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AttitudeBehavior Relations

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Primed (mentally activates a concept, made accessible) concept of elderly. ... Behavioral consequences of priming men to view women as sexual objects. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: AttitudeBehavior Relations


1
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • First Generation Whether
  • To what extent, if at all, are attitudes
    predictive of behavior?
  • Second Generation When
  • Under what conditions do what kinds of attitudes
    of what kinds of individuals predict what kinds
    of behavior?
  • Third Generation How

2
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • First Generation
  • The LaPiere study and its implications for the
    field. Remember Wicker (1969). Remember Lewin.
  • Campbells situational threshold model

3
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Assume moderately unfavorable attitude
  • Low threshold High Thold
  • LaPiere reject accept
  • Campbell accept reject
  • pseudo-inconsistency
  • true inconsistency

4
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Campbells take home point
  • The way the attitude is expressed depends on
    certain situational pressures. But the same
    latent acquired behavioral disposition or
    attitude mediates both verbal and overt
    behavioral responses.
  • Implication that the reported failure of
    attitudes to predict behavior represented
    pseudo-inconsistencies that should not
    influence our construal of AB relations.

5
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Second Generation When
  • Under what conditions do what kinds of attitudes
    of what kinds of individuals predict what kinds
    of behavior?
  • Rationale identifying moderating variables
    contributes to our understanding of the processes
    involved in going from attitudes to behavior.

6
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Conditions Situational moderators (normative
    concerns)
  • Theory of reasoned action and theory of planned
    behavior (Fishbein Ajzen)
  • Assumptions people are quite rational and make
    systematic use of info available to them. When an
    appropriate measure of intention is obtained, it
    provides the most accurate prediction of
    behavior. Goal of reasoned action model to
    understand and predict social behavior.

7
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • BI and B Relations regulated by BI
  • Measures must be specific and in correspondence.
  • Brief time interval between measurement of BI and
    observation of B.
  • B under persons volitional control.
  • the longer the interval, the more likely Att
    will exert direct influence on B. Intentions less
    stable across time than Atts.

8
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Determinants of BI Attitude and SN, and relative
    importance.
  • Relationship to underlying belief structures.
  • BBI
  • BI Aactw1 SNw2
  • Aact Bi x ai (summed, i1 to N)
  • SN NBi x MCi (summed, i1 to N)
  • External variables Link to B moderated by Aact,
    SN, and BI.

9
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Bowman Fishbein (1978)
  • Concerns about Reasoned Action
  • Scope the approach does not address cases where
    we want to know if a global attitude predicts a
    specific behavior (e.g., symbolic racism and
    opposition to school busing). Represents a
    measurement solution to A-B relations that does
    not deal with such cases.

10
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Abelson It seems like throwing out the baby
    and clinging tenaciously to the bathwater.
  • Adopting Aact represents a loss in explanatory
    power, but a gain in the precision of measurement
    and prediction.
  • 2. Are the effects of A and SN on B fully
    mediated by BI, or can they influence B
    separately from their influence on BI?
    Regulatory role played by BI.

11
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • 3. Instability of BI its strength may lie in
    its ability to predict immediate behavior.
    Otherwise, more dependent on social situations
    and contingencies than A. If As more stable and
    stronger than BI, then As and past B should have
    more predictive power as time interval increases.
  • 4. Limited degree of volitional control over
    behavior. Less control if B depends on the
    presence of appropriate opportunities or adequate
    resources (time, , skill).

12
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Other concerns
  • Interrelationship between A and Sn.
    Multicolinearity problem?
  • BI and B correlating two measures of the same
    attitude? Given specificity of measures, are you
    correlating behavioral measures of attitude with
    a behavioral self-report measure?
  • What about effects of behavioral beliefs about
    alternative behaviors? Increase predictability.
    Having an abortion vs. having the child (Smetana
    Adler)

13
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Theory of Planned Behavior addition of perceived
    behavioral control the persons belief as to how
    easy or difficult performance of the behavior is
    likely to be.
  • Extension of reasoned action deals with Bs
    that are not under volitional control.
  • Armitage Conner (2001) meta analysis

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20
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • 2nd Generation of A-B relations research
  • Conditions (situational moderators)
  • Attitudes (predictor moderators)
  • Individuals (personal moderators)
  • Behavior (criterion moderators)

21
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Third Generation How
  • How and by what psychological mechanisms do
    attitudes guide behavior?
  • To improve the accuracy of prediction of specific
    action tendencies, it is necessary to examine the
    processes whereby attitudes guide behavior.
  • Deliberative (reasoned action/planned behavior)
    vs. automatic processing models (Fazios MODE
    model and other automatic activation models).

22
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Civilization advances by extending the number of
    operations we can perform without thinking about
    them. Alfred North Whitehead
  • Influence of attitudes on behavior is conscious
    and deliberate (reasoned action, planned
    behavior).
  • Example attitude strength study by Holland,
    Verplanken, Van Knippenberg (2002).

23
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Not direct evidence of process, but strong
    attitudes (evals retrieved from memory easier to
    retrieve) guide weak attitudes
    (attitudes-as-temporary constructions) follow.
  • Strong attitudes (more certain, personally
    relevant, etc.) less susceptible to survey
    context effects (Lavine, et al, 1998).

24
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • But there are times when behavior is more
    reflexive than reflective, and situational
    stimuli elicit B automatically.
  • Bargh, Chen, Burrows (1996)
  • language proficiency study perform sentence
    completion task (30 sets of 5 words each form
    grammatical English sentence using 4 of 5).

25
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • 2. For half, embedded within these 150 words,
    were many words stereotypically associated with
    the elderly gray, wrinkle, Florida, bingo.
    Primed (mentally activates a concept, made
    accessible) concept of elderly.
  • 3. Other half exposed to neutral words not
    associated with elderly. Thanked and thought
    study was over.

26
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • 4. 2nd E covertly timed how long it took each
    participant to walk from the threshold of the lab
    to the elevator down the hall.
  • H merely activating the concept of elderly would
    make those participants automatically mimic how
    they habitually behave around the elderly, and
    thus walk more slowly down the hallway.

27
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Key finding participants who were primed took 13
    seconds longer to walk to the elevator.
  • Presumably unaware of the priming effect.
  • Other exs. of automatic activation effects
  • ?activating traits of rudeness or intelligence
    led to people behaving more assertively or
    performing better on tests of general knowledge.

28
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • ?activating goal of achievement led to people
    persevering longer on difficult tasks.
  • ?(Dijksterhuis van Knippenberg, 1998)
  • Primed students either with a social category
    associated with intellectual accomplishment
    (professors), or with one noted for refined
    habits of mind (soccer hooligans).
  • Those primed with professor cues did better on
    test of general knowledge than those primed with
    cues associated with soccer hooligans.

29
Attitude-Behavior Relations
  • Rudman Borgida (1995) The afterglow of
    construct accessibility Behavioral consequences
    of priming men to view women as sexual objects.
  • Procedure
  • Pretests
  • Market research
  • Lexical decision task
  • Interview
  • Results
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