The document discusses impression management and various biases that can occur in perception. It defines impression management as an attempt to control how others perceive you. People are more likely to engage in impression management tactics when interacting with those who have power over them. The document also discusses primacy effects, where first impressions strongly influence later perceptions, and salience effects, where noticeable traits cause people to stand out and be stereotyped. It outlines several biases that can occur in perception, such as the halo effect and self-fulfilling prophecies.
2. 13
Impression Management
Impression management is an attempt to
control the perceptions or impressions of others.
Targets are especially likely to use impression
management tactics when interacting with
perceivers who have power over them and on
whom they are dependent for evaluations, raises,
and promotions.
Individuals who are high in self-monitoring are
more likely than individuals who are low in selfmonitoring to engage in impression management
tactics.
3. Impression Management
An attempt to manipulate or control
the impressions that others form
about the person.
Non verbal communication, clothes,
hair cut, style, etc.
Feigning interest in a boring lecture
Behaving nicely when grandparents
come to visit
4. Impression Motivation
The degree to which an individual actually
manages the impression that he or she
makes.
Sometimes people are strongly motivated
for impression management, such as going
for an interview
Sometimes people are not as strongly
motivated for impression management,
such as going to meet old friends
5. Impression Construction
It refers to an individual’s consciously
choosing
(1) an image to convey &
(2) how to go about doing that.
For a job interview one may be
dressed in conventional suiting.
Rewriting the resume, etc.
6. Impression Motivation:
How much do I care
about the impression
that I am making?
Impression Construction:
What image do I want to convey?
How do I go about it?
Impression Management
7. Primacy Effect
Most of the perceptions are strongly
affected by the first impression.
How a person perceives other person
is influenced by:
Characteristics of the person being
perceived
Characteristics of the perceiver, and
The situation or context within which the
perception takes place
8. The Person Perceived on basis of
voice quality
Voice Quality:
High in
Male Voice
Female Voice
Breathiness
Younger , Artistic Feminine, pretty,
petite, shallow
Flatness
Similar for both
sexes
Masculine, cold,
withdrawn
Nasality
Similar for both
sexes
Having many socially
undesirable
characteristics
Tenseness
Old, Unyielding
Young, emotional,
high strung, not very
intelligent
9. 15
Salience
Salience is the extent to which a target of
perception stands out in a group of people
or things.
Consequences of salience
Extreme evaluations (positive or negative)
Stereotyping
10. 15
Causes of salience
Being novel: Anything that makes a
target unique in a situation (e.g., being
the only young person).
Being figural: Standing out from the
background (e.g., by wearing bright
clothes).
Being inconsistent with other
people’s expectations: Behaving or
looking in a way that is out of the
ordinary.
11. 17
Biases and Problems in Perception
Primacy
Effects
The initial pieces of information
that a perceiver has about a target
have an inordinately large effect on
the perceiver’s perception and
evaluation of the target.
Interviewers decide in the first few minutes
of an interview whether or not a job candidate
is a good prospect.
Contrast
Effect
The perceiver’s perceptions of
others influence the perceiver’s
perception of a target.
A manager’s perception of an average
subordinate is likely to be lower if that
subordinate is in a group with very high
performers rather than in a group with very
low performers.
Halo
Effect
The perceiver’s general impression
of a target influences his or her
perception of the target on specific
dimensions.
A subordinate who has made a good overall
impression on a supervisor is rated as
performing high-quality work and always
meeting deadlines regardless of work that is
full of mistakes and late.
12. 18
Biases and Problems in Perception
Similar-tome Effect
People perceive others who are
similar to themselves more
positively than they perceive those
who are dissimilar.
Supervisors rate subordinates who are similar
to them more positively than they deserve.
Harshness,
Leniency, and
Average
Tendency
Some perceivers tend to be overly
harsh in their perceptions, some
overly lenient. Others view most
targets as being about average.
When rating subordinates’ performances, some
supervisors give almost everyone a poor rating,
some give almost everyone a good rating, and
others rate almost everyone as being about
average.
Knowledge
of Predictor
Knowing how a target stands on a
predictor of performance influences
perceptions of the target.
A professor perceives a student more positively
than she deserves because the professor knows
the student had a high score on the SAT.
13. Errors in Attribution
Beliefs that all
members of
specific groups
share similar
traits and are
prone to behave
the same way.
14. Errors in Attribution
The tendency to
attribute others’
actions to internal
causes (for example,
their traits) while
largely ignoring
external factors that
also may have
influenced behavior.
15. Errors in Attribution
The tendency for
our overall
impressions of
others to affect
objective
evaluations of their
specific traits;
perceiving high
correlations
between
characteristics that
may be unrelated.
16. Errors in Attribution
The tendency for
people to perceive
in a positive light
others who are
believed to be
similar to
themselves in any
of several different
ways.
17. Errors in Attribution
The tendency to
focus on some
aspects of the
environment
while ignoring
others.
19. Self-Fulfilling Prophecy
Self-Fulfilling Prophecy: The tendency for someone’s
Prophecy
expectations about another to cause that person to
behave in a manner consistent with those
expectations.
Pygmalion Effect: A positive instance of the selfEffect
fulfilling prophecy, in which people holding high
expectations of another tend to improve that
individual’s performance.
Golem Effect: A negative instance of the selfEffect
fulfilling prophecy, in which people holding low
expectations of another tend to lower that
individual’s performance.
21. Overcoming Biases
Do not overlook the
external cases of
others’ behaviors.
Identify your
stereotypes.
Evaluate people
based on objective
factors.
Avoid making rash
judgments.
22. Organizational Applications
Performance Appraisal: The process of
Appraisal
evaluating employees on various workrelated dimensions.
An inherently biased process
Impresssion Management: Efforts by
Management
individuals (esp. in employment
interviews) to improve how they appear to
others.
Corporate Image: The impressions that
Image
people have of an organization.