Inference Model
RevisionNotes.Co.Uk - Free Revision and Course Notes for UK Students
Home: A Level: Psychology: Social and Cognitive Psychology: Inference Model
Revision Notes
GCSE
A-Level
University
IB
User Options
Search
My Revision Notes
Bookmark Page
Contribute
Contribute Work
Other Sites
AcademicDB
Essay Writing Help

Inference Model
Bookmark this page

We hold beliefs about how certain traits belong together so that if a person holds one of these it is inferred that they also have (some of) the others

Although our impressions may be based on second-hand information - we usually try to explain why the person behaved as they did by identifying the cause of their behaviour - in particular was it something to do with the person or with the situation?

Schematic processing is the perceiving and interpreting of incoming information in terms of simplified memory structures for schemata. Research confirms that schemata help us to process information: e.g. if people are explicitly instructed to remember as much information as they can about a stimulus person, they actually remember less than if they are simply told to form an impression of the person ( Hamilton, 1979) - forming an impression induces subjects to search for various person-relevant data that help them to organise and recall material better.

Schemata of classes of persons are called stereotypes; schemata of

events and social interactions are called scripts.

Schemata constitute miniature theories of everyday objects and events.  They allow us to process information efficiently by permitting us to encode and to remember only the unique or most prominent feature of a new event or object.  But simplifications of reality produces bias and error - in forming impressions of other people.

For example, we are prone to the primacy effect  - the first information we receive evokes an initial schema and, hence, becomes more powerful in determining our impressions than does later information.

We are not very accurate at detecting covariations or correlations between variables - when our schemata or theories lead us to expect two things to covary, we overestimate the actual correlation, but when we do not have a theory we underestimate the correlation.

Stereotypes are resistant to change- can be self-perpetuating and self-fulfilling because they influence those who hold them to behave in ways that actually evoke the stereotyped behaviour.

Other Notes in this Category

  1. Attitudes
  2. Attitudes and Behaviour
  3. Attribution
  4. Conformity
  5. Crowds and Territoriality
  6. Goffman - Symbolic Interactionist
  7. Impression Formation
  8. Inference Model
  9. Intuition model
  10. Is there a conformity personality?
  11. Obedience
  12. Persuasion
  13. Prejudice
  14. Self Concept
  15. Self-attribution processes
  16. Social Influence
  17. Stereotypes and Stereotyping
  18. The Primacy-Recency effect
  19. Zimbardo

Didn't find this useful?

  • Visit Coursework.Info for over 14,000 GCSE, A-Level and University Essays

© UK-Learning 2001-3. Disclaimer, Feedback, Other Stuff.