheres to norms, social roles, and circumstances.
- people use the intended effects or consequences of a behaviour to make inferences about a person
Briefly describe Kelley’s covariation theory.
Kelley’s covariation theory says that people attribute behaviour to factors that are present when a behaviour occurs and absent when the behaviour does not occur. Three types of covariation information are helpful to make an attribution: consensus, distinctiveness, and consistency. People make personal attributions when there is high consistency, low consensus, and low distinctiveness. People make stimulus attributions (something about the stimulus caused the behaviour) when there is high consensus, high distinctiveness, and high consistency. When behaviours are low in consistency attribution is assigned to passing circumstances.
What are cognitive heuristics (in general)?
Cognitive heuristics are information-processing rules of thumb that allow people to think in ways that are quick and easy. A downside of cognitive heuristics is that they frequently lead to error. Cognitive heuristics are often used to make attributions and other types of social judgments.
Define the availability heuristic.
The availability heuristic is the tendency to estimate the likelihood of an event occurring based on how easily instances of it come to mind.
Define the false-consensus effect.
The false-consensus effect is the tendency for people to overestimate the extent to which others share their opinions, attributes, and behaviours.