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Attitude Attitude vs. Belief  Belief is a thought (cognition) about something   Raw fish is bad Exercise is important  Attitude    adds two components: ABCs Affective: evaluation, emotion Behavioral: tendency to take action Cognitive: belief or thoughts Components  Affective:   I hate raw fish and sushi I enjoy exercise  Behavioral   I won’t eat sushi I will exercise regularly  Cognitive   Raw fish is bad Exercise is good Consistency  We always want our ABCs to agree  What  Behavior will shape our attitude  What  if we don’t have an attitude? if our ABCs are inconsistent? Caveats Attitudes  Explicit attitude  Implicit attitude   Involuntary, uncontrollable, often unconscious IAT Attitudes toward groups  Prejudice    Stereotypes    Affective component Hostile or negative attitude toward people just because they are a group member Cognitive component Generalization in which identical characteristics are assigned to all members Discrimination   Behavioral component Unjustified negative or harmful action toward a group member because of their membership Prejudice in the classroom  Jane Elliott       Prejudice can be taught Told students blue-eyed people were better than brown-eyed people Brown-eyed children had to wear collars and sit in the back of class Over the course of one day: brown eyed children became self-conscious, depressed, and demoralized Next day: Elliott switched the stereotypes about eyecolor (brown=good) Brown-eyed kids exacted their revenge Why are stereotypes maintained?  Illusory correlation     Out-group homogeneity effect    See correlations where they don’t exist Remember confirmatory examples more Example: Cheerleaders are outgoing Us vs. them “All ______ are alike” In-group bias   Positive feelings for people who are part of our ingroup Alumni, state residency Fundamental Attribution Error  Interpret behavior as a characteristic of the individual rather than the situation  Do not take into account the situation     Person unemployed is a bad worker Bush caused war Jeopardy player is really smart Maintain stereotypes:   Attribute confirmatory examples to the individual Ignore/attribute to the situation examples which don’t fit or stereotype Persuasion  Yale Attitude Change  Hovland, 1953 The effectiveness of communication depends on who says what to whom.  Who: The persuader or source  • Credibility (expertise, knowledge) • Attractiveness Persuasion  What: The message • One- vs. two-sided messages • Blatantly persuasive • Primacy vs. recency  Depends on when decision is made • Fear arousing  To whom: The recipient • Distraction • Intelligence • Age Persuasive techniques  Foot in the door  Door in the face  Reciprocity—create an obligation  Low-ball—obtain commitment then up the price  Sweeten the deal  Exclusivity  Prestige Heider’s Balance Theory  We want to maintain consistency among our attitudes   Prefer to agree with someone I like Disagree with someone I dislike Object + Object + Self -- Other + + Self Other -- Balance Theory  What if my attitudes are imbalanced? Object -- Object + Self + Other Self +   + Other -- Change beliefs about the object Change beliefs about the person • Change whichever is easier