Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Chapter 4
Assumption: Our private beliefs and feelings determine our public behavior, so if we wish to change behavior we
must first change hearts and minds
o Social psychologists agreed with this in the beginning: To know people’s attitudes is to predict their actions
Extreme attitudes can produce extreme behavior (e.g., suicide bombers and genodicidal killers)
o Festinger: Evidence showed that changing people’s attitudes hardly affects their behavior
Believed the attitude-behavior relation works the other way around
We are very well trained and very good at finding reasons for what we do, but not very good at
doing what we find reasons for
Attitudes provide an efficient way to size up the world
o When we have to respond quickly to something, the way we feel about it can guide how we react
The study of attitudes is close to the heart of social psychology and was one of its first concerns
o ABCs of attitudes: Affect (feelings), Behavior tendency, Cognition (Thoughts)
Concepts and definitions:
o Attitude – A favorable or unfavorable evaluative reaction toward something or someone (often rooted in
one’s beliefs and exhibited in feelings and in one’s inclination to act/intended behavior)
Role Playing
Role
o Theater: Refers to actions expected of those who occupy a particular social position
o Social roles: When enacting them, we at first may feel phony, but our unease seldom last
College men volunteered to spend time in a simulated prison constructed in Stanford’s psychology department by
Zimbardo
o Question: Is prison brutality a product of evil prisoners and malicious guards? Or do the institutional roles of
guard and prisoner embitter and harden even compassionate people? Do the people make the place violent?
Or does the place make the people violent?
o Flip of a coin Assign roles
Guards Uniforms, billy clubs, whistles, and instructed them to enforce rules
Prisoners Locked in cells, wore humiliating hospital-gown-like outfits
o First jovial day of playing their roles, guards and prisoners, and even the experimenters, got caught up in
the situation
Guards Disparage the prisoners, devised cruel and degrading routines
Prisoners Broke down, rebelled, or become apathetic
o There was a growing confusion between reality and illusion, between role-playing and self-identity
o Two-week simulation was called off after 6 days
Point:
o Not that we are powerless to resist imposed roles
In simulations, other people become sadistic while others do not
o It’s that behavior is a product both of the situation and the person
Prison study attracted volunteers who were prone to aggressiveness
o Deeper lesson: How what is unreal (an artificial role) can subtly evolve into what is real
Just imagine what playing the role of a slave for years would do to a person
Master’s role may even be more affected, because the master’s role is chosen
Concepts and definitions:
o Role – A set of norms that defines how people in a given social position ought to behave
Social Movements
Society’s laws, and therefore its behavior, can have strong influence on racial attitudes
o A danger lies in the possibility of employing the same idea for political socialization on a mass scale
1930s Germany: Participation in the Nazi rallies, displaying the Nazi flag, and especially the public
greeting “Heil Hitler” established a profound consistency between behavior and belief
The German greeting was a powerful conditioning for those who had doubts about Hitler
o They tried to make themselves believe what they said
o The practice is not limited to totalitarian regimes
Political rituals—daily salute to the flag by children, singing national anthems—use public conformity
to build a private belief in patriotism
Many people assume that most potent social indoctrination comes through brainwashing
o Brainwashing – a term coined to describe what happened to American POWs during the 1950s Korean War
Although the “thought control” program was not as irresistible as the term suggest, the results were
still disconcerting
Hundreds of prisoners cooperated with their captors
21 chose to remain after being granted permission to return to America
Many of those who returned came home believing “although communism won’t work in
America, I think it’s a good thing for Asia”
o Schein interviewed many POWs during their journey home and reported that the captors’ method included a
gradual escalation of demands
Started with trivial requests and gradually worked up to more significant ones
After a prisoner had once been ‘trained’ to speak or write out trivia, statements on more
important issues were demanded
They always expected active participation, be it just copying something or participating in
group discussions, writing self-criticism or uttering public confessions
Once a prisoner had spoken or written a statement, he felt an inner need to make his
beliefs consistent with his acts
That often drove prisoners to persuade themselves of what they had done wrong
o The “start-small-and-build” tactic was an effective application of the foot-in-the-
door technique, and it continues to be so today in the socialization of terrorists and
torturers
Self-Observation: Self-Perception
Self-perception is an even simpler theory than dissonance
Self-perception theory assumes that we make similar inferences when we observe our own behavior
o When our attitudes are weak or ambiguous, we are in the position of someone observing us from the
outside
Hearing myself talk informs me of my attitudes; seeing my actions provides clues to how strong my
beliefs are
This is especially so when I can’t easily attribute my behavior to external constraints
The acts we freely commit are self-serving
o William James proposed a similar explanation for emotion
We infer our emotions by observing our bodies and our behaviors
A stimulus such as a growling bear confronts a woman in the forest She tenses Her
heartbeat increases Adrenaline flows She runs away
o Observing all this, she then experiences fear
If I am about to give a lecture at a college Am awake before dawn and can’t fall back
asleep I conclude I must be anxious
o People who observe themselves agreeing to a small request indeed come to perceive themselves as helpful
This is why in the foot-in-the-door phenomenon, people agree to larger requests
Behavior can modify self-concept
Expressions and Attitude
o Experiments on facial expressions suggest a way for you to experience it
College students induced to frown reported feeling angry
When induced to make a smiling face, they felt happier and found cartoons more humorous
Those induced to repeatedly practice happy (vs. sad/angry) expression recall more happy memories
and find the happy mood lingering
Viewing one’s expression in a mirror magnifies the self-perception effect
o We’re feeling crabby, but then the phone rings/someone comes to the door and elicits from us a warm,
polite behavior
If our feelings are not intense, this warm behavior may change our whole attitude (It’s tough to
smile and feel grouch)
o Even your gait can affect how you feel
Get up from reading this chapter, taking short, shuffling steps with eyes downcast Great way to
feel depressed
To feel better Walk taking long strides with your arms swinging and your eyes straight ahead
o Experiments:
People find cartoons funnier when holding a pen with their teeth (using a smiling muscle) than while
holding it with their lips (using muscles incompatible with smiling)
o Would imitating others’ expressions help us know what we are feeling
Yes
Students were asked to observe someone receiving an electric shock
o Some were asked to make a pained expression whenever the shock came on
Freud claimed the pained expression would be inwardly calming
The opposite occurred
Compared with students who did not act out the expressions,
these grimacing students perspired more, and had faster heart
rates when they saw the shock being delivered
Acting out the person’s emotion enabled the observer to feel more
empathy
o To sense how other people are feeling, let your own face
mirror their expressions
o We naturally and unconsciously mimic others’ moment-to-moment reactions
We synchronize our movements, postures, and tones of voice with theirs Helps us tune in to what
they’re feeling Makes for “emotional contagion” – explains why it’s fun to be around happy
people
o Our facial expressions can also influence our attitudes
“Test headphone sets” Vertical or horizontal head movements while listening to a radio editorial
Those who were vertically moving their heads agreed with the editorial
o Because positive thoughts are more compatible with vertical nodding and
incompatible with horizontal motion
Stereotypical actions feed stereotypical thinking
Induced some people to move about in a portly manner of an obese person—wear life vests
and put weights on their wrist and ankles—and then to give their impressions of someone
described on paper
Those whose movements simulated obesity, more than in the control condition, perceived
the target person as exhibiting traits (friendliness, sluggishness, unhealthiness) that people
often perceive in obese people
People induced to move slowly, as elderly person might, ascribed more elderly stereotypic
traits to a target person
o Doing influenced thinking
o Postures also affect performance
Arms-folded posture Associated with determination and persistence
Students solve impossible anagrams
o Those instructed to work with their arms folded persevered for an average of 55
seconds, nearly double the 30 seconds of those with their hands on their thighs
Overjustification and Intrinsic Motivations
o People explain their behavior by noting the conditions under which it occurs
Hearing someone proclaim the wisdom of a tuition increase after being paid $20 to do so
Statement seems less sincere than when the person doing so was only paid $1/no pay
Perhaps, we could make similar inferences when observing ourselves
We observed our uncoerced actions and infer our attitude
o Contrary to the notion that rewards always increase motivation, it suggests that unnecessary rewards
can have a hidden cost
Rewarding people for doing what they already enjoy may lead them to attribute their action to the
reward
This undermines their self-perception that they do it because they like it
This is called the overjustification effect
o Pay people for playing with puzzles and they will play with puzzles less than those
who play for no pay
o Promise children a reward for doing what they intrinsically enjoy and you will turn
their play into work
o The self-perception theory implies:
An unanticipated reward does not diminish intrinsic interest, because people can still attribute
their actions to their own motivation
If compliments for a good job make us feel competent and successful, this can actually
increase our intrinsic motivation
When rightly administered, rewards can also boost creativity
o The overjustification effect occurs when someone offers an unnecessary reward beforehand in an obvious
effort to control behavior
What matters is what a reward implies: Rewards and praise that inform people of their
achievements—that make them feel good at what they do—boost intrinsic motivation
Rewards that seek to control people and lead them to believe it was the reward that caused
their effort diminish the intrinsic appeal of an enjoyable task
o How can we cultivate people’s enjoyment of an initially unappealing task?
Use some incentives to coax the desired behavior
After the person complies, suggest an intrinsic reason for doing so
Concepts and definitions:
o Self-perception theory – The theory that when we are unsure of our attitudes, we infer them as much as
would someone observing us, by looking at our behavior and the circumstances under which it occurs
I’m smoking again I must like smoking
o Overjustification effect – The result of bribing people to do what they already like doing
They may then see their actions as externally controlled rather than intrinsically appealing
Comparing the Theories
Why actions only seem to affect our attitudes Self-presentation theory
Two explanations of why our actions genuinely affect our attitudes Cognitive dissonance theory and self-
perception theory
o CD – Justify our behavior to reduce internal discomfort
o SP – We observe our behavior and make reasonable inferences about our attitudes, much as we observe
other people and infer their attitudes
The two explanations seem to contradict each other
It’s difficult to determine which is right
o In most instances, they make the same predictions and we can bend each theory
to accommodate most of the findings we have considered
o It all boils down to a matter of personal loyalties and preferences
Both theories are products of human imagination—creative attempts to
simplify and explain what we’ve observed
Dissonance As Arousal
Strong support has emerged for the dissonance theory
o Dissonance – an aroused state of uncomfortable tension
To reduce tension, we supposedly change our attitudes
o Self-perception theory says nothing about tension being aroused when our actions and attitudes are not in
harmony
It assumes merely that when our attitudes are weak to begin with, we will use our behavior and its
circumstances as a clue to those attitudes
Conditions that supposedly produce dissonance have been proven to be uncomfortable arousing—providing that the
behavior has unwanted consequences for which the person feels responsible
o In the privacy of your own room, you say something you don’t believe Minimal dissonance
o If someone hears and believes you, if it causes harm and negative effects are irrevocable Greater
dissonance
o Feel responsible for the consequences—can’t easily excuse your act because you agreed to it and able to
foresee its consequences—then uncomfortable dissonance will be aroused
Detectable in increased perspiration and hear rate
Volunteering to say or do undesirable things Why are they arousing?
o Self-affirmation theory Such acts are embarrassing They threaten our sense of personal competence
and goodness
Justifying our actions and decisions is therefore self-affirming Protects and supports our
integrity of self-worth
In dissonance-generating actions—uncoerced counterattitudinal actions—their thinking left frontal
lobes buzz with extra arousal
If people who have committed self-contradictory acts were offered to reaffirm their self-worth by doing good deeds,
their self-concepts were restored, people felt much less need to justify their acts
o People with high and secure self-esteem also engage in less self-justification
Is arousal necessary for attitudes-follow-behavior effect?
o YES – When drinking alcohol reduces the dissonance-produced arousal, the attitudes-follow-behavior effect
disappears
Students wrote essays favoring big tuition increase
Students reduced their resulting dissonance by softening their antituition attitudes—unless
after writing the unpleasant essays they drank alcohol, supposedly as part of a beer- or
vodka-tasting experiment
Concepts and definitions:
o Self-affirmation theory – A theory that people often experience a self-image threat, after engaging in
an undesirable behavior, and they can compensate by affirming another aspect of the self
Threaten people’s self-concept in one domain and they will compensate either by refocusing or by
doing good deeds in another domain
Self-Perceiving When Not Self-Contradicting
Dissonance procedures are uncomfortably arousing
o That makes for self-persuasion after acting contrary to one’s attitudes
o But dissonance theory cannot explain attitude changes that occur without dissonance
When people argue a position that is in line with their opinion, although a step or two beyond it, procedures that
eliminate arousal do not eliminate attitude change
o Dissonance theory also does not explain the overjustification effect
This is because being paid to do what you like should not arouse great tension
What about situations where action does not contradict any attitude (inducing grimaces or smiles)
Here, there should be no dissonance, but there is still an attitude change
Dissonance theory successfully explains what happens when we act contrary to clearly defined attitudes: We
feel tension, so we adjust our attitudes to reduce it
o It explains attitude change
In situations where our attitudes are not well-formed, self-perception theory explains attitude formation
o As we act and reflect, we develop more readily accessible attitudes to guide our future behavior