Psycholgoy-Chapter 20-Attitudes and Social Influence
Brainwashing
extreme form of attitude change; uses peer pressure, physical suffering, threats, rewards, guilt, and intensive indoctrination
Self-Concept
how we see or describe ourselves; our total perception of ourselves
Internalization
incorporating the values, ideas, and standards of others as a part of oneself
Prejudice
preconcieved attidues toward a person or group that have been formed without sufficent evidence and are not easily changed
Attitude
predisposition to act, think, and feel in particular ways toward a class of people, objects, or an idea
Identification
seeing oneself as similar to another person or group and accepting the attitudes of another person or group as one's own
Sleeper Effect
the delayed impact on attitude change of a persuasive communication
Persuasion
the direct attempt to influence attitudes
Self-Justification
the need to rationalize one's attitude and behavior
Counterattitudinal Behavior
the process of taking a public position that contradicts one's private attitude
Cognitive Dissonance
the uncomfortable feeling when a person experiences contradictory or conflicting thoughts, attitdues, beliefs, or feelings
Discrimination
the unqueal treatment of individuals on the basis of their race, ethnic group, age, gender, or membership in another category rather than on the basis of individual characteristics
Self-fulfilling prophecy
a belief, prediction, or expectation that operates to bring about its own fulfillment
Boomerang Effect
a change in attitude or behavior opposite of the one desired bt the persuader
Compliance
a change of behavior to avoid discomfort or rejection and to gain approval
Inoculation Effect
developing resistance to persuassion by exposing a person to arguments that challenge his or her beliefs so that he or she can practice defending them