Impression Formation Flashcards

1
Q

Nature of Impression Formation

A

Way in which we form impressions and attribute specific characters to them

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2
Q

Configural Model

ASCH (1946)

A

Overall consistent impression
Central traits determine how attributes combine, determine how peripheral traits interplay

Read a list of attributes, ppt give impression

  • warm- certain things to be right, sincere in an argument, like to see point won
  • cold- snobbish, believes set apart from others, calculating

Warm/cold traits influential on overall impression compared to peripheral polite/blunt

Primacy effect- first terms set direction, subsequent terms are related to the first

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3
Q

Cognitive Algebra

ANDERSON (1965,1978)

A

Forming impressions of others underpins judgements about safety and danger- whether to avoid or approach someone

Adaptive behaviour… evaluative process- assign subjective value to each trait observed

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4
Q

How are evaluations combined?

A

Summative- total score to see if good (+) or bad (-)

Averaging- few strong traits can influence impressions more than a lot of mild traits

Weighted averaging- certain traits given greater weighting in certain contexts

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5
Q

Negativity bias

A

Negative traits have greater impact on impressions

Negative information is remembered more

Negative traits are more predictive of voting behaviour

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6
Q

Halo effect

EAGLY ET AL (1991)

A

Attribute positive qualities to attractive people

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7
Q

OLSON & MARSHUETZ (2005)

A

21 students exposed to attractive/unattractive faces- judged whether positive or negative

Reaction time faster to recognise attractive faces

Implicit positive attitudes towards attractive faces

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8
Q

Baby-faced faces

A

Larger eyes, higher eyebrows, rounder faces, smaller chin, thicker lips

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9
Q

KEATING, RANDALL & KENDRIC (1999)

A

51 ppts

Baby faced Kennedy perceived as less powerful

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10
Q

Cultural Differences

ZEBROWITZ ET AL (2012)

A

30 US men and 40 indigenous Bolivian men rated photos

Culture specific methods

Strong agreement on attractiveness and baby-faces for own

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11
Q

Errors in impression

RULE (2013)

A

Multiple choice quiz

50% complied and stopped working after 5 mins, 50% cheated

Other ppts rated target faces on trustworthiness

Ratings of trustworthiness were unrelated to whether target cheated

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12
Q

Political votes

BALLEW & TODOROV (2007)

A

Select competent winners / runners up after 100ms, 250ms and no time constraint

Select actual winner as being more competent and all exposure durations

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13
Q

CEO hiring

GRAHAM (2014)

A

Matched CEOs and non-CEOs

Which person is more: competent, trustworthy, likeable, attractive

More likely to select CEO as more competent and attractive- positively correlated with CEOs pay

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14
Q

Jury verdicts

PORTER TEN BRINKS & GUTAW (2010)

A

Photo of accused, written descriptive of the crime- severe or mild

Severe crimes= guilty verdicts formed less on evidence if accuser had untrustworthy looking face

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15
Q

Interpersonal and context factors

A
Clothing
The perceiver
The context 
Culture, race and ethnicity
Knowledge
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16
Q

Halo effect in contexts

GLICK (2005)

A

Does sexiness affect perceived competence in low and high status jobs

Video of woman (receptionist or manager) dressed in a) trousers, b) skirt

Rated attractiveness, sexiness, competence

=attractiveness same for A and B, sexiness higher for B

17
Q

LIVINGSTON & PEARCE (2009)

A

For black CEOs, baby-facedness was positively correlated with perceived earnings

18
Q

OLIVOLA ET AL (2012)

A

Republicans= accuracy linked to being elected- looking for republican associated with greater chance the candidate won in that state

Physical appearance more influential to republican- less political knowledge

19
Q

Cognitive short-cuts

A

Knowledge about peoples characteristics= cognitive representation

‘Webs of information’ predict a persons behaviour

Impressions guide our actions in a chaotic social world- adaptive