Psych Video Notes
Psych Video Notes
Contents
Chapter 1....................................................................................................1
Chapter 2.................................................................................................5
Chapter 3..................................................................................................12
Chapter 4..................................................................................................18
Funder – debate – are our social perceptions often inaccurate? NO..........26
Ross and nisbett – debate – are our social perceptions often inaccurate
YES............................................................................................................30
Kelly and Duckitt – experiment – self esteem and ethnic identity in SA,
status, power, legitimacy..........................................................................32
Shutts and Kinzler – experiment – self esteem and ethnic identity in SA,
status, power, legitimacy..........................................................................35
Baumeister – debate – are self esteem programs misguided? YES...........38
Dubois and Tevendale – debate – are self esteem programs misguided? NO
..................................................................................................................38
Chapter 1
Social psychology
- Cognitive psychology
- Economics
- individual psychology
- social anthropology
- sociology
- sociolinguistics language communication
Gordon Allport
Scientific investigation of the thoughts, feelings and behaviours that
individuals are influenced by actual, imagined or implied presence.
Kurt Lewin
Floyd Allport
scientific method
Experimental method
2 groups
AVOID CONFOUNDING
Demand characteristics
Evaluation apprehension
Social desirability
Experimental effects
Non-experimental methods
Examination of correlation between natural occurrences and does not
allow us to draw structured conclusions from data gathered. No causal
conclusions
Archival research
Survey research
Experimental VS non-experimental
Research ethics
Review proposals and ensuring the extent as the rights of participants are
protected.
Chapter 2
Social psychology is the science of human thought, feeling and behaviour
as they are influenced by and have influenced on other people
Thought
Cognition
- Automatic processing
Social psychology
- How people think and feel about, relate to, and influence other
people
Social cognition
Cognitive psychology
1960
1970
- Naive scientist
- People need to attribute causes to events in order to make sense of
the world
- Rational in their understanding of the world
- Bias or inaccuracy is linked back to past experiences and past
knowledge
- Many cognitive shortcuts due to shortcomings
- Not driven by motivation to reach true underlying cause of
behaviours
New
- Motivated tacticians
- Fully engaged thinkers with many strategies stores
- Chooses depending on situation we are sitting in and what is around
us
2000s
Impression formation
Communicate those first impressions and this will ultimately decide how
we feel or act in relation to those around us and how we perceive those
people or environments.
Solomon Asch
- Configural model
- Latch on to certain information when we first meet someone
- Central traits and have disproportionate influence on final (warm /
cold)
- Then peripheral traits (polite / blunt)
o Less impressions on traits we once found
Range of bias
Primacy effect
Recency effect
- When you are distracted and meet new person then first impression
may not truly matter as then it will grow over time
Negative information
- Create own idocentric ways to judge and place people in our world
- Two people can form 2 different impressions
- Develop over time with person perception
- Strong to change
- Discover what characteristics go together to form a person
- Implicit personality construct does not change
Physical appearance
Stereotypes
Cognitive algebra
SCHEMAS
Top-down processing
- Schemas activated
- Concept driven processing
- Make more assumptions
- Little cognitive efforts
- Using prior knowledge from active schemas
- EG
o Person schemas
o Role schemas (social groups)
o Scripts (events)
o Content free schemas (little rules to process)
o Self schemas (what we know of self)
Bottom up processing
CATEGORIES
Dog = category
Fuzzy = Prototype
- Categories find a sweet spot that are not too exclusive nor inclusive
as this could be cognitively draining in mass
- Rely on the middle rather than the extremes
- Optimally distincitive
- Stereotype
o Widely shared general of group that are derogatory to persons
in the outgroups
o Not consensual belief but can also be seen as general theories
or attribute of other groups
o Truth may exist
o Reduce uncertainty and are not always wrong or inaccurate
o Social roles can also be controlled
o Intergroup processing and understanding
o Means to justify status que
o Extrapolates the judgement to out of the group
o Subjective importance relevance or value
o Characterise common groups due to simplistically
o Readily usable from early age
o Respond to social context and has inertia
Acquiring schemas
Or
Changing schemas
Social encoding
3 factors
1. Salience
a. Property of stimulus that makes it stand out
b. Variety of reasons (behaviour is different to normal)
c. Important to your goals or visual field or told to pay attention
d. Salient people more influention
e. More responsible and less influences
f. More extreme as positively or negatively
2. Vividness
a. Intrinsic property of stimuli itself
b. Emotionally evoking feelings
c. Concrete images produced
d. Close to you
3. Accessibility
a. Readily and automatically primed to make sense of domain
b. Often use, recent, consistent currently
c. Assimilate into primed category
d. Ambiguous category
e. Contract stimuli with category
i. Incongruent to categories
Person memory
Exceptions
Chapter 3
People occupied of seeking, constructing and sorting their experiences
Social explanations
Interpersonal relationships
Women VS men
Biases of attribution
- view own behaviour as typical and assume others would behave the
same way
o seek out similar others
- own opinions so salient to us and at the forefront it eclipses
possibility of other opinons
- ground our opinion and actions in perceived consensus
o important beliefs and ones we are certain of
intergroup attribution
- process of signing the cause of ones own or others behaviour to
group membership
- ethnocentrism
o ingroup bias that operates inter group
- socially desirable or positive behaviour by ingroup members VS
socially undesirable behaviour are independently attributed to the
outgroup
- processes responsible
o cognitive process
stereotypes and schemas and categorisation
o self esteem process
social identity
Chapter 4
Self and identity
medieval times
- prescribed social
- birth order / rank / job
- 3 driving forces
o Secularisation
Fulfilment does not only occur in afterlife, actively
pursue fulfilment in this life
o Industrialisation
Increasingly seen people as products of production with
a portable person identity not locked to social structures
o Enlightenment
Allow to construct different identities to overthrow other
social structures
Psychoanalysis
- Freud
o Self is unfathomable because it is in the unconscious
o Self only truly known by self or others when special
procedures are employed to bring repressed thoughts
o Largely subconscious influence of authoritarian
o Personal and private and epitome of individuality
Types of self
- Individual self
o Based on personal traits that differentiate from all others
- Relationship self
o Connections and role relationships with significant others
- Collective self
o Group membership that splits us and them
o Group mind / hive mind
o This influences our individual self
o Muzafer Sherif and Solomon Asch
Emergence of group norms and conformity to norms
Symbolic interactionism
Wilhelm Wundt
impression management
Self presentation
- 2 motives
o Strategic
High self monitors
Shape behaviour to impress audience or situational
demands
1. Self promotion
Pursued others for competence
2. Ingratiation
Style to get others to like you
3. Intimidation
Think you are dangerous
4. Exemplification
Morally respectable individual
5. Supplication
Take pity on you
Manipulating other perception of you
o Expression
Low self monitors
Less obligated to change depending on demands
Demonstrate and validate the self concept with your
actions
Any identity is worthless unless recognised and
validated by others
Self awareness
Deindividualization
Self knowledge
Regulatory focus
- Promotion system
o Ideals and focus on achieving
o Sensitive to presence of positive events
o Approach strategic means to achieve
o Positive role models brought in
o Elevated motivation and persistent on task with gains
- Prevention system
o Fulfilment of duties and obligations (ought)
o Generate sensitivity to presence of negative events
o Avoidance strategic means to achieve goals
o Recall information later to avoidance of failure of others
- Active
o How we currently are
- Ideal
o How we would like to be
- Ought
o How we think we should be
- Through self regulation the discrepancies can be motivated to
change and reduce it
o General notion elaborates into regulatory focus theory
Personal identity
Social identity
- Group memberships
Henri Tajfel
Social categorisation
Group based
Collective social
Social identity
Consequences
1. Self assessment
a. Desire to learn about yourself
b. Pursuit of information about self
c. Truth about self no matter how bad it may be
d. Increased self reflection on peripheral traits
2. Self verification
a. Pursuit of information persistent with self image
b. Satisfies need of validation
c. Underpins what we already know about ourselves
d. Central rather than peripheral
3. Self enhancement
a. Learning favourable things about self
b. Guides pursuit on how we see ourselves
c. Guides to revisit bad views
d. Self affirmation theory
i. Publicly affirm positive assets
ii. Subtle in rationalisation
Self esteem
Readings
Funder – debate – are our social perceptions
often inaccurate? NO
Introduction
Vernon (1933)
Estes (1938)
Cronbach (1955)
Asch (1946)
Kelley (1967)
- Attributional cube
o Tend to attribute behaviour to internal dispositional causes
2 meanings of error
PONZO’S ILLUSION
- Two lines that converge upward, two lower lines yet one appears
longer than the other (it is not)
MILLER-LYER ILLUSION
- Gregory (1971)
o Effective visual system can be fooled
Dual reality keeps visual errors from being mistakes
Perceptual research can be constructed so as to not only
be artificial but impossible
OVER ATTRIBUTION
SOCIAL ROLES
Two questions
2 meanings of accuracy
Remaining questions
Scenario
Power of situations
Whether personality judgment of the sorr discussed are all that important
Introduction
Objectives of research
- Primary
o Out group preference, associated with lower self esteem in
minority children
- Examine age trends in group and out group
- Correlation between in group and outgroup may vary at different
ages
Hypothesis
Method
Subjects
Instruments
Problems
Results
Relevant theories
Conclusion
- Findings suggest that both ingroup preference and self esteem of
black SA children increase with age , not directly linked
- Own group and outgroup preference and identification of black
minority children in SA do not appear to impact on self attitudes
Introduction
- Prefer members of groups that are larger, familiair and higher status
- Personal encounters, exposure to media, observations around them
- Primary underlying factors of childrens asymmetric race preferences
are unresolved
- SA unique profile and history can shed light
- IF social status was primary force then white should prefer their own
more than poc
Study 1
Participants
Design
Result
- Preferred faces that were not Xhosa, choosing the face only 36% of
the time
- Showed high similar race preferences: all preferred white coloured
to POC
- Not exhibit systematic own-race favouritism as POC children
- Findings cast doubt on thesis statements
Study 2
Participants
Results
Study 3
Participants
Study 4
Participants
Results
Study 5
Participants
Results
- 4 primary conclusions
o Group size and familiarity not primary determinants
o Children racial preferences reflect the relative status of
different groups
o Race based social preferences even when raised in diverse
country
o Social status not the only factor that contributes to the
children guide on groups
Introduction
School daze
Aim
Abstract
- Consider:
o Multiple distinct facets of self esteem
o Moderating influence of youth characterises, environmental
exp, processes the formation and maintenance of self esteem.
o Bidirectional, recursive linkages between self esteem and
adaptive functioning throughout development
- Implications for interventions designed to enhance youth self
esteem are discussed
Concluding comments