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Chapter 2 Power Point

The document discusses various aspects of the self and how it relates to the social world. It covers topics like: 1) Spotlights and illusions people have about how much others pay attention to them and their emotions. 2) Examples of how social surroundings and self-interest influence people's self-awareness and social judgments. 3) Development of self-concept through the roles people play, social comparisons, and others' judgments. It provides an overview of research on the self in social contexts and relationships.
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100% found this document useful (1 vote)
647 views31 pages

Chapter 2 Power Point

The document discusses various aspects of the self and how it relates to the social world. It covers topics like: 1) Spotlights and illusions people have about how much others pay attention to them and their emotions. 2) Examples of how social surroundings and self-interest influence people's self-awareness and social judgments. 3) Development of self-concept through the roles people play, social comparisons, and others' judgments. It provides an overview of research on the self in social contexts and relationships.
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
You are on page 1/ 31

David Myers

11e
The Self in a Social World

1
Spotlights and Illusions

Spotlights
Spotlight effect (Lawson, ‘2010)
 Belief that others are paying more attention to one’s
appearance and behavior than they really are
Illusions
Illusion of transparency (Stavitsky & Gilovich, 2003)
 Illusion that our concealed emotions leak out and can be
easily read by others

2
Research Close-Up: On Being
Nervous about Looking Nervous
Examples of interplay between our sense of self and our
social world
Social surroundings affect our self-awareness
Self-interest colors our social judgment
 Self-serving bias
 weattribute favorable outcomes to internal causes (self)
 We attribute unfavorable outcomes to external causes

Self-concern motivates our social behavior


 We monitor our own and others’ behavior (Snyder)
Social relationships help define our self
 Could mindful meditation help?
3
Self-Concept: Who Am I?

A person’s answers to the question, “Who am I?”


Take time to answer this question…
 Are your answers more relational (collectivist) or about self
(individualist)?
Which brain hemisphere helps you to recognize
yourself? (Decety & Sommerville, 2003)
Right?
 Left?

4
At the Center of Our Worlds: Our
Sense of Self
Schema
Mental templates by which we organize our worlds)
 We bolster our self-schema by remembering things better
that are consistent with it. (Kilstrom & Cantor, ’84)
Self-schema
Beliefs about self that organize and guide the
processing of self-relevant information

5
Possible Selves

Images of what we
dream of or dread
becoming in the future
Spend more time in the
present!

6
Development of the Social Self

What Determines Our Self-Concept?


Roles we play
Social identities we form
Comparisons we make with others
How other people judge us
Surrounding culture

7
Development of the Social Self

The Roles We Play


New roles begin as playacting then become reality
 As we play them we begin to believe them (self perception
theory, (D. Bem)
Social Comparisons
We compare ourselves with others and consider how we
differ …Via Social Comparison theory (Festinger, ‘54)
 We tend to compare upward
 Who is your referent group?

 Can diminish satisfaction

8
Development of the Social Self

Success and Failure


Our daily experiences cause us to have empowerment
or low self-esteem
 Remember Self-esteem <-> Competence?
Other People’s Judgments
Looking-glass self (Cooley, 1902 –sociologist)
 How we think others perceive us is a mirror for perceiving
ourselves

9
Self and Culture

Individualism
Concept of giving priority to one’s own goals over
group goals and defining one’s identity in terms of
personal attributes rather than group identifications
 Independent self
 Western cultures – tend towards self-inflation (cf to

Japanese)
 - Is Pride a deadly sin?

10
Self and Culture

Collectivism
Giving priority to the goals of one’s group and defining
one’s identity accordingly
 Interdependent self
 Asian, African, and Central and South American cultures

 Thought ? Can you think of groupings other than just national

cultures?

11
Self and Culture

Culture and Cognition


Richard Nisbett’s The Geography of Thought (2003)
 Contends that collectivism results in different ways of
thinking
 Asians tend to think more in relationships than Americans

 Americans see choices as expressions of themselves.

 Which focus more on the focal object/background?

 Japanese / Americans?

 What does this tell us?

12
Self and Culture

Culture and Self-Esteem


In collectivist cultures
 Self-concept is context-specific rather than stable
 Conflict takes place between groups

 Persist more when failing

In individualistic cultures


 Self-esteem is more personal and less relational
 Persist more when winning

 Conflict takes place between individuals


 Crime

 Divorce

In your opinion, which culture is ‘better’?

13
Self-Knowledge

Explaining Our Behavior


Do we know what affects our mood?
Predicting Our Behavior
 Can your roommate predict the longevity of your romantic relationship
better than you? (McDonald & Ross, ‘97)
Planning fallacy
 Tendency to underestimate how long it will take to complete
a task
 What are the implications for goal setting
 In job or in school?

14
Self-Knowledge

Predicting Our Feelings (Gilbert & Wilson)


 Studies of “affective forecasting” reveal people have the greatest
difficulty predicting the intensity and the duration of their future
emotions
 We underestimate the effects of situational cues

 Impact bias
 We overestimate the enduring impact of emotion-causing events

 How much time would you like on a island holiday?


 How long would it take to get over a job loss?

 Immune neglect
 Tendency to neglect the speed and strength of the “psychological immune
system” which enables emotional recovery and resilience after bad things
happen

15
Self-Knowledge

The Wisdom and Illusions of Self-Analysis


 We often aren’t aware of how thinking brought an “aha” experience.
 Dual attitude (T. Wilson, “85)
 Mental processes that control or behavior are distinct from
those we use to explain our behavior
 Automatic implicit attitudes regarding someone or something

often differ from our consciously controlled, explicit attitudes


 What’s the difference in the two?
 How are we strangers to ourselves?

 Implicit ones change more slowly

 Self-reports are untrustworthy – no guarantee of their validity

16
Self-Esteem (motivation power?)
Our overall self-evaluation or sense of self-worth
What are your “domains” of SE? (Crocker & Wolfe)
 Attractive/smart/athletic/rich/loved? +++
Or is it “bottom up”? (Brown & Dutton?)
 What is the baby example?
 Feedback is best when it is true and specific
 Leads to high “self-efficacy”
 General praise…”you can do anything you want”
 -Can lead to unrealistic optimism What were you told in

school? Competence feedback -> High Self-efficacy


 Which do better? Those failing were told “feel great about

yourself-hold your head high” or “taking control will help”


 (Forsyth et al., 2007)

17
Self-Esteem Motivation

Self-esteem maintenance
What level is best to have? Hi/med/lo?
Self-esteem threats occur among friends whose
successes can be more threatening than that of
strangers (remember social comparison theory?)
Referent others
Terror Management Theory states humans must find
ways to manage their fear of death.

18
The “Dark Side” of Self-Esteem

Narcissism
Delroy and Williams (2002)
 “The Dark Triad” of negative traits
 Narcissism

 Machiavellianism (manipulativeness)

 Over time: college students’ (Twenge, ‘06)


 Narcissism

 Empathy

 Hi Narcissims > more “hooking up”, gambling, cheating

 Me generation

 Need for autonomy/ competence/relationships (E. Deci)

19
Perceived Self-Control

Effortful self-control depletes our limited willpower


reserves… controlling emotions during upsetting film
resulted in
 Showing more aggression and fighting with their partner
 Became less restrained in sexual thoughts and behaviors
 DeWall et al., ‘07 Finkel & Campbell, ‘01)

Our brain’s “central executive” consumes available


blood sugar when engaged in self-control

20
Self-Efficacy (Albert Bandura)
What’s the difference between self-esteem and self-
efficacy?
How competent we feel on a task
Leads us to set challenging goals and to persist
Competency + persistence = accomplishment / self
confidence
 …if you have control over the outcome!

21
Locus of Control (Julien rotter)

Who would you rather dance with?


Extent to which people perceive outcomes as
internally controllable by their own efforts and
actions or as externally controlled by chance or
outside forces

22
Learned Helplessness versus Self-
Determination
Learned Helplessness
Hopelessness and resignation learned when a human or
animal perceives no control over repeated bad events
 Martin Seligman

Self-Determination
Development of self-discipline in one area of your life
may cause self-control in other areas as well
 Edward Deci

23
The Costs of Excess Choice

Excess Freedom
Too many choices can lead to dissatisfaction with our
final choice
People tend to be generally happier with decisions
when they can’t undo them
 So does love cause marriage or does marriage cause love?

24
Self-Serving Bias

Tendency to perceive oneself favorably


Explaining positive and negative events
 Self-serving attributions
 Tendency to attribute positive outcomes to oneself and

negative outcomes to other factors


 Contribute to marital discord, worker dissatisfaction, and

bargaining impasses How so?


 I got an “A” in social ψ

 Dr. Mitchell gave me a “C” in social ψ

 “only others fall prey to the self-serving bias!”

25
Self-Serving Bias

Can We All Be Better than Average?


Lake Wobegon effect
 “all the children are above average”
Most people see themselves as better than the average
person on the following dimensions
 Subjective, (e.g. “disciplined”) vs. Observable (“punctual)
 Socially desirable,

 Common dimensions

Are we more self-serving on subjective or observable?


Why?

26
Self-Serving Bias
Areas in which we believe we are above average
…but sometimes you’re right….but how will you know when?
Ethics Parental support
Professional competence Health
Virtues Attractiveness
Intelligence Driving

27
Self-Serving Bias

Unrealistic Optimism
Is on the rise
Illusory optimism increases our vulnerability
 Remember the tendency to underestimate the strength of
situational cues on our ability to self-control?
How does this explain the 2008 housing bubble?
Defensive Pessimism (Julie Norem, ‘2000)

Adaptive value of anticipating problems and harnessing


one’s anxiety to motivate effective action

28
Self-Serving Bias

False Consensus Effect


Tendency to overestimate the commonality of one’s
opinions and one’s undesirable or unsuccessful
behaviors
 Why do you think integrity tests for employment work?
False Uniqueness Effect
Tendency to underestimate the commonality of one’s
abilities and one’s desirable or successful behaviors

29
Self-Serving Bias

Explaining Self-Serving Bias


Self-serving bias is a by-product of how we process and
remember information about ourselves
Self-Serving Bias may be
Adaptive
 Protects people from depression
 Depressed people may be more in tune with reality!

Maladaptive
 Why didn’t I get the big merit raise?
 Group-serving bias

30
Self-Presentation (Barry Schlenker)
Wanting to present a desired image both to an external
audience (other people) and to an internal audience
(ourselves)
It’s a good thing in employment interviews!
Self-Handicapping (fear of failure)
 Protecting one’s self-image with behaviors that create a handy
excuse for later failure
Self-Monitoring
 Tendency to act like social chameleons
Twin truths: self-efficacy and self-serving bias
Find the middle ground through careful self-reflection!

31

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