Chapter 4 – Perceiving Persons

Perceiving Persons

30 cards   |   Total Attempts: 188
  

Cards In This Set

Front Back
Social Perception:
The process by which people come to understand one another
What are situational scripts?
Situational Scripts: expectations of what’s likely to occur in a given situationWe sometimes see what we expect to see in a particular situation.We use the social situation to explain the causes of behavior.
What specific aspects of nonverbal behavior contribute to our social perceptions?
Nonverbal Behavior:
Behavior Evidence
Nonverbal Behavior
1) Detecting emotion
2) Situational cues
3) Body language
4) Eye contact/ gaze
5) Touch
Behavior that reveals a person’s feelings without words, through facial expressions, body language, and vocal cues.
Central Traits:
Traits that exert a powerful influence on overall impressions.
Why is Heider credited as the “father of attribution theory”? What did he contribute to our understanding of this process?
Attribution Theory:
Fritz Heider (1958)
The “father of attribution theory”
A group of theories that describe how people explain the causes of behaviorWe observe, analyze, and explain other’s behavior in terms of attributions that are either:
Clearly distinguish between internal (Personal Attribution:) and external (Situational Attribution:) attributions.
Personal Attribution to internal characteristics of an actor, such as ability, personality, mood, or effort.
internal (personal, dispositional), -OR-


Situational Attribution to factors external to an actor, such as the task, other people, or luck.
external (situational)
Be familiar with Jones & Davis’ (1965) Correspondent Inference
“Correspondent Inference Theory”
People try to infer whether others’ actions correspond to dispositions or not.ChoiceExpectedness of behaviorIntended effects (a.k.a. non-common effects)
Theory and Kelley’s Covariation Theory.
Co-variation Principle: A principle of attribution theory that holds that people attribute behavior to factors that are present when a behavior occurs and are absent when it does not.

Consensus
Comparison across people: How do others react to the same stimulus?
Consistency
Comparison across time: How does the person react to this stimulus on different occasions?
Distinctiveness
Comparison across situations/stimuli: How does the person react to different stimuli?
Availability Heuristic:
The tendency to estimate the liklihood that an event will occur by how easily instances of it come to mind.
Base-rate Fallacy:
The finding that people are relatively insensitive to consensus information presented in the form of numerical base rates.
Counterfactual Thinking:
The tendency to imagine alternative events or outcomes that might have occurred by did not.
False-consensus (uniqueness?) Effect:
The tendency for people to overestimate the extent to which others share their opinions ,attributes, and behaviors.
Fundamental Attribution Error (FAE):
The tendency to focus on the role of the personal causes and underestimate the impact of situations on other people’s behavior.
Actor-observer difference
We tend to see other people's behaviors as being caused by their personal disposition, whilst perceiving our own actions as due to situational factors.
self-serving bias
A self-serving bias occurs when people attribute their successes to internal or personal factors but attribute their failures to situational factors beyond their control