Utilisateur
unconscious, effortless and conscious and intentional
Mental shortcuts used to form judgments or make decisions
How we select, interpret, and use the information to make judgments about ourselves and the world
using information that is easiest to get and getting rid of other information…
Positivity bias: our tendency to perceive people we don't know in a positive light…
Negativity bias: anything in the social world we pay attention to and more than the positives.
-Intuition
-Availability
-Representativeness
-Base-rate fallacy
-Anchoring and adjustment
-Counterfactual thinking/simulation
The location of our bodies, position, and speed of movement, movement affect social cognition.
influence and affect our social cognition. Sometimes a happy mood can have an effect that we are more vulnerable to persuasion and stereotypes.
Tendency to estimate the likelihood of an event based on the ease with which instances of it are "available" in memory. Heuristics involve automatic processing.
-organizes social information
-simplifying the social world
-fill in the blanks
-impeded the processing of information
-can skew and bias opinions/thinking
our brains are obsessed with being social, we may spend more time thinking about other people than everything else combined. Brian puts being social above everything else. Areas of the brain that process social information differently than everything else.
Beliefs about others, their traits, and their goals.
Our memory, inferences, and information about ourselves.
Behaviours expected of people in particular occupations or social positions.
Scripts we have for well-known situations; help us prepare for the expected sequence of events.
Rules about processing information.
Our assumption that certain traits and behavior go together.
-The ease of impression formation
-Beliefs about how traits go together
-The impact of mood
-Facial expression
-Appearance
-A single action
Tendency for the information presented early to have a greater impact on judgments than information presented later.
We are more strongly influenced by negative traits than we are by positive traits.
after we go through an event we may start to think about the scene differently than it actually happened…
Upward counterfactual thinking- imagining something better, if we do have control upwards.
Downward counterfactual thinking- thinking about things worse than they actually are, used if we have 0% control over a situation.
-Perceptual confirmation (if you believe in something you perceive everything that they do to fit their beliefs…)
-Belief perseverance
-Self-fulfilling prophecy
-Interpret ambiguous events in line with our beliefs
-Look for information to support our view
-Disregard information that contradicts it
Tendency for us to see things in line with their own beliefs.
-Claimed hearing voices; diagnosed with schizophrenia
-Once in the hospital, acted completely normal
-Professional staff continued to see them as "sick" and interpreted their normal behavior as symptoms of schizophrenia.
-Perceptual confirmation helps explain why people can watch the same event but see it in very different ways.
Tendency to see a correlation between two events when in reality no such association exists.
-We tend to notice events that support our beliefs while ignoring those that do not.
-We tend to see two relatively rare attributes as associated, even if we do not expect that
these things should go together.
-how we present information…
twist information to make it fit with what we want to hear…
We take information as is either taken pos or neg…
wanting to do something but as time gets closer to doing it you do not want it anymore,
focusing on all the positives that come from doing the behavior.
using negative things that come if we don't do that behavior.
Tend to see ourselves as less likely than others to suffer bad events in the future.
Our tendency to be positively biased when it comes to our looks and talents.
Unrealistically positive view of the self.
thinking we have more control over things than we do.
Tendency to hold onto the beliefs even though they have been proven unreliable.
Process by which our expectations about a person leads us to elicit behavior that confirms them.
-Your goal is to be liked by the target person
-Targets are aware of your expectations
-Your assumptions are highly inaccurate
-We are better at judging friends and acquaintances than judging strangers.
-We can form more accurate impressions when we are motivated to be accurate and open-minded as well as when we are aware of biases.
-Self-fulfilling prophecies can lead to positive effects.
Collectivistic cultures focus less on personality traits in their understanding of themselves and
others…
most researchers believe we have two minds automatic and deliberate…
-Your country of origin influences what is known and easily brought to mind
-Cultures value different things
-Unrealistic optimism is found less in collectivistic cultures
Define self in terms of contexts and relationships with others
Have more difficulty identifying a figure embedded in a larger background; are better able to perceive the whole image as one holistic figure
Have a greater ability to identify a target figure and separate it from its larger background.
the physical outcome of a situation being influenced by our thinking, either positively or negatively.