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Chapter 5
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality
Learning Goals
• Understand human perceptual processes
and how people form impressions of others
• Describe types of perceptual error and their
effects on information people get from their
environment
• Explain attribution processes and their
effects on perception and attitudes
Learning Goals (Cont.)
• Discuss the nature of attitudes, how they
form and how they change
• Explain the different views of human
personality development
• Discuss some dimensions of personality and
several personality types
• Recognize the effects of different cultures
on perception, attitudes, and personality
Chapter Overview
• Introduction
• Perception
• Attitudes
• Personality
• International Aspects of Perception,
Attitudes, and Personality
• Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and
Personality
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality
Perception Attitudes
Personality
Chapter 5
Perception
• A cognitive process: lets a person make
sense of stimuli from the environment
• Affects all senses: sight, touch, taste, smell,
hearing
• Includes inputs to person and choice of
inputs to which the person attends
• Stimulus sources: people, events, physical
objects, ideas
• Helps adaptation to a changing environment
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual process
– Target: object of the person’s perceptual
process
– Threshold: minimum information from target
for the person to notice the target
• Detection threshold: point at which person notices
something has changed in her or his environment
• Recognition threshold: point at which person can
identify the target or change in the target
See text book Figure 5.1
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual process (cont.)
– Target emerges from its surrounding context
sometimes slowly, sometimes quickly
– Quickly discriminate a high-contrast target
from its background; an ambiguous target takes
more time to see
– Contrast can come from the target's size, color,
loudness, or smell
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual process (cont.)
– People attend more quickly to positively valued
stimuli than to negatively valued stimuli
– Example: achievement-oriented employees
notice announcements about promotion
opportunities faster than an employee with less
achievement motivation
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual defense: shield self from
negatively valued stimuli
– Example: block out annoying sounds
– Organizational example: block some feedback
from a supervisor or coworker when it is
negative
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual errors: mistakes in the
perceptual process
– Perceptual set
• Beliefs about a target based on information about
the target or previous experiences with it
• Information about the target from any source
• Beliefs act like instructions for processing stimuli
from the target
Perception (Cont.)
• Perceptual errors (cont.)
– Stereotype: beliefs and perceived attributes
about a target based on the target’s group
– Examples
• American university students: energetic and
spontaneous
• Russian university students: orderly and obedient
Self-Perception:
A View of Self
• Self-perception: process by which people
develop a view of themselves
• Develops from social interaction within
different groups, including groups
encountered on the Internet
• Self-perception has three parts: self-
concept, self-esteem, self-presentation
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-concept:
– Set of beliefs people have about themselves
– View people hold of their personal qualities and
attributes
– Factors affecting a person's self-concept
• Observations of behavior
• Recall of past significant events
• Effect of the surrounding social context
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-concept (cont.)
– Observations of behavior
• People see their behavior, and their situation, in the
same way they see the behavior of other people
• Person believes the behavior occurred voluntarily:
concludes the behavior happened because of some
personal quality or attribute
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-concept (cont.)
– Observations of behavior (cont.)
• People learn about themselves by comparing
themselves to other people with similar qualities
• Example: you may want to assess your abilities to
hold a supervisory position. You compare yourself
to people with backgrounds similar to yours who
have had recent promotions
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-concept (cont.)
– Recall of past significant events and effect of
the surrounding social context
• Recall events important in their lives; not error free
• Tend to recall events they attribute to themselves
and not to a situation or other people
• Often overestimate their role in past events
• Place more weight on the effects of their behavior
and less on the surrounding situation or other people
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-esteem
– Emotional dimension of self-perception
– Positive and negative judgments people have of
themselves
– People with low self-esteem tend to be
unsuccessful; do not adapt well to stressful
events
– Those with high self-esteem have the opposite
experiences
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-awareness
– People differ in degree of self-awareness
– Two forms
• Private self-consciousness: behave according to
attend to inner feelings and standards
• Public self-consciousness: behave according to
social standard correct for the situation
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-presentation
– Behavioral strategies people use to affect how
others see them
– How they think about themselves
– Goals of self-presentation
• Affect other people's impressions to win their
approval
• Increase the person's influence in a situation
• Ensure that others have an accurate impression of
the person
Self-Perception:
A View of Self (Cont.)
• Self-presentation (cont.)
– Highly conscious of public image: change
behavior from situation to situation. Readily
conform to situational norms
– People who want others to perceive them in a
particular way behave consistently in different
situations. They act in ways they perceive as
true to themselves with little regard for the
norms of the situation
Social Perception:
A View of Others
• Social perception: process by which
people come to know and understand each
other
• Forming impression of a person: perceiver
first observes the person, the situation, and
the person's behavior
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Form a quick impression by making a snap
judgment about that person, or
• Make attributions and integrate the
attributions to form a final impression
• Confirmation biases lead the perceiver to
hold tenaciously to it
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Elements of social perception
– Three sets of clues help form the impression of
another person
• Person
• Situation surrounding the person
• Observed behavior of the person
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Elements of social perception (cont.)
– Developing first impressions
• Use different physical aspects of the person: height,
weight, hair color, eyeglasses
• Stereotypes based on physical features
– Thin men: tense, suspicious, stubborn
– Blond women: fun loving
– Neatly dressed people: responsible
• Stereotypes result from attributing qualities to
people based on previously formed perceptions
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Elements of social perception (cont.)
– Preconceptions about the situations in which
we see the behavior of other people
– Develop from experience with the same or
similar situations
– Situation raises expectations about behavior the
situation should cause
– Example: when two people are introduced, we
expect both parties to acknowledge the other
and probably to shake hands
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Attribution processes
– People use attribution processes to explain the
causes of behavior they see in others
– Begins with a quick personal attribution
followed by adjustment based on the
characteristics of the situation
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Personal attribution
– Characteristics of the person such as beliefs,
disposition, or personality, and not the
situation, caused the person's behavior
– Example: when you conclude that another
student spends many hours completing a
project because he likes to work hard or values
hard work, you are making a personal
attribution
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Situational attribution
– Aspects of the situation, not qualities of the
person, cause the person's behavior
– Example: a student worked hard because of the
reward of a good grade
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Perceiver uses three types of information
when forming an attribution
– Consensus information
– Distinctiveness information
– Consistency information
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Consensus information
– Observe other people in the same or a similar
situation
• If other people show the same behavior as the target
person, the situation caused the behavior
• If other people behave differently from the target
person, the person caused the behavior
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Distinctiveness information
– Observe the target person in a different
situation
• If the response is different in the new situation, the
situation caused the behavior
• If the response is the same, the person caused the
behavior
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Consistency information
– Observe the target person in a similar situation,
but at a different time
• High consistency: same behavior at both times
• Low consistency: different behavior at both times
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Combine consensus, distinctiveness, and
consistency information to form attribution
– Personal attribution: behavior high in
consistency; low in consensus and
distinctiveness
– Situational attribution: behavior high in
consensus and distinctiveness; low in
consistency
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Fundamental attribution error
– Observer underestimates situation as cause of
behavior; overestimates the as cause
– Explaining their behavior: tend to ascribe
causes to the situation, not to personal qualities
– Explaining other’s behavior: tend to ascribe its
causes to personal qualities, not the situation
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• False consensus
– Overestimate the degree to which others agree
with the person's view
– Reinforces the view the perceiver has of
another person
Social Perception:
A View of Others (Cont.)
• Integration of attributions to form final
impression: disposition of perceiver
– Effects of recent experiences: positive or
negative event just before meeting someone for
the first time can affect the impression of the
person
– Mood at time of first meeting:
• Positive impressions in a good mood
• Negative impressions in a bad mood
Attitudes
• An attitude is “a learned predisposition to
respond in a consistently favorable or
unfavorable manner with respect to a given
object”
• Attitude object: physical objects, issues,
ideas, events, people, places
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Parts of an attitude
– Cognitive: perceptions and beliefs about an
attitude object
– Affective: feelings about an attitude object
– Behavioral intentions: how the person wants
to behave and what a person says about an
attitude object
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Common work attitudes
– Organizational commitment
– Satisfaction
– Job involvement
• Play a role in employee turnover
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Some connection between attitudes and
behavior, although not strong
– People with strong attitudes about an object
will likely behave in accord with their attitude
– Strong positive attitudes about Macintosh©
computers leads to buying one
– Ardent followers of Jesse Jackson will likely
vote for him
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Attitude formation: affected by the
person’s beliefs about an object and the
amount and type of information the person
has about the object
– Perceives positive attributes: develops positive
attitude
– Perceives negative attributes: develops
negative attitude
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Attitude formation (cont.)
– Family upbringing
– Peer groups
– Work groups
– General social experiences
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Attitude change
– Something persuades the person to shift his or
her attitudes (persuasive communication)
– Norms of a social group can affect a person’s
attitude (social norms)
– Person becomes uncomfortable with some
aspects of her or his beliefs (cognitive
dissonance)
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Persuasive communication
– Advertising
– Tries to change cognitive part of attitude
– Assumes affective part will also change
– Attitude change process
• Win target’s attention
• Understand message
• Accept the influence
• Remember the message
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Social influence on attitudes
– People are embedded in social groups
– Feel pressures to conform to norms
– If person values membership in group, likely
will align attitudes with the group norms
Attitudes (Cont.)
• Cognitive dissonance
– Hold multiple beliefs or cognitions about an
attitude object
– Feel tension when discrepancies develop
– Motivated to reduce the tension
– Change one or more cognitions
– Other parts of attitude also change
Personality
• Set of traits, characteristics, and
predispositions of a person
• Usually matures and stabilizes by about age
30
• Affects how a person adjusts to different
environments
Personality Theories
• Cognitive theory: people develop their
thinking patterns as their life unfolds
• Learning theories: behavior patterns
develop from the social environment
• Biological theories: personality as
genetically inherited
Personality Theories (Cont.)
• Cognitive theory
– Develop thinking patterns as life unfolds
– Affects how the person interprets and
internalizes life's events
– Cognitive development stages
• Reflexive behavior of infant
• More complex modes of perception and
interpretation of events
– Neither driven by instincts nor unwittingly
shaped by environmental influences
Personality Theories (Cont.)
• Learning theories
– Learn behavior from social interaction with
other people
– Young child: early family socialization
– Continuously learn from social environment:
stable behavior forms the personality
– Uniqueness of each personality follows from
variability in social experiences
Personality Theories (Cont.)
• Biological theories
– Ethological theory
• Develop common characteristics as a result of
evolution
• Behavioral characteristics that have helped survival
over generations become inborn characteristics
Personality Theories (Cont.)
• Biological theories (cont.)
– Behavior genetics
• Individual's unique gene structure affects
personality development
• Personality develops from interactions between a
person's genetic structure and social environment
The Big-Five
Personality Dimensions
• Extroversion
– High: talkative, sociable
– Low: reserved, introverted
• Emotional stability
– High: calm, relaxed
– Low: worried, depressed
• Agreeableness
– High: cooperative, tolerant
– Low: rude, cold
The Big-Five
Personality Dimensions (Cont.)
• Conscientiousness
– High: dependable, thorough
– Low: sloppy, careless
• Openness to experience
– High: curious, intelligent
– Low: simple, conventional
Assess yourself on each dimension
Personality Types
• Locus of control: people control the
consequences of their actions or are
controlled by external factors
– External control: luck, fate, or powerful
external forces control one’s destiny
– Internal control: believe they control what
happens to them
Assess yourself against each type.
Personality Types (Cont.)
• Machiavellianism
– Holds cynical views of other people's motives
– Places little value on honesty
– Approaches the world with manipulative intent
– Maintains distance between self and others
– Emotionally detached from other people
– Suspicious interpersonal orientation can
contribute to high interpersonal conflict
Personality Types (Cont.)
• Machiavellianism (cont.)
– Focus on personal goals, even if reaching them
requires unethical behavior
– Suspicious orientation leads to view of
organizational world as a web of political
processes
Personality Types (Cont.)
• Type A personality: a keen sense of time
urgency, focuses excessively on
achievement, aggressive
Type B personality: strong self-esteem,
even tempered, no sense of time urgency
Type A: significant risk factor for coronary heart disease.
Personality Types (Cont.)
• Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
– Popular personality assessment device
– Four bi-polar dimensions
• Extroverted (E) - introverted (I)
• Sensing (S) - intuitive (I)
• Thinking (T) - feeling (F)
• Perceiving (P) - judging (J)
– Assigns people to one of sixteen types based on
these dimensions
Personality Types (Cont.)
• Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI)
(cont.)
– Extroverts look outward; introverts turn inward
– Sensers use data; intuitives use hunches
– Thinkers are objective; feelers are subjective
– Perceivers are flexible; judgers want closure
– ESTJ type: extroverted, sensing, thinking, and
judging
International Aspects of
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality
• Culturally based stereotypes
– Swiss: punctual
– Germans: task-oriented
– Americans: energetic
– People who hold these stereotypes experience
surprises when they meet people from these
countries who do not fit the stereotypes
International Aspects of
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Culturally based stereotypes (cont.)
– Project aspects of own culture onto people and
situations in a different culture
– Assumes that the new culture mirrors their own
– Example: Korean manager visiting Sweden
assumes all women seated behind desks are
secretaries
– Such behavior would be inappropriate and
possibly dysfunctional in Sweden where many
women hold management positions
International Aspects of
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Attitudes about organizational design,
management, and decision making:
– U.S. managers: a hierarchical organizational
design helps solve problems and guides the
division of labor in the organization
– French and Italian managers: a hierarchical
design lets people know authority relationships
in the organization
International Aspects of
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Attitudes (cont.)
– Italian managers: bypassing a manager to reach
a subordinate employee is insubordination
– Swedish and Austrian organizations:
decentralized decision making
– Philippine and Indian organizations:
centralized decision making
Conclusion: Organizations that cross national borders and draw
managers from many different countries have high conflict potential.
International Aspects of
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Personality characteristics
– People in individualistic cultures (United
States) have a stronger need for autonomy than
people in group-oriented cultures (Japan)
– People in cultures that emphasize avoiding
uncertainty (Belgium, Peru) have a stronger
need for security than people in cultures that
are less concerned about avoiding uncertainty
(Singapore, Ireland)
Ethical Issues in
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality
• Stereotypes and workforce diversity
– Can have inaccurate stereotypes about the
ethics of people with different social, racial,
and ethnic backgrounds
– These stereotypes can affect the opinions
people develop about the ethical behavior of
such people in the workplace
Ethical Issues in
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Self-presentation
– Deliberately managing self-presentations so
decisions and behavior appear ethical
– Limited experimental evidence suggests one
can favorably manage other people's
impressions of their ethical attitudes
Ethical Issues in
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Attribution and accountability
– Individual responsibility is central to ethical
behavior
• Attribution of responsibility to a person: person
behaved ethically or unethically
• Attribution of responsibility to the situation:
individual not held accountable
• Example: observer believed the person had behaved
unethically because of a directive
– Errors in attribution: could conclude that he or
she was not responsible for an unethical act
Ethical Issues in
Perception, Attitudes,
and Personality (Cont.)
• Ethical attitudes
– Little reliable and valid information about
ethical attitudes
– Some evidence points to the absence of a fixed
set of ethical attitudes among managers
– Attitudes about ethics in organizations and
decision making are situational and varying
– The morality of behavior and decisions is
determined by their social context, not by
abstract and absolute rules

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Perception, Attitudes personality

  • 2. Learning Goals • Understand human perceptual processes and how people form impressions of others • Describe types of perceptual error and their effects on information people get from their environment • Explain attribution processes and their effects on perception and attitudes
  • 3. Learning Goals (Cont.) • Discuss the nature of attitudes, how they form and how they change • Explain the different views of human personality development • Discuss some dimensions of personality and several personality types • Recognize the effects of different cultures on perception, attitudes, and personality
  • 4. Chapter Overview • Introduction • Perception • Attitudes • Personality • International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality • Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and Personality
  • 5. Perception, Attitudes, and Personality Perception Attitudes Personality Chapter 5
  • 6. Perception • A cognitive process: lets a person make sense of stimuli from the environment • Affects all senses: sight, touch, taste, smell, hearing • Includes inputs to person and choice of inputs to which the person attends • Stimulus sources: people, events, physical objects, ideas • Helps adaptation to a changing environment
  • 7. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual process – Target: object of the person’s perceptual process – Threshold: minimum information from target for the person to notice the target • Detection threshold: point at which person notices something has changed in her or his environment • Recognition threshold: point at which person can identify the target or change in the target See text book Figure 5.1
  • 8. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual process (cont.) – Target emerges from its surrounding context sometimes slowly, sometimes quickly – Quickly discriminate a high-contrast target from its background; an ambiguous target takes more time to see – Contrast can come from the target's size, color, loudness, or smell
  • 9. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual process (cont.) – People attend more quickly to positively valued stimuli than to negatively valued stimuli – Example: achievement-oriented employees notice announcements about promotion opportunities faster than an employee with less achievement motivation
  • 10. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual defense: shield self from negatively valued stimuli – Example: block out annoying sounds – Organizational example: block some feedback from a supervisor or coworker when it is negative
  • 11. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual errors: mistakes in the perceptual process – Perceptual set • Beliefs about a target based on information about the target or previous experiences with it • Information about the target from any source • Beliefs act like instructions for processing stimuli from the target
  • 12. Perception (Cont.) • Perceptual errors (cont.) – Stereotype: beliefs and perceived attributes about a target based on the target’s group – Examples • American university students: energetic and spontaneous • Russian university students: orderly and obedient
  • 13. Self-Perception: A View of Self • Self-perception: process by which people develop a view of themselves • Develops from social interaction within different groups, including groups encountered on the Internet • Self-perception has three parts: self- concept, self-esteem, self-presentation
  • 14. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-concept: – Set of beliefs people have about themselves – View people hold of their personal qualities and attributes – Factors affecting a person's self-concept • Observations of behavior • Recall of past significant events • Effect of the surrounding social context
  • 15. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-concept (cont.) – Observations of behavior • People see their behavior, and their situation, in the same way they see the behavior of other people • Person believes the behavior occurred voluntarily: concludes the behavior happened because of some personal quality or attribute
  • 16. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-concept (cont.) – Observations of behavior (cont.) • People learn about themselves by comparing themselves to other people with similar qualities • Example: you may want to assess your abilities to hold a supervisory position. You compare yourself to people with backgrounds similar to yours who have had recent promotions
  • 17. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-concept (cont.) – Recall of past significant events and effect of the surrounding social context • Recall events important in their lives; not error free • Tend to recall events they attribute to themselves and not to a situation or other people • Often overestimate their role in past events • Place more weight on the effects of their behavior and less on the surrounding situation or other people
  • 18. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-esteem – Emotional dimension of self-perception – Positive and negative judgments people have of themselves – People with low self-esteem tend to be unsuccessful; do not adapt well to stressful events – Those with high self-esteem have the opposite experiences
  • 19. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-awareness – People differ in degree of self-awareness – Two forms • Private self-consciousness: behave according to attend to inner feelings and standards • Public self-consciousness: behave according to social standard correct for the situation
  • 20. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-presentation – Behavioral strategies people use to affect how others see them – How they think about themselves – Goals of self-presentation • Affect other people's impressions to win their approval • Increase the person's influence in a situation • Ensure that others have an accurate impression of the person
  • 21. Self-Perception: A View of Self (Cont.) • Self-presentation (cont.) – Highly conscious of public image: change behavior from situation to situation. Readily conform to situational norms – People who want others to perceive them in a particular way behave consistently in different situations. They act in ways they perceive as true to themselves with little regard for the norms of the situation
  • 22. Social Perception: A View of Others • Social perception: process by which people come to know and understand each other • Forming impression of a person: perceiver first observes the person, the situation, and the person's behavior
  • 23. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Form a quick impression by making a snap judgment about that person, or • Make attributions and integrate the attributions to form a final impression • Confirmation biases lead the perceiver to hold tenaciously to it
  • 24. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Elements of social perception – Three sets of clues help form the impression of another person • Person • Situation surrounding the person • Observed behavior of the person
  • 25. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Elements of social perception (cont.) – Developing first impressions • Use different physical aspects of the person: height, weight, hair color, eyeglasses • Stereotypes based on physical features – Thin men: tense, suspicious, stubborn – Blond women: fun loving – Neatly dressed people: responsible • Stereotypes result from attributing qualities to people based on previously formed perceptions
  • 26. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Elements of social perception (cont.) – Preconceptions about the situations in which we see the behavior of other people – Develop from experience with the same or similar situations – Situation raises expectations about behavior the situation should cause – Example: when two people are introduced, we expect both parties to acknowledge the other and probably to shake hands
  • 27. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Attribution processes – People use attribution processes to explain the causes of behavior they see in others – Begins with a quick personal attribution followed by adjustment based on the characteristics of the situation
  • 28. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Personal attribution – Characteristics of the person such as beliefs, disposition, or personality, and not the situation, caused the person's behavior – Example: when you conclude that another student spends many hours completing a project because he likes to work hard or values hard work, you are making a personal attribution
  • 29. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Situational attribution – Aspects of the situation, not qualities of the person, cause the person's behavior – Example: a student worked hard because of the reward of a good grade
  • 30. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Perceiver uses three types of information when forming an attribution – Consensus information – Distinctiveness information – Consistency information
  • 31. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Consensus information – Observe other people in the same or a similar situation • If other people show the same behavior as the target person, the situation caused the behavior • If other people behave differently from the target person, the person caused the behavior
  • 32. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Distinctiveness information – Observe the target person in a different situation • If the response is different in the new situation, the situation caused the behavior • If the response is the same, the person caused the behavior
  • 33. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Consistency information – Observe the target person in a similar situation, but at a different time • High consistency: same behavior at both times • Low consistency: different behavior at both times
  • 34. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Combine consensus, distinctiveness, and consistency information to form attribution – Personal attribution: behavior high in consistency; low in consensus and distinctiveness – Situational attribution: behavior high in consensus and distinctiveness; low in consistency
  • 35. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Fundamental attribution error – Observer underestimates situation as cause of behavior; overestimates the as cause – Explaining their behavior: tend to ascribe causes to the situation, not to personal qualities – Explaining other’s behavior: tend to ascribe its causes to personal qualities, not the situation
  • 36. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • False consensus – Overestimate the degree to which others agree with the person's view – Reinforces the view the perceiver has of another person
  • 37. Social Perception: A View of Others (Cont.) • Integration of attributions to form final impression: disposition of perceiver – Effects of recent experiences: positive or negative event just before meeting someone for the first time can affect the impression of the person – Mood at time of first meeting: • Positive impressions in a good mood • Negative impressions in a bad mood
  • 38. Attitudes • An attitude is “a learned predisposition to respond in a consistently favorable or unfavorable manner with respect to a given object” • Attitude object: physical objects, issues, ideas, events, people, places
  • 39. Attitudes (Cont.) • Parts of an attitude – Cognitive: perceptions and beliefs about an attitude object – Affective: feelings about an attitude object – Behavioral intentions: how the person wants to behave and what a person says about an attitude object
  • 40. Attitudes (Cont.) • Common work attitudes – Organizational commitment – Satisfaction – Job involvement • Play a role in employee turnover
  • 41. Attitudes (Cont.) • Some connection between attitudes and behavior, although not strong – People with strong attitudes about an object will likely behave in accord with their attitude – Strong positive attitudes about Macintosh© computers leads to buying one – Ardent followers of Jesse Jackson will likely vote for him
  • 42. Attitudes (Cont.) • Attitude formation: affected by the person’s beliefs about an object and the amount and type of information the person has about the object – Perceives positive attributes: develops positive attitude – Perceives negative attributes: develops negative attitude
  • 43. Attitudes (Cont.) • Attitude formation (cont.) – Family upbringing – Peer groups – Work groups – General social experiences
  • 44. Attitudes (Cont.) • Attitude change – Something persuades the person to shift his or her attitudes (persuasive communication) – Norms of a social group can affect a person’s attitude (social norms) – Person becomes uncomfortable with some aspects of her or his beliefs (cognitive dissonance)
  • 45. Attitudes (Cont.) • Persuasive communication – Advertising – Tries to change cognitive part of attitude – Assumes affective part will also change – Attitude change process • Win target’s attention • Understand message • Accept the influence • Remember the message
  • 46. Attitudes (Cont.) • Social influence on attitudes – People are embedded in social groups – Feel pressures to conform to norms – If person values membership in group, likely will align attitudes with the group norms
  • 47. Attitudes (Cont.) • Cognitive dissonance – Hold multiple beliefs or cognitions about an attitude object – Feel tension when discrepancies develop – Motivated to reduce the tension – Change one or more cognitions – Other parts of attitude also change
  • 48. Personality • Set of traits, characteristics, and predispositions of a person • Usually matures and stabilizes by about age 30 • Affects how a person adjusts to different environments
  • 49. Personality Theories • Cognitive theory: people develop their thinking patterns as their life unfolds • Learning theories: behavior patterns develop from the social environment • Biological theories: personality as genetically inherited
  • 50. Personality Theories (Cont.) • Cognitive theory – Develop thinking patterns as life unfolds – Affects how the person interprets and internalizes life's events – Cognitive development stages • Reflexive behavior of infant • More complex modes of perception and interpretation of events – Neither driven by instincts nor unwittingly shaped by environmental influences
  • 51. Personality Theories (Cont.) • Learning theories – Learn behavior from social interaction with other people – Young child: early family socialization – Continuously learn from social environment: stable behavior forms the personality – Uniqueness of each personality follows from variability in social experiences
  • 52. Personality Theories (Cont.) • Biological theories – Ethological theory • Develop common characteristics as a result of evolution • Behavioral characteristics that have helped survival over generations become inborn characteristics
  • 53. Personality Theories (Cont.) • Biological theories (cont.) – Behavior genetics • Individual's unique gene structure affects personality development • Personality develops from interactions between a person's genetic structure and social environment
  • 54. The Big-Five Personality Dimensions • Extroversion – High: talkative, sociable – Low: reserved, introverted • Emotional stability – High: calm, relaxed – Low: worried, depressed • Agreeableness – High: cooperative, tolerant – Low: rude, cold
  • 55. The Big-Five Personality Dimensions (Cont.) • Conscientiousness – High: dependable, thorough – Low: sloppy, careless • Openness to experience – High: curious, intelligent – Low: simple, conventional Assess yourself on each dimension
  • 56. Personality Types • Locus of control: people control the consequences of their actions or are controlled by external factors – External control: luck, fate, or powerful external forces control one’s destiny – Internal control: believe they control what happens to them Assess yourself against each type.
  • 57. Personality Types (Cont.) • Machiavellianism – Holds cynical views of other people's motives – Places little value on honesty – Approaches the world with manipulative intent – Maintains distance between self and others – Emotionally detached from other people – Suspicious interpersonal orientation can contribute to high interpersonal conflict
  • 58. Personality Types (Cont.) • Machiavellianism (cont.) – Focus on personal goals, even if reaching them requires unethical behavior – Suspicious orientation leads to view of organizational world as a web of political processes
  • 59. Personality Types (Cont.) • Type A personality: a keen sense of time urgency, focuses excessively on achievement, aggressive Type B personality: strong self-esteem, even tempered, no sense of time urgency Type A: significant risk factor for coronary heart disease.
  • 60. Personality Types (Cont.) • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) – Popular personality assessment device – Four bi-polar dimensions • Extroverted (E) - introverted (I) • Sensing (S) - intuitive (I) • Thinking (T) - feeling (F) • Perceiving (P) - judging (J) – Assigns people to one of sixteen types based on these dimensions
  • 61. Personality Types (Cont.) • Myers-Briggs Type Indicator (MBTI) (cont.) – Extroverts look outward; introverts turn inward – Sensers use data; intuitives use hunches – Thinkers are objective; feelers are subjective – Perceivers are flexible; judgers want closure – ESTJ type: extroverted, sensing, thinking, and judging
  • 62. International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality • Culturally based stereotypes – Swiss: punctual – Germans: task-oriented – Americans: energetic – People who hold these stereotypes experience surprises when they meet people from these countries who do not fit the stereotypes
  • 63. International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Culturally based stereotypes (cont.) – Project aspects of own culture onto people and situations in a different culture – Assumes that the new culture mirrors their own – Example: Korean manager visiting Sweden assumes all women seated behind desks are secretaries – Such behavior would be inappropriate and possibly dysfunctional in Sweden where many women hold management positions
  • 64. International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Attitudes about organizational design, management, and decision making: – U.S. managers: a hierarchical organizational design helps solve problems and guides the division of labor in the organization – French and Italian managers: a hierarchical design lets people know authority relationships in the organization
  • 65. International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Attitudes (cont.) – Italian managers: bypassing a manager to reach a subordinate employee is insubordination – Swedish and Austrian organizations: decentralized decision making – Philippine and Indian organizations: centralized decision making Conclusion: Organizations that cross national borders and draw managers from many different countries have high conflict potential.
  • 66. International Aspects of Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Personality characteristics – People in individualistic cultures (United States) have a stronger need for autonomy than people in group-oriented cultures (Japan) – People in cultures that emphasize avoiding uncertainty (Belgium, Peru) have a stronger need for security than people in cultures that are less concerned about avoiding uncertainty (Singapore, Ireland)
  • 67. Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and Personality • Stereotypes and workforce diversity – Can have inaccurate stereotypes about the ethics of people with different social, racial, and ethnic backgrounds – These stereotypes can affect the opinions people develop about the ethical behavior of such people in the workplace
  • 68. Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Self-presentation – Deliberately managing self-presentations so decisions and behavior appear ethical – Limited experimental evidence suggests one can favorably manage other people's impressions of their ethical attitudes
  • 69. Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Attribution and accountability – Individual responsibility is central to ethical behavior • Attribution of responsibility to a person: person behaved ethically or unethically • Attribution of responsibility to the situation: individual not held accountable • Example: observer believed the person had behaved unethically because of a directive – Errors in attribution: could conclude that he or she was not responsible for an unethical act
  • 70. Ethical Issues in Perception, Attitudes, and Personality (Cont.) • Ethical attitudes – Little reliable and valid information about ethical attitudes – Some evidence points to the absence of a fixed set of ethical attitudes among managers – Attitudes about ethics in organizations and decision making are situational and varying – The morality of behavior and decisions is determined by their social context, not by abstract and absolute rules