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Social Psychology Chapter 13 • “People who need people are the luckiest people in the world.” Barbra Streisand • “Hell is other people.” Jean-Paul Sartre Social Psychology • Social psychology is the scientific study of how the individual is influenced by the thoughts, feelings, and behaviours of other people Attitudes • Attitudes are feelings and beliefs about other people, ideas, or objects that are based on a person’s past experiences, and shape future behaviour • The cognitive dimension of an attitude consists of thoughts and beliefs • The emotional dimension of an attitude involves evaluate feelings (such as like or dislike) • The behavioural dimension of an attitude involves how beliefs and evaluations are demonstrated Does Behaviour Determine Attitudes? • It is possible that • Within days, “guards” behaviour shapes attitudes • A dramatic demonstration of this was the “Stanford Prison Experiment” in which well-adjusted college students were asked to act and dress as prisoners or guards were harassing “prisoners” and prisoners were caving in and becoming obedient • The study showed a person may quickly adopt attitudes consistent with one’s roles Persuasion: Changing Attitudes • Carl Hovland was one of the first social psychologists in the 1950s to identify the key components of attitude change Persuasion: Changing Attitudes The Communicator • To be persuasive, the communicator must show integrity, credibility, and trustworthiness • Perceived power, prestige, prominence, modesty, celebrity, and attractiveness are also extremely important Coercive Persuasion • Physical or emotional distress • One simple explanation • Unconditional love, acceptance, and attention • New identity is created • Entrapment • Information access is controlled The Communication • The means by which a communication is presented is called its “medium” • Openness to attitude change is related in part to age and education • Change is far more likely if the person doing the persuading is a friend Techniques to Change Attitudes • Foot-in-the-Door Technique • Door-in-the-Face Technique • Ask-and-You-Shallbe-Given Technique • Lowballing Technique • Modelling • Incentives Technique Cognitive Dissonance • Cognitive dissonance is a state of mental discomfort that arises from a discrepancy between two or more of a person’s beliefs, or between beliefs and behaviour • Leon Festinger believed that people try to reduce cognitive dissonance by changing one’s attitudes or behaviours Figure 13.3 Cognitive Dissonance Assessing the World Using Nonverbal Communication (Social Cognition) • Impression formation often begins with nonverbal communication, the communication of information by physical cues or actions, facial expressions, body language, and eye contact Facial Expressions • • Across cultures, six basic emotions are distinguished in facial expressions When a person smiles, both the muscular activity around the eyes and the smile help determine if the person is happy, or masking another feeling Body Language • Information about moods and attitudes is conveyed through body language • Gestures and aspects of body language have different meanings in different societies Eye Contact • The eyes convey a surprising amount of information about feelings • People tend to judge others based on the eye contact they engage in Nonverbal Communication: Flirting