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Attitudes

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Title: Attitudes


1
Chapter 6
  • Attitudes

2
What is an Attitude?
  • A positive, negative, or mixed reaction to a
    person, object, or idea expressed at some level
    of intensity.

3
How Attitudes Are Measured Self-Report Measures
  • Self-report measures are direct and
    straightforward, but sometimes attitudes are too
    complex for a single question.
  • Attitude Scale A multiple-item questionnaire
    designed to measure a persons attitude toward
    some object.
  • e.g., Likert Scale
  • Bogus Pipeline A phony lie-detector device that
    is sometimes used to get respondents to give
    truthful answers to sensitive questions.

4
How Attitudes Are Measured Covert Measures
  • Observable behavior
  • Facial Electromyograph (EMG) An electronic
    instrument that records facial muscle activity
    associated with emotions and attitudes.
  • Neuroscience research ongoing
  • Appears attitudes may be measurable by electrical
    brain activity

5
How Attitudes are Formed
  • Our most cherished attitudes most often form due
    to exposure to
  • Attitude objects
  • History of rewards and punishments
  • Attitudes of family, friends, enemies, etc.
  • Social and cultural context
  • Personal experiences
  • Clearly, attitudes are formed through basic
    processes of learning but how much do they
    influence behavior?

6
Attitudes in Context
  • Theory of planned behavior attitudes toward a
    specific behavior combine with subjective norms
    and perceived control to influence a persons
    actions

7
Strength of the Attitude
  • Why do some attitudes have more influence on
    behavior?
  • Depends on attitudes importance or strength
  • Why are some attitudes stronger than others?
  • Because of our genetic make-up?
  • Does it directly affect ones own outcomes and
    self-interests?
  • Is it related to deeply held philosophical,
    political, and religious values?
  • Is it of concern to ones close friends, family,
    and social ingroups?

8
Factors That Indicatethe Strength of an Attitude
  • The more well informed on a topic, the more
    consistent behavior is with attitude
  • Not only amount of information, but also how that
    information was acquired
  • An attitude can be strengthened by an attack
    against it from a persuasive message
  • Strong attitudes are highly accessible to
    awareness, how quickly and easily they are
    brought to mind.

9
Two Routes to Persuasion
  • Central Route Person thinks carefully about a
    message.
  • Influenced by the strength and quality of the
    message
  • Peripheral Route Person does not think
    critically about the contents of a message.
  • Influenced by superficial cues

10
The Central Route (contd)
  • Assumption that the recipients are attentive,
    active, critical, and thoughtful.
  • Assumption is correct only some of the time.
  • When it is correct, the persuasiveness of the
    message depends on the strength of the messages
    content.
  • The central route is a thoughtful process.
  • But not necessarily an objective one

11
The Peripheral Route
  • People are persuaded on the basis of superficial,
    peripheral cues.
  • Message is evaluated through the use of
    simple-minded heuristics.
  • People are also influenced by attitude-irrelevant
    factors.

12
What Makes an Effective Source?
  • Believable sources must be credible sources.
  • To be seen as credible, the source must have two
    distinct characteristics
  • Competence or expertise
  • Trustworthiness
  • How likable is the communicator?
  • Two factors influence a sources likability
  • The similarity between the source and the
    audience
  • The physical attractiveness of the source

13
Is the Source MoreImportant Than the Message?
  • It depends
  • How personally relevant is the message for the
    recipient?

14
What Makes an Effective Message?
  • How should the argument be presented to maximize
    its strength?
  • Are longer messages better?
  • If peripheral, the longer the message, the more
    valid it must be.
  • If central, message length is a two-edged sword.
  • Does presentation order matter?

15
Subliminal Influence
16
Regulatory Fit
  • To what extent does the message meet the
    psychological needs of the audience?
  • Does the message fit the frame of mind of the
    audience and feel right?
  • Promotion-oriented vs. prevention-oriented

17
Forewarning and Resistance
  • Advanced knowledge allows time to develop
    counterarguments.
  • Inoculation hypothesis
  • Being forewarned elicits a motivational reaction.
  • Psychological reactance
  • Effects of forewarning depends on personal
    importance of message.

18
Cognitive DissonanceTheory The Classic Version
  • We are motivated by a desire for cognitive
    consistency.
  • Cognitive Dissonance Theory Inconsistent
    cognitions arouse psychological tension that
    people become motivated to reduce.
  • Can lead to irrational and sometimes maladaptive
    behavior

19
Alternative Routes to Self-Persuasion
  • Self-Perception Theory Self-persuasion through
    observation of own behavior.
  • Impression Management Theory What matters is not
    a motive to be consistent but rather a motive to
    appear consistent.
  • Self-Affirmation Theory Dissonance situations
    create a threat to the self.
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