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Rouenne Camille de Castro
ATTITUDE-CHANGE THEORY
Attitude
● Our predispositions toward things● Attitude is primarily a way of being “set” toward or
against certain things (Murphy, Murphy, and Newcomb, 1937, p. 889).
● A mental and neural state of readiness, organized through experience, exerting a directive or dynamic influence upon the individual's responses to all objects and situations with which it is related (Allport, 1954, p.45).
Attitude
● An enduring, learned predisposition to behave in a consistent way toward a given class of objects (English and English, 1958, p.50).
● An enduring system of positive or negative evaluations, emotional feelings, and pro or con action tendencies with respect to a social object (Krech, Crutchfield, and Ballachey, 1962, p.177).
● Persuasion - “attitude change reesulting from exposure to information from others” (Olson and Zanna, 1993, p.135).
History
● Aristotle– One of the first to analyze and write about persuasion
in his classic works on rhetoric
● Rice and Willey– Their investigation of the effects of William
Jenninga Bryan's address on evolution at Dartmouth College, 1923; sometimes cited as the first attitude-change study
History
● Carl Hovland– Worked for the Research Branch of the US Army's
Information and Education Division
– The Yale Communication and Attitude-Change Program
● He believed that attitudes were learned and that they were changed through the same processes that occurred when learning took place
The Three-Component Model Of Attitudes
● Affective component – liking or feeling about an object
● Cognitive component – beliefs about an object● Behavioral component – actions toward an object
Specific Techniques of Attitude-Change
● One-Sided and Two-Sided Messages● Source Credibility● Fear Appeals
Theories of Attitude-Change
● Consistency theories● Learning theories● Judgment theories● Functional theories
Consistency Theories
● Theory of Cognitive Dissonance– Leon Festinger
– Information that is not consistent with a person's already-held values and beliefs will create a psychological discomfort that must be relieved
– People generally work to keep their knowledge of themselves and of the world somewhat consistent
Consistency Theories
● Theory of Cognitive Dissonance– Selective Processes (psychological processes
designed to reduce dissonance)● Selective exposure: people tend to expose themselves
to messages that are consistent with their preexisting attitudes and beliefs
● Selective retention: people tend to remember best and longest those messages that are most meaningful to them
● Selective perception: people will alter the meaning of messages so they become consistent with preexisting attitudes and beliefs
Consistency Theories
● Rokeach: Beliefs, Attitudes, and Values– Milton Rokeach
– Believes that each person has a highly organized system of beliefs, attitudes and values, which guides behavior
– Self-concept: “Who am I?”
– Values: specific types of beliefs that are central in the system and act as life guides
● Instrumental: guidelines for living on which we base our daily behavior
● Terminal: ultimate aims of life toward which we work
Learning Theories
● Osgood on Meaning– Charles Osgood
– Deals with the ways in which meanings are learned and how they relate to thinking and behavior
– 3 factors of meaning:● Evaluation (good or bad)● Activity (active or inactive)● Potency (strong or weak)
Learning Theories
● Attribution Theory– Fritz Heider
– Deals with the ways people infer the causes of behavior
– “naive psychology” - centers on the perceived causes of behavior by ordinary people in everyday life
– Causal attributions people commonly make:● Situational causes, personal effects, ability, effort,
desire, sentiment, belonging, obligation, permission
Learning Theories
● Classical Conditioning of Attitudes– Staats and Staats
– They point out that in our everyday experience certain words are systematically paired with certain emotional experiences
Judgment Theories
● Social Judgment Theory– Muzafer Sherif
– Deals with the way people make judgments about messages
– An individual's initial attitude serves as an anchor (or reference point) for the judgment of related attitude communications
– Opinions are evaluated against this point of reference and are placed on attitudinal continuum
Judgment Theories● Social Judgment Theory
– Makes the following predictions:● Messages falling within the latitude of acceptance
facilitate attitude change● Messages falling within the latitude of rejection
results to reduced or nonexistent attitude change● Within the latitude of acceptance and
noncommitment, the more discrepant the message from your own stand, the greater the expected attitude change
● The greater your ego involvement in the issue, the larger the latitude of rejection, the smaller the latitude of noncommitment, and thus the less the expected attitude change
Judgment Theories● Elaboration Likelihood Theory
– Richard Petty and John Cacioppo
– States that there are two routes to attitude change:● Central: elaboration, or critical thinking occurs● Peripheral: nonelaboration, or lack of critical thinking
– Two main factors that influence the degree of elaboration:
● Motivation● Ability
● Expectancy Violations Theory● Interpersonal Deception Theory
Functional Theories● Functions of Attitudes
– Daniel Katz and his colleagues, Irving Sarnoff and Charles McClintock
– 4 major functions:● Utilitarian – people are motivated to gain rewards and
avoid punishments from their environment● Ego-defensive – people use defense mechanisms to
protect their self-concepts against internal and external threats
● Value-expressive – acknowledges the importance of self-expression and self-actualization
● Knowledge – presumes a basic human need to gain a meaningful, stable, and organized view of the world
Functional Theories
● Inoculation Theory– William McGuire and Demetrios Papageorgis
– Most people have many unchallenged beliefs and that these beliefs can often be easily swayed once they are attacked because the person is not used to defending them
Sources
Baran, Stanley J. & Dennis K. Davis. (1995). Mass Communication Theory: Foundations, Ferment and Future. Belmont, California: Wadsworth
Publishing Company
DeFleur, Melvin L. & Sandra J. Ball-Rokeach. (1989). Theories of Mass Communication. New York & London: Longman.
Littlejohn, Stephen W. (2002). Theories of Human Communication (7th ed.). United States: Wadsworth.
Maushak, Nancy and Michael Simonson.(2001). Instructional Technology and Attitude Change. Retrieved from
http://www.aect.org/edtech/ed1/pdf/34.pdf
Severin, Werner J. & James W. Tankard, Jr. (1997). Communication Theories: Origins, Methods, and Uses in the Mass Media (4th ed.). New York: Longman