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Social Cognition Over the next few days we’ll focus on social cognition and self justification. Tonight: overview of concepts election-related social cognition Thursday: film analysis – Capturing the Friedmans Tuesday: article seminar and self justification Making sense of the world People are constantly trying to make sense of our social world Our brains are powerful and efficient, but imperfect We try to be rational, but we aren’t always Cognitive misers We try to conserve our cognitive energy We adopt strategies to simplify complex problems We ignore some information to reduce our cognitive load This leads to biases in our thinking **How do you try to simplify the information related to the election?** A few ads to get you thinking… http://www.yeson1098.com/videos.html http://www.defeat1098.com/media/video http://www.pattymurray.com/multimedia/vi deo?id=0023 http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=V66tq1 Rmdd4 Effects of Context on Social Judgment Reference points and contrast effects Priming Gain or loss? Positive or negative? Ordering What are we thinking about? Framing Good compared to what? Primacy effect and impression formation Amount of information Dilution effect Judgmental heuristics (definition) A mental shortcut Simple rules that guide our judgment and problem solving When do we use heuristics? When we don’t have time to think carefully When we are overloaded with information When the issues at stake aren’t very important When we have insufficient information to use in making a decision Judgmental heuristics Representative heuristic – it’s like this in one way, must be like it in other ways Availability heuristic – specific examples come easily to mind Attitude heuristic – our positive or negative attitudes affect our judgment Halo effect – False consensus Availability heuristic http://www.thedailyshow.com/watch/monjuly-15-2002/i-know-what-you-did-lastsummer-of-the-shark Stereotyping and Categorization Self-fulfilling prophecy: Our stereotypes lead us to treat people in ways that make them conform to expectations Illusory Correlation: we see a relationship we expect but where none exists Ingroup/outgroup effects: all of them are the same and my group is better Human cognition is conservative We try to preserve that which is already established We maintain our existing knowledge, beliefs, attitudes and stereotypes Confirmation bias Hindsight bias Attribution Biases Three general biases we use when we are interpreting and explaining the world Fundamental Attribution Error Actor Observer Bias Self Biases Fundamental attribution error The tendency to overestimate the importance of personality factors rather than situational factors when describing and explaining the causes of social behavior Actor-observer bias The tendency for actors to attribute their actions to situational factors while observers attribute the same actions to personality factors Self Biases - Egocentric thought The tendency to perceive ourselves as more central to events than is actually the case We tend to think we influence events and people more than we do Self-serving bias The tendency to make dispositional (personality) attributions for our successes and to make situational attributions for our failures