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Social Psychology David Myers 10e Copyright 2010 McGraw-Hill Companies 1 Chapter Three • Social Beliefs and Judgments 2 Perceiving Our Social Worlds • Priming – Activating particular associations in memory • Example: Watching a scary movie at home may prime us to interpret furnace noises as a possible intruder – Perceiving and interpreting events • Kulechov effect • Spontaneous trait transference 3 Perceiving Our Social Worlds • Belief Perseverance – Persistence of one’s initial conceptions, as when the basis for one’s belief is discredited but an explanation of why the belief might be true survives 4 Perceiving Our Social Worlds • Constructing Memories of Ourselves and Our Worlds – Misinformation effect • Incorporating “misinformation” into one’s memory of the event after witnessing an event and receiving misleading information about it – Reconstructing our past attitudes – Reconstructing our past behavior 5 Judging Our Social World • Intuitive Judgments – Powers of intuition • Controlled processing – Reflective, deliberate, and conscious • Automatic processing – Impulsive, effortless, and without our awareness » Schemas » Emotional reactions 6 Judging Our Social World • Overconfidence Phenomenon – Tendency to be more confident than correct – to overestimate the accuracy of one’s beliefs • Incompetence feeds overconfidence – Planning fallacy – Stockbroker overconfidence – Political overconfidence 7 Judging Our Social World • Confirmation bias – Tendency to search for information that confirms one’s preconceptions • Helps explain why our self-images are so stable • Self-verification 8 Judging Our Social World • Remedies for Overconfidence – Give prompt feedback to explain why statement is incorrect – For planning fallacy, ask one to “unpack a task” – break it down into estimated time requirements for each part – Get people to think of one good reason why their judgments might be wrong 9 Judging Our Social World • Heuristics: Mental Shortcuts – Representativeness heuristic • Tendency to presume, sometimes despite contrary odds, that someone or something belongs to a particular group if resembling (representing) a typical member 10 Judging Our Social World • Heuristics: Mental Shortcuts – Availability Heuristic • Cognitive rules that judges the likelihood of things in terms of their availability in memory – The more easily we recall something the more likely it seems 11 Fast and Frugal Heuristics Table 3.1 12 Judging Our Social World • Counterfactual Thinking – Imagining alternative scenarios and outcomes that might have happened, but didn’t • Underlies our feelings of luck 13 Judging Our Social World • Illusory Thinking – Our search for order in random events • Illusory correlation – Perception of a relationship where none exists, or perception of a stronger relationship than actually exists 14 Judging Our Social World • Illusory Thinking – Illusion of control • Perception of uncontrollable events as subject to one’s control or as more controllable than they are – Gambling – Regression toward the average » Statistical tendency for extreme scores or extreme behavior to return toward one’s average 15 Judging Our Social World • Moods and Judgments – Good and bad moods trigger memories of experiences associated with those moods – Moods color our interpretations of current experiences Figure 3.3 16 Explaining Our Social World • Attributing Causality: To the Person or the Situation – Misattribution • Mistakenly attributing a behavior to the wrong source – Attribution theory • Theory of how people explain others’ behavior – Dispositional attribution – Situational attribution 17 Explaining Our Social World • Inferring Traits – We often infer that other people’s actions are indicative of their intentions and dispositions • Commonsense Attributions – Consistency – Distinctiveness – Consensus 18 Harold Kelley’s Theory of Attributes Figure 3.4 19 Explaining Our Social World • Fundamental Attribution Error – Tendency for observers to underestimate situational influences and overestimate dispositional influences upon others’ behavior • Example: – Assuming questioning hosts on game shows are more intelligent than the contestants 20 Explaining Our Social World • Why Do We Make the Attribution Error? – Perspective and situational awareness • • • • Actor-observer perspectives Camera perspective bias Perspectives change with time Self-awareness 21 Explaining Our Social World • Why Do We Make the Attribution Error? – Cultural Differences • Dispositional attribution • Situational attribution Figure 3.7 22 Expectations of Our Social World • Self-Fulfilling Prophecy – Belief that leads to its own fulfillment • Experimenter bias • Teacher expectations and student performance Figure 3.8 23 Expectations of Our Social World • Getting from Others What We Expect – Behavioral confirmation • Type of self-fulfilling prophecy whereby people’s social expectations lead them to behave in ways that cause others to confirm their expectations 24