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Attitudes 1 “Did you ever have to make up your mind?” The Lovin’ Spoonful • • • • • • • Attitudes I. What are attitudes? II. How do we develop attitudes? III. The link between attitudes and behavior IV. Attitude Change A. Case example B. Cognitive dissonance processes Attitudes & Persuasion • Attitudes: A positive, negative, or mixed evaluation of people, objects, or ideas. • Exercise Processes in the development of attitudes • • • • Classical conditioning Instrumental/operant conditioning Modeling Direct experience Classical conditioning • Association between an initially neutral stimulus and a stimulus that naturally produces a strong reaction. Operant conditioning • You have been reinforced for expressing the “right” or correct views. Modeling • Modeling: We observe the behavior of others and base our beliefs on such observations. – Ex: Mother buys “Tide” Direct Experience • Four ways of learning are not mutually exclusive! Link between Attitudes and Behavior • Big question in social psychology: Can we predict behavior from people’s attitudes? • Richard LaPiere (1934): Traveled through U.S. with Chinese couple • Results:_________________ When are attitudes poor predictors of behavior? • (1) Low correspondence between the attitude and the behavior (Aizen & Fishbein) • (2) Strength of attitude is weak – (strength=more knowledge; based on direct experience; more important; more accessible.) • How do attitudes change? • The case of Patricia Hearst • Isolation • Guilt • Environmental control • Voicing particular views, even if we don’t believe them, might lead to attitude change. Cognitive dissonance theory (Festinger, 1957) • Assumed we feel tension (dissonance) when two of our thoughts (cognitions) are psychologically inconsistent. We change our thinking to reduce this tension. • Video clip of Festinger & Carlsmith (1959) study Festinger and Carlsmith • IV: $1 or $20 to lie by saying a boring task was very interesting • DV: How much the participant reported enjoying the dull task • Results: Ps in the _________condition said the dull task was ______enjoyable than did those in the _______condition. ______=insufficient justification for lie Importance of Festinger & Carlsmith study • Demonstrates self persuasion • Contradicted long-held belief that big rewards produced attitude change “less [money] leads to more [attitude change]” effect Ways to Reduce Dissonance • • TECHNIQUES Change your attitude • • Change your perception of the behavior • Add consonant cognitions “Chocolate mousse is very nutritious.” • • Minimize the importance of the conflict. “I don’t care if I’m overweight— life is short; mousse is great. • Reduce perceived choice. “I had no other choice; it was prepared for the occasion. EXAMPLES “I don’t really need to be on a diet.” “I hardly ate any mousse.” Insufficient justification • Aronson & Carlsmith (1963) • Forbidden toy study • IV: Mild threat (I won’t like it) or severe threat (will be spanked) • DV: later liking for the toy • Results: Those faced with a _____threat liked the toy ______than those faced with a _______ threat. Those in the mild threat group had “______________for their behavior, and therefore internalized the attitude. Insufficient justification principle works for punishment as well as rewards • Aronson & Mills (1959) • Female students; group discussions about sex • IV: Mild initiation or severe initiation or control (no initiation) • Heard boring tape about “secondary sex behavior in lower animals.” • Ss in __________initiation group rated the discussion _________than those in the _______initiation or control group. • Four steps to dissonance arousal (Cooper & Fazio) • The attitude discrepant behavior must produce unwanted negative consequences. • Must feel personally responsible for unpleasant consequences. • Must experience physiological arousal • Must attribute the arousal to your own inconsistent behavior Cognitive dissonance theory • Generated a lot of research • Explanations for effects are still being debated, but inconsistency appears to be important.