attitudes (continued)

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Attitudes (continued)

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Attitudes (continued). Ways to Reduce Dissonance. TECHNIQUESEXAMPLES Change your attitude“I don’t really need to be on a diet.” Change your perception of the behavior“I hardly ate any mousse.” Add consonant cognitions“Chocolate mousse is very nutritious.” - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Attitudes (continued)

Attitudes (continued)

Page 2: Attitudes (continued)

Ways to Reduce Dissonance

• TECHNIQUES EXAMPLES

• Change your attitude “I don’t really need to be on a diet.”

• Change your perception• of the behavior “I hardly ate any mousse.”

• Add consonant cognitions “Chocolate mousse is very nutritious.”

• Minimize the importance “I don’t care if I’m • of the conflict. overweight— life is short;

mousse is great.

• Reduce perceived choice. “I had no other choice; it was prepared for the occasion.

Page 3: Attitudes (continued)

Insufficient justification

• Aronson & Carlsmith (1963)• Forbidden toy study• IV: Mild threat (I won’t like it) or severe threat

(will be punished)• DV: later liking for the toy• Results: Those faced with a mild threat liked the

toy LESS than those faced with a more severe threat. Those in the mild threat group had “insufficient justification” for their behavior and therefore internalized the attitude. (severe threat group could justify)

Page 4: Attitudes (continued)

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.”• Participants in severe initiation group rated

the discussion more favorably than those in the mild initiation or control group.

Page 5: Attitudes (continued)

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

Page 6: Attitudes (continued)

Cognitive dissonance theory

• Generated a lot of research

• Explanations for effects are still being debated, but inconsistency appears to be important.

• If time: Video clip on effects of dissenting in a group (Johnny Rocco case)

Page 7: Attitudes (continued)

Persuasion

Discussion of Cialdini chapters

Page 8: Attitudes (continued)

Two routes to persuasionPetty & Cacioppo (1981)

• Peripheral route: automatic responses based on superficial cues (e.g., heuristics, moods)

• Central route: Requires thoughtful, effortful

processing. Receiver must have the ability

and motivation to take this route.

Page 9: Attitudes (continued)

Central route to persuasion

• Attend to message • Comprehend message• Mentally rehearse message arguments and

conclusions (establish a link between the issue and recommended responses)

• Leads to retention.Yale Attitude Change Approach (Hovland): This

view assumed that people are attentive, active, critical, thoughtful recipients of messages.

Most likely when people are motivated, involved w/issue

Page 10: Attitudes (continued)

Peripheral route

• More common when people are not involved, not motivated to attend to the message, tired, distracted, etc.

Page 11: Attitudes (continued)

• We’ll focus on the peripheral route– Communicator– Message

Page 12: Attitudes (continued)

Communicator

• Several characteristics make a communicator more persuasive

• Finding: National Enquirer or New England Journal of Medicine

• Credibility– Cues to expertise, competence (dress, milieu,

title)E.g., type of speech

Page 13: Attitudes (continued)

Erickson et al., 1978

• Evaluate courtroom testimony• IV: Witness speaks in straightforward or

hesitating manner• DV: Evaluations of the competence and

credibility of the witness• Results: Witnesses who used

straightforward speech were rated as more credible and competent than those who used hesitant speech.

Page 14: Attitudes (continued)

Communicator

• Physical attractiveness– Halo effect: If attractive also viewed as more

honest, talented, kind, intelligent, etc.– Handsome men on trial for criminal offenses

received lighter sentences than those who were less handsome.

– Attractive people are more likely to receive help.

Page 15: Attitudes (continued)

Communicator

• Similarity– We like people who are similar to us.– IV: hippie or conservative dress– DV: Give dime to make a phone call– Results: Students more likely to give the dime

when the experimenter was dressed in a style similar to their own.

– Salespeople use this strategy. Examples?

Page 16: Attitudes (continued)

Message

• Appeals to emotion– Fear or scare tactics

• Religious groups • Drugs and AIDS • Dandruff, or bad breath, or ring around the collar. • Parents may use fear tactics

Page 17: Attitudes (continued)
Page 18: Attitudes (continued)

Leventhal studies

• High fear-arousing messages lead to attitude change IF they also include specific instructions about how to avoid the danger.

• Driving safety films that recommend seatbelts are most effective when they show close-ups of broken bones and bloody accident victims than when they show controlled collisions involving dummies and then show person buckling up.

Page 19: Attitudes (continued)

Positive emotions persuasion

• Positive emotions also can influence our views. "luncheon technique“

• Razran: Studies found that subjects showed a greater preference for people and things they experienced while they were eating.

Page 20: Attitudes (continued)

Positive emotions

• Razran “luncheon technique”• IV : Presented some political statements

while subjects were eating and other political

statements while subjects were not eating.• DV: Attitude change from Time 1 to Time 2• Results: Subjects changed to agree more with

the statements only if they had been presented

while they were eating. (Pavlov, classical conditioning)

Page 21: Attitudes (continued)

Case study: Jim Jones’ and the Peoples Temple

• Extreme case of persuasion

• Convinced 911 followers to drink cups of a strawberry drink laced with tranquilizers, painkillers, and a lethal dose of cyanide.

• Why?

Page 22: Attitudes (continued)

Background

• People's Temple: Cult based in the San Francisco area in the 70's and most of its recruits were poor and uneducated.

• Led by Jim Jones --who was seen as an all-knowing spiritual leader. Moved group to Guyana, South America.

• 1978 when a congressman (Leo J. Ryan) went to investigate the cult

• Ryan and 3 members of his fact finding team were killed by a Jonestown member as they tried to leave Jonestown by plane.

• Some had tried to leave w/Ryan. Jones paranoid (as was Koresh). Commit revolutionary suicide. Die rather than participate in what felt was politically wrong. Refuse capitalism in support of socialism

Page 23: Attitudes (continued)

Social psychological principles at work?

• Consistency and commitment– Make public commitment– Recruitment strategy

Page 24: Attitudes (continued)
Page 25: Attitudes (continued)

• Foot-in-the-door technique: A two-step compliance technique in which an influencer prefaces the real request by first getting a person to comply with a much smaller request.

Page 26: Attitudes (continued)

• Freedman & Fraser (1966)• IV : First asked or did not ask to put a 3 inch• square sign reading "Be a safe driver" in their• window.• DV: Whether agreed to place a large ugly• billboard ("Drive Carefully) on their front lawn.• Results: Only 17% agreed when the large• request had not been prefaced by the smaller• one, but 76% agreed when they had first• complied with the smaller request.

Page 27: Attitudes (continued)

• Jones used with followers– 10% tithe– Practice suicide drills

Page 28: Attitudes (continued)

Communicator

• Charismatic– “psychic readings”

Page 29: Attitudes (continued)

Emotional, vivid message

• Trust the all-knowing leader

• Be a part of the family

Page 30: Attitudes (continued)

Audience

• Most susceptible include young (< 25 yrs.) and people facing a crisis/turning point

Page 31: Attitudes (continued)

Group isolation

• Group isolation: The cult is isolated from other support systems; other members define reality.

• Principle of Social Proof (Cialdini) : People use the behavior of similar others as guidelines for what to do, especially in novel or ambiguous situations.

Page 32: Attitudes (continued)

Nature of Persuasion

• Not inherently good or bad. Can be used in many ways – for positive, negative, or neutral ends.