Quiz 5
pluralistic ignorance
error of assuming that no one in a group perceives things as we do
Smaller rewards lead to greater attitudinal change due to the ________ effect.
ess-leads-to-more
subliminal processing
way that the human brain deals with very low-strength stimuli, so low that the person has no conscious awareness
Neutral conditioning
food and bell at the same time
positive conditioning
to add something
Reactance
A motive to protect or restore one's sense of freedom. Reactance arises when someone threatens our freedom of action.
According to the theory of planned behavior, what type of process precedes the decision to engage in a particular behavior?
A rational process
selective avoidance
A tendency to direct attention away from information that challenges existing attitudes. Such avoidance increases resistance to persuasion.
Which of the following can contribute to a person showing attitudinal change when confronted with a counter attitudinal message?
Ego-depletion
Which of the following can contribute to a person showing attitudinal change when confronted with a counterattitudinal message?
Ego-depletion
IAT
Implicit Association Test
Which form of conditioning causes many children and young teens to hold political, religious, and social views that are very similar to those of their parents?
Instrumental conditioning
hypocrisy
Pretending to have feelings, beliefs, or virtues that one does not have
one study employing the IAT suggests that the gender gap in wages may be linked to implicit attitudes. Which of the following findings support this idea?
Reaction times are faster for associations between men and wealth.
Which of the following examples BEST illustrates a situation where there is a gap between our attitudes and behavior?
Roz tells her new boyfriend that she is extremely excited to see the new James Bond movie, even though she truly dreads seeing that film.
Sherif attends a conference focused on evolutionary psychology. At the conference, he listens to a lecture about how inherent impulses underlie many of our day-to-day behaviors. Which of the following is an example of heuristic processing that Sherif might experience during this lecture?
Sherif decides to trust the speaker because the speaker is an expert
less-leads-to-more effect
The fact that offering individuals small rewards for engaging in counterattitudinal behavior often produces more dissonance, and so more attitude change, than offering them larger rewards.
selective exposure
The process by which individuals screen out messages that do not conform to their own biases.
reference group
a social group that serves as a point of reference in making evaluations and decisions
ego depletion
a state, produced by acts of self-control, in which people lack the energy or resources to engage in further acts of self-control
classical conditioning
a type of learning in which one learns to link two or more stimuli and anticipate events
If, as Arkes and Tetlock have speculated, Jesse Jackson were to "fail" an IAT that asks about his attitudes toward African Americans, it is because ________.
although he does not endorse negative stereotypes of African Americans in the culture, he has good knowledge of those stereotypes
behavioral intentions
an individual's plans to perform the behavior in question
implicit attitudes
attitudes that influence a person's feelings and behavior at an unconscious level
Marshall wants to pledge Theta Phi fraternity. He may well ________ publicly, believing active member decision makers will hear of his views. He is, in private, ________ to express those same views.
badmouth other fraternities; unlikely
rational process
conflict as an opportunity to resolve problems and reach family goals
According to the elaboration-likelihood and the heuristic-systematic models of persuasion, the two key factors that will determine whether we engage in effortful or effortless processing of information are one's ________.
capacity to process information and level of motivation
Upon learning that soda sales are in decline, a soda manufacturer, ABC Fizz, decides upon a new advertising tactic. Using demographic data, ABC Fizz discovers that 30-34-year- olds show a strong affiliation with Apple products. In the new advertising campaign, the company repeatedly pairs images of its soda with 30-34-year-olds using Apple products. Before long, they find that sales of their soda increase within this demographic. This is an example of ________ conditioning.
classical
subliminal conditioning
classical conditioning that occurs in the absence of conscious awareness of the stimuli involved
Students entering college who had social networks with more ________ attitudes toward affirmative action exhibited ________ change over the following 2 months
diverse; more
social comparison
evaluating one's abilities and opinions by comparing oneself with others
A CEO of a Midwestern company gave a press briefing and espoused some fairly restrictive regulations aimed at reducing carbon emissions and water pollution. His excellent credibility was probably due to the fact that ________.
he is CEO of a chemical company
Patty is a politician running for public office. At a town hall meeting, she claims that she has always fought for and will continue to fight for the LGBT community. At this, a person who does not support Patty stands up and claims that Patty only began to support marriage equality after the majority of U.S. states had legalized same-sex marriage. This person is trying to generate feelings of ________.
hypocrisy
self-affirmation
in the context of dissonance theory, a way of reducing dissonance by reminding oneself of one or more of one's positive attributes
Trivialization
make (something) seem less important, significant, or complex than it really is.
We hold values similar to, and identify with, ________.
members of our reference group(s)
According to the theory of planned behavior, our behavioral intentions are determined in part by our perceptions of whether others will approve or disapprove of the behavior, our perceptions of our ability to perform the behavior, and ________.
our attitudes toward a particular behavior
Erin works at a think tank in Washington, DC. She is a progressive liberal and, as most of her colleagues are around her age and come from similar backgrounds, she makes the assumption that her colleagues are too, even though a large percentage of them do not identify as such. Erin has fallen susceptible to ________.
pluralistic ignorance
Assume you have a negative stereotype of fraternity/sorority members as "stuck-up." Given an IAT with photos labeled "fraternity member" or "independent," and paired with the word "bad" or "good," your responses to the fraternity member/bad combination would likely be ________ than to independent/bad combinations.
quicker
insufficient justification
reduction of dissonance by internally justifying one's behavior when external justification is "insufficient"
Irene considers herself to be an environmentalist, and she wants to reduce her carbon footprint. One day, her husband comes home and says that he sold their electric lawn mower and used the money, plus some savings, to by a new, powerful gasoline-powered mower. Irene is shocked, but when she uses the mower, she decides that she really likes it. This makes her feel uneasy, so she reminds herself of all the good environmental work she has done in the past. Irene is engaging in ________.
self-affirmation
A film studio pairs with a brewery and exclusively includes scenes of people drinking this beer or the beer standing in the background of scenes throughout many of its summer blockbusters. Sales of the brewery's line of beers skyrocket. The increased sales were likely due to ________ conditioning.
subliminal
Theory of Planned Behavior
the idea that people's intentions are the best predictors of their deliberate behaviors, which are determined by their attitudes toward specific behaviors, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control
Having not met any members of a new social group, you hear a person expressing negative views of that group. Your attitude toward the new group would not be likely influenced by hearing this negative message if ________.
the person expressing the attitude is someone you dislike and see as dissimilar to yourself
Having not met any members of a new social group, you hear a person expressing negative views of that group. Your attitude toward the new group would not be likely influenced by hearing this negative message if ________.
the person expressing the attitude is someone you dislike and see as dissimilar to yourself
unconscious processing
the tendency to make conclusions and decisions without thinking about them
Which of the following is usually true of a persuasive communicator?
An attractive communicator is more persuasive than an unattractive communicator.