OB Mid-Term
OB Mid-Term
OB Mid-Term
Perceiver: When you look at a target, your interpretation of what you see is influenced
by your personal characteristic’s attitudes, personality, motives, interests, past
experiences, and expectations. In some ways, we hear what we want to hear and we see
what we want to see not because it’s the truth, but because it conforms to our thinking.
For Example, A employees who started work earlier in the day as more conscientious and
therefore as higher performers; however, supervisors who were night owls themselves
were less likely to make that erroneous assumption.
Target: The characteristics of the target also affect what we perceive. Because we don’t
look at targets in isolation, the relationship of a target to its background influences
perception, as does our tendency to group close things and similar things together.
Sometimes differences can work in our favor, though, such as when we are drawn to
targets that are different from what we expect.
For Example, A professor wearing a T-shirt and sneakers in the classroom more than the
same professor dressed traditionally. The professor stood out from the norm for the
classroom setting and was therefore perceived as an individualist.
Context: Context matters too. The time at which we see an object or event can influence
our attention, as can location, light, heat, or situational factors.
For Example, you may not notice someone dressed up for a formal event that you
attended on a Saturday night. Yet if you were to notice that person dressed the same way
for your Monday morning management class, he or she would likely catch your attention,
if the students do not normally wear formal attire to class.