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Social psychology (1)
Impression Management: It is also called as self-presentation. It
deals with the various methods and efforts that individuals use to produce a favorable impression about himself/herself on others. We often attempt to influence others by projecting ourselves in ways which will present us in a favorable light. We often behave, act, dress and express ourselves in ways that produce favorable impressions on others. Impression Management is a skillful activity. Research on impression management has shown that people who can perform impression management successfully are often successful in many situations as they help others to form positive and good impressions about themselves. 57 6.3 RESEARCH BY SOLOMON ASH ON CENTRAL AND PERIPHERAL TRAITS IN IMPRESSION FORMATION : Solomon Asch (1946) did pioneering studies in the areas of Impression formation. He was heavily influenced by the work of Gestalt Psychologists, who believed that “the whole is greater than the sum of its parts” . Like Gestalt Psychologists, Solomon Asch held the view that we do not form impression simply by adding together all of the traits we observe in other persons. Rather, we perceive these traits in relation to one another, so that the traits cease to exist individually and become, instead, part of an integrated, dynamic whole. Asch studied impression formation by using a simple method. He gave individuals lists of traits supposedly possessed by a stranger, and then asked them to indicate their impression of this person by checking the traits on a long list that they felt fit with their impression of the stranger. In one of his study participants were given the following two lists. • Intelligent - skilful – industrious - warm – determined – practical - cautious. • Intelligent – skilful - industrious - cold - determined – practical - cautious. The above lists differed only with respect to two words: warm and cold. Thus, if people form impressions merely by adding together individual traits, the impression formed by persons exposed to these lists would not differ very much. The results of his study revealed that persons who read the list containing “warm” were much more likely to view the stranger as generous, happy, good natured, sociable, popular, and altruistic than were people who read the list containing “cold.” According to Asch, the words “warm” and “cold” described central traits -- ones that strongly shaped overall impressions of the stranger and coloured the other adjectives in the lists. Asch obtained additional support for this view by substituting the words “polite” and “blunt” for “warm” and “cold.” When he did this, the effects on participant’s impressions of the stranger were far weaker; “polite” and “blunt”, it appeared, were not central words with a strong impact on first impressions. Thus, Central traits have a stronger impact on our impressions than Peripheral Traits. In further studies, Asch varied not the content but the order of adjectives of each list. For example 58 • One group read the following list. “Intelligent - industrious – impulsive critical- stubborn - envious”. • Another – group read: “Envious - stubborn - critical – impulsive - industrious - intelligent.” In the above list the only difference was in the order of the words on the two lists. Yet, again, there were larger differences in the impression formed by participants. For example, while 32 per cent of those who read the first list described the stranger as happy, only 5 per cent of those who read the second list did so. Similarly, while 52 per cent of those who read the first list described him as humorous, only 21 per cent of those who read the second list used this adjective. Harold Kelly (1950) replicated the studies of Solomon Ash, and found that central traits affect not only our ratings of others, but also influences our behavior. On the basis of many studies such as these, Asch and other researchers concluded that: i) Forming impressions of others involve more than simply adding together individual traits. ii) Our perceptions of others are more than the sum of information (Traits) we know about others. iii) Individual Traits are evaluated in relation to other known Traits, and develop an overall picture where all the traits fit together consistently. iv) Impression formation is a coherent, unified and integrated process in which we take a wholistic and a global view of the various traits possessed by an individual. Download 0.55 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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