Attitudes Part 2
Attitudes Part 2
Attitudes Part 2
Change: Influencing
Thoughts and Feelings
(part 2)
Sacha Pierre
Quotes about the Interplay between individual and society
- Albert Bandura
33 Pearson 2019
How Do Attitudes Change?
• When attitudes change, it is often due to social influence.
• Attitudes are social phenomena.
• Sometimes attitudes change dramatically over short periods of
time.
35 Pearson 2019
Changing Attitudes by Changing Behaviour
36 Pearson 2019
Persuasive Communications and Attitude Change
• How should you construct a message so that it would really change people’s attitudes?
• Yale attitude change approach
• The study of the conditions under which people are most likely to change their attitudes in response to
persuasive messages
• “Who said what to whom.”
• Who: The source of the communication
• What: The nature of the communication
• Whom: The nature of the audience
37 Pearson 2019
The Central and Peripheral Routes to Persuasion
(1 of 4)
• Elaboration likelihood model:
• An explanation of the two ways in which persuasive communications can cause attitude change
• Specifies when people will be influenced by what is said (i.e., the logic of the arguments) or by more
superficial characteristics (e.g., who gives the speech or how long it is).
38 Pearson 2019
Elaboration Likelihood Model of Persuasion (simplypsychology.org)
The Central and Peripheral Routes to Persuasion
(3 of 4)
39 Pearson 2019
The Central and
Peripheral Routes to
Persuasion (4 of 4)
Pearson 2019 40
Taylor Swift (pinterest.com)
The Motivation to Pay Attention to
the Arguments (1 of 2)
• Personal relevance of the topic
• How important is the topic to a person’s well-being?
• More personally relevant, pay more attention
• Central route
41 Pearson 2019
The Motivation to Pay Attention to
the Arguments (2 of 2)
People high in the need for
cognition
Form attitudes through
Central Route
42 Pearson 2019
The Ability to Pay Attention to
the Arguments
• When people are unable to pay close
attention to the arguments, they are swayed
more by peripheral cues.
• Status of communicator
• Liking or trusting communicator
43 Pearson 2019
Effects of Personal Relevance on Type of
Attitude Change
• People who base their attitudes on a careful analysis of the arguments will be:
• More likely to maintain a specific attitude
• More likely to behave consistently with the specific attitude
• More resistant to counter-persuasion
45 Pearson 2019
Fear-Arousing Communications
• Refer to persuasive messages that attempt to change people’s attitudes by arousing their fears
46 Pearson 2019
Fear and Smoking Ads
Pearson, 2019
Effects of Fear Appeals on Attitude Change
49 Pearson 2019
Emotions as Heuristics (2 of 3)
• Use emotions and moods as heuristics to determine attitudes
• Ask yourself: “How do I feel about it?”
• If we feel good
• Must have a positive attitude about object
• If we feel bad
• Must have a negative attitude about object
• Problem with the “How do I feel about it?” heuristic
• Can make mistakes about what is causing our mood
• Misattribute feelings created by one source to another
• If so, people might make a bad decision
50 Pearson 2019
Emotions as Heuristics (3 of 3)
• Advertisers and retailers want to
create good feelings about their
product
• Pair product with appealing
music or showing pleasant
images
• Hope people will attribute
feelings to the product
51 Pearson 2019
Emotions as Heuristics (extra)
• Advertisers and retailers want to
create good feelings about their
product
• Pair product with appealing
music or showing pleasant
images
• Hope people will attribute
feelings to the product
52 Pearson 2019
Emotion and
Different Types of
Attitudes (1 of 2)
Several studies found that success of attitude change
techniques depends on the type of attitude we are trying
to change
• If an attitude is cognitively based
• Try to change it with rational arguments
• If it is affectively based
• Try to change it with emotional appeals
53
Pearson 2019
Emotion and
Different Types of
Attitudes (2 of 2)
Some ads stress the objective merits of a product
• Price, reliability, efficiency
54
Pearson 2019
Attitude Change
and the Body
Body posture plays a significant role in attitude
change
Research Says:
• Cartoons rated as more funny when
holding an object between one’s teeth
(mimicking a smile) compared to
holding it between one’s lips (mimicking
a frown)
• Nodding or shaking one’s head while
listening to strong or weak arguments
also affects attitude change
55
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-NC-ND Pearson 2019
Attitude
Change and
the Body
https://mediaplayer.pearsoncmg.com/asset
s/mypsychlab-
body_movement_and_persuasion
Pearson 2019
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY
How Advertising Works
• Many take emotional approach of attitude change
• Little difference between brands
• Associate product with excitement, youth, sexual
attraction
Pearson 2019
Subliminal Advertising: A
Form of Mind Control?
• Subliminal messages:
• Words or pictures that are not consciously
perceived but may nevertheless influence
people’s judgments, attitudes, and
behaviour
• No evidence that subliminal messages
influence behaviour
Pearson 2019 58
Advertising and Culture
Western Cultures Eastern Cultures
May base attitudes more on individuality and May base attitudes more on standing in
self-improvement social group
59 Pearson 2019
Resisting Persuasive Messages
• Attitude inoculation Theory
• Framework for helping individuals resist
attempts to change their attitudes by initially
exposing them to small doses of the arguments
against their position
Pearson 2019
Being Alert to
Product
Placement (2 of 3)
This Photo by Unknown Author is licensed under CC BY-SA-NC
Pearson 2019 62
Being Alert to
Product Placement
(3 of 3)
https://mediaplayer.pearsoncmg.com/assets/mypsychlab-
Resisting_Persuasive_Efforts
63 Pearson 2019
Resisting Peer Pressure
• Peer pressure in adolescence
− Operates on values and emotions
− Liking and acceptance by peer group (need to belong assumption)
• Not based in logical arguments
− To make adolescents resistant to attitude change attempts via peer pressure
− Attitude inoculation that focuses on inoculating against emotional appeals
Pearson 2019
When Persuasion Attempts
Backfire: Reactance Theory
• Reactance theory
• When people feel their freedom to perform a
certain behaviour is threatened (or feel
forced), they react against the persuasion.
• May try to reduce feeling by performing
the threatened behaviour
References
Aronson, E., Wilson, T.D., Sommers, S.R. (2018). Social Psychology (10th Ed.). Pearson Ltd.
Sabiqotul Husna. (2021). Denial attitude and behavior as a response to the COVID-19 pandemic: A qualitative study. Humanitas: Indonesian Psychological Journal,
18(2), 153–163. https://doi.org/10.26555/humanitas.v18i2.19173
Kashima, Y., Laham, S. M., Dix, J., Levis, B., Wong, D., & Wheeler, M. (2015). Social transmission of cultural practices and implicit attitudes. Organizational Behavior
and Human Decision Processes, 129, 113–125. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.obhdp.2014.05.005
Mozuraitis, M., Chambers, C. G., Daneman, M., Weller, J., & Yaxu Zhang. (2016). Verbal Ability, Argument Order, and Attitude Formation. Frontiers in Psychology, 1–11.
https://doi.org/10.3389/fpsyg.2016.01374
Sardinha, L., & Catalán, H. E. N. (2018). Attitudes towards domestic violence in 49 low- and middle-income countries: A gendered analysis of prevalence and
country-level correlates. PLoS ONE, 13(10). https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0206101
Yoshihisa Kashima, Simon M. Laham, Jennifer Dix, Bianca Levis, Darlene Wong, Melissa Wheeler (2015). Social transmission of cultural practices and implicit
attitudes Organizational Behavior and Human Decision Processes Volume 129: 113-125
66 Pearson 2019
Glossary
Emotions as Heuristics
Persuasive Communication
Body Posture and Attitude Change
Elaboration Likelihood Model
Advertising and Persuasion
Central Route
Advertising and Culture
Peripheral Route
Attitude Inoculation Theory
Fear-Arousing Communication
Reactance Theory
Cognitive Dissonance and Attitudes
67 Pearson 2019
*Let’s Recap
Attitude Formation
Classical Conditioning, includes terms like neutral
stimulus, unconditioned response, conditioned stimulus,
and conditioned response.
68