Chapter 7: attitudes
affectively based attitude
attitude based more on people's feelings and values than on their beliefs about the nature of an attitude object
Behavioral based Attitudes
attitude based on observations of how one behaves toward an object
Fear-Arosuing Communication
Persuasive message that attempts to change people's attitudes by arousing their fears
Elaboration Likelihood Model
a model that explains two ways in which persuasive communications can cause attitude change
Yale attitude change approach
a study of certain conditions under which people are mosr likely to change their attitudes in response to persuasive messages, focusingon the osurce of the communication the nature of the communication, and the nature of the audience.
Heuristic-Systematic Model of persuasion
an explanation of the two ways in which perduasive communications can cause attitude change: either systematically processing the merits of the arguments or using menta; shortcuts or heuristics
Cognitively base Attitude
attitude based primarly on people's beliefs about the properties ofan attitude object. (how good does it work, what are the mileages, etc)
Implicit Attitudes
attitudes that exist outside of conscios awareness
Explicit Attitudes
attitudes that we consciously endorse and can easily report
How is attitude accessibility measured
by the speed with which people can report how they feel about the object
Attitude
evaluatios of people, objects, and ideas
Attitude inoculation
making people immune to attempts to change their ttitudes by initially exposing theem to small doses of the arguments against their position
Persusive communication
message advocaing a particuar side of an issue
Peripheral Route to persuasion
people do not elaborae on the arguements in a persuasive communication but are instead swayed by moree superfical cues (the way the speaker looks, how famous they are, how smart they look)
Central Route to Persuasion
people have the ability and motivation to elaborate on a persuasive communication, listening carefully, and thinking deeply about the arguments
Theory of Planned behavior
people's intentions are the best predictos of their deliberate behaviors. These are determined by their attitudes toward specific behaviors, subjective norms, and perceived behavioral control.
gender roles
socital beliefs-such as those conveyed by medica and other sources regarding how men and women are expected to behave
Attitude accessibility
the strenght of the association between an attitude object and a person's evalution of that object
Reactance Theory
when peolpe feel their freedom to perform a certain behavior is threatened, an unpleasant state of resistance is aroused, which they can reduce by performing the prohibited behavior
Sublimial Messages
words or pictures that are not consciously perceived but may nevertheless influence judgements, attitudes, and behaviors.