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Lecture notes for Stereotypes

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Lecture notes for Stereotypes from the first year module Introduction to Psychology

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  • May 23, 2022
  • 5
  • 2019/2020
  • Lecture notes
  • Dr charlotte pennington
  • All classes
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Intro to Psychology

18/10/19 Stereotyping


Social information processing

 We live in a complex social world where we are often exposed to an overwhelming
amount of information
 We need a system to interpret this information in a quick and simple manner
 How do we process social information?
 How do we think about ourselves and others?


Schemas

 A set of interrelated cognitions (thoughts, beliefs, attitudes) that allow us to quickly
make sense of a person, situation, event or place based on limited information.
- Hogg & Vaughan, 2008.

 A mental framework we use to organise and understand our social world.

 Organises categories of information and the relationships among them.

 Schemas are developed through life experiences and stored in memory.


Types of schemas:
1. Person schema
- Help us to anticipate the nature of our social interactions with individuals, giving
us a sense of control and predictability.
- What kind of person is he/she? Best friend, neighbour? (Cantor & Mischel, 1971).

2. Self schema
- Cognitive representations about ourselves (Markus, 1977).
- We represent and store information about ourselves in a more complex and
varied manner: development of self-concept.
- Different schemas for real self and also for you ‘ideal’ and ‘ought’ selves (Higgins,
1987).

3. Role schema
- The norms and expected behaviours of specific roles in society.
- Doctor, pilot, estate agent, terrorist.

4. Event schema
- Act as cognitive scripts.
- Provide the basis for anticipating the future, setting goals.

, - Christmas party, holiday, funeral, football match.


Schema development:
 Gender-schema theory – once children have developed their gender identity, they
develop associated schemas.
 Used to organise and direct the child’s behaviour based on society’s gender norms
and expectations related to gender.
 Studies suggest that children learn traditional gender roles from a young age.


How do schemas function? Two basic stages:
1. Identification:
- Assigning a schema to the target
- Identifying a schema which provides a good fit to the object, person or situation.

2. Application:
- Processing information according to that schema in a top-down manner
(Rumelhart & Ortony, 1977).
- Through experience, schemas become more complex and organised
- All things being equal schemas should generally become more accurate.

Schema-Relevant Information:
 Reinforced by experience to strengthen schema
 Processed quickly and is efficiently applied.

Schema-Irrelevant Information:
 Directly contradicts or disconfirms schematic expectations
 Tend to be either ignored or quickly forgotten (filtering hypothesis).


What determines schema use?
Which features/cues will be used as a basis for categorisation?
1. Vividness
- An intrinsic property of the stimulus itself
- Emotionally interesting (e.g. violent crime)
- Image provoking (e.g. gory description)
- Close to you in place or time (e.g. crime yesterday on your street)
- However, vividness research can be confounded by other factors e.g. vivid info
may also be more funny or have more details.

2. Saliency
- Salient features determine/cue schema use
- Visibly accessible features (e.g. age, gender, race. Fiske, 1998)
- Distinctive features (e.g. physical appearance, dress. Zebrowitz, 1996)
- Contextually distinctive factors (e.g. single man in a group of women, person
wearing a bright shirt at a funeral)

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