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Ch3TheSelfpart1.pptx

Chapter 3

The Self

Today’s Outline

What is the Self?

Its roles

How we learn about ourselves

Introspection

Social comparison

Self-awareness

Motivation to learn about ourselves

Ok this lesson starts off a little slow

But it gets very interesting when we get to social comparison!

What is the Self?

We all know and use the concept of self on a daily basis, myself, yourself, etc.

But it’s actually pretty hard to operationally define the self

Furthermore, neuroscience research can usually identify nodes/areas of the brain associated with something

E.g. there’s an area of your brain related to birds, you also have a specific Johnny Depp area of your brain, an area for your best friend, etc.

Oddly though, no one has been able to find the ‘self’ area of the brain

Perhaps the concept is too complex and diffused over many areas of the brain

The Self

One way is to define the self by its roles

Self-Knowledge/Self-Concept

What you have accomplished, what color your hair is, etc.

Public/interpersonal Self

The image you present to others, e.g. dressing up for a social event

Agent/Executive Self

Mediates between the other two

E.g. you want the last donut but you don’t want to take it from your friend

The Self

One reason the self may have developed is related to another recurring theme from social psychology:

inner traits of human beings (such as the self) exist to serve interpersonal functions

Without the concept of selves it’d be hard to operate in society

If you grew up on a deserted island, how different would your self-concept be?

Differences in Self across cultures

Famous study by Markus & Kitayama (1991)

They had Westerners (European and North American participants) and Easterners (Japanese, Chinese, and Korean participants) create a list of traits/descriptors that define who they are

Westerners had many more independent traits, so traits related just to himself/herself (motivated), whereas Easterners listed more interdependent traits (good team player)

Cultural ideals about what the best self would look like influence the development of these traits

The Self

Another way we define ourselves is in roles.

Take a second and think of the top 5 roles that describe you?

For example, some of my most important roles are: psychologist, hobbyist, uncle, competitor, and bird-dad (lol).

Gizmo hiding from a loud

thunderstorm

Where does self-knowledge come from?

How do we learn about ourselves?

One of two main ways, the first of which seems obvious: Introspection

Introspection – we refer to our own thoughts/feelings and inner states

In this way, some have said we have “privileged access” to our own mind

Self-Knowledge: Introspection

There is some truth to introspection, but it didn’t take long for researchers to find flaws with introspection

If you have men watch car ads they are given information about the cars, such as safety, mileage, etc. and some cars are paired with beautiful women

The men mostly choose the cars paired with women

When asked why, though, they cite other explanations, such as safety

Self-Knowledge: Introspection

Similarly, in another study, people selected the last pair of socks presented to them, even though they cited reasons like “they look soft,” etc.

Based on findings like those two studies, introspection can certainly tell if someone likes something, but the why of it may not be accurate

The duplex mind (conscious vs. non-conscious) can explain those findings

Self-Knowledge: self-perception

Perhaps rather than introspection, Bem (1965) suggested ‘self-perception theory’

There is no “privileged access” to our mental states

But we can and do observe our own actions

If Jim had told his friends he highly values health/fitness, but he observes that he hasn’t gone to the gym in months

He may come to change his attitude to be in line with his behavior, and state he values fitness less. Or he may change his behavior and go more, once he realizes this!

Self-Knowledge: Self-perception

Why we perform any given behavior can have different motivations

‘Intrinsic motivations’ are when we are motivated to do things because we like them, they’re inherently fun to us

E.g. I listen to music because it’s enjoyable

‘Extrinsic motivations’ are when we are motivated to do something because of the outcome

E.g. I work to get paid or I study just to get a good grade

Self-Perception – Overjustification Effect

In an incredibly interesting finding on self-perception, it was discovered that if you reward someone (extrinsic motivation) for something they do for fun (intrinsic motivation), their self-perception will shift to believe they are doing it to receive the reward

E.g. if a kid likes washing dishes,

and then the mom/dad start to

pay the kid for washing dishes,

his/her intrinsic motivation to do

the task decrease

The kid self-perceives and sees

‘oh, I do this because I get paid’

(Implications for pro sports players or pro anything really)

Self-Knowledge: Social Comparison

Beyond Introspection, the other main way we learn about ourselves is through ‘social comparisons’ (Festinger, 1954)

***The drive to make social comparisons is one of the most deep-seated drives in human nature

This theme will come up time and time again in the psychology literature and in your life

It is both pleasing to us and also causes our own worst nightmares/problems

Say you can beat your sibling at tennis, or swim a mile in a certain time, or perform well in a competitive video game, or get a score on the GRE’s…

What does any of that really mean outside of a frame of reference??? What percentile did your score fall in for the GRE’s?

Self-Knowledge: Social Comparison

If you found out your GRE test score was in the top .03% of other students’ in the nation, you’d feel amazing

Thus, you would have learned something about yourself (you’re good at what the GRE measures, math and English vocabulary) through comparison with other people

Self-Knowledge: Social Comparison

But who do you compare yourself to?

If you’re a tennis player and you compare yourself to one of the Williams sisters, you’re going to feel like you suck

Comparing yourself to someone better is called an

upward social comparison

Upward social comparisons are

helpful in that they can set a good

standard for us to work toward,

even though we feel bad about

how far we are from it

We keep the comparisons

plausible/helpful, e.g. if Serena

is too far above, then maybe

just the best person at your

club or the state champ

Self-Knowledge: Social Comparison

Downward social comparison is the opposite

This can bolster our self-esteem

E.g. well at least I’m still smarter than Bob, or have more money than Sally, or am prettier than Marta

It can make people feel better in the face of tragedies/illness too, ‘at least I don’t have it as bad as that guy.’

Beyond specific comparisons to certain people, you can compare yourself to ‘most people’ as well

Exercise

Let’s do an exercise in social comparison!

I want you to rate your skill at 5 tasks compared to everyone else in the world

Once this activity is done I will have you email me the results

I want you to estimate what percentile of people you’re better than at certain tasks (next slide)

For example, Lebron James would be better than 99.9% of people at basketball

If Larry has usually received C’s in his math courses, he may estimate he’s an average math student, so better than 50% of people at math

Get a sheet of paper and write down what percentile of people you would be better than at each of these activities?

Driving ____

Cooking ____

Swimming ____

Critical thinking/logic ___

Leadership ability ___

Generalized social comparisons

If we were to do this exercise in a physical class, you’d see that on average, most people would rate themselves rather highly on most things

Now, you don’t need to email me your estimations, I just wanted you to think about it

But our general comparisons are flawed/biased

If almost everyone thinks they’re better than 80% or more of drivers, that’s of course logically not possible

On most tasks, people will fall onto

a bell curve, with some extreme

outliers on either end and most

people in the middle somewhere

Generalized social comparisons

To give you an example of how extreme these kind of results with generalized social comparison are:

In one study of over a million high school students

Not a single one rated himself/herself as below average in ability to get along with others

Only 2% said they were below average in leadership ability

Another study found that 90% of people thought they were above average drivers

Generalized social comparisons

It’s not possible for everyone to be great at everything

But of course each of us would assume we’re the exception or outlier

And without any evidence to the contrary, we are inclined to believe how great we from a downward comparison standpoint

E.g. our self-esteem is boosted by the positive illusion

Generalized social comparisons

To expand on this, there’s an effect everyone should be aware of:

The Dunning-Kruger Effect (1999)

Their article was titled “Unskilled and Unaware of it”

They found that people who are measured and found to be low ability on a task typically think they’re much better than they are

Because of their lack of ability/knowledge about the task, they can’t conceive of why they are, in fact, bad at it.

Implications of the Dunning-Kruger Effect

Think about it: have you ever watched someone who is bad at something you’re good at blame their poor performance on luck and continue to think they’re good?

Even when you could point to a million mistakes/reasons why their performance was abysmal?

Implications of the Dunning-Kruger Effect

Consider all the places this applies to the real world:

Someone gets hired as district manager for a company because their daddy owns the company, but really they know nothing about the company’s product or procedures

A politician that is appointed for a position for an area that they have no training/background in

E.g. most of our politicians are generalists, how does that work when they end up making laws on topics of specific expertise, such as science, education, healthcare, etc.?

In all these cases, people will be too ignorant to know how ignorant they are, and will remain confident that they can perform the job

Implications of the Dunning-Kruger Effect

My thoughts on the Dunning-Kruger Effect:

If our society wants to improve, we need to focus on being a meritocracy (people get what they earn)

No buying or cheating one’s way into positions

Similarly, if there’s someone spouting off opinions about a topic, their credentials in that field should be scrutinized before anyone listens to them

In sum, too many ignorant opinions, not enough science and deference to scientific experts

Relevance of Social Comparison

Before we move on, consider all the various spheres of social comparison people may engage in on a daily basis:

Knowledge

Money

Career success

Power

Popularity/Social influence

Happiness

Who does the most good for the world

Attractiveness

Success at one’s favorite pastime or art

And anything else you can think of…

Social comparisons continued:

When we compare ourselves to other people, we often feel badly because we don’t live up to certain standards

One way many people will try to feel better is by essentially reducing their self-awareness

Binge eating and getting drunk have both been shown to make people temporarily feel better due to lack of self-awareness

Self-awareness can make people behave better though, for example dieters were more likely to resist temptation when they ate in front of a mirror

And students were less likely to cheat on a test when

taking it in front of a mirror

Self-knowledge

In sum, we’ve covered two ways that people learn about themselves

Introspection (and/or self-perception)

Social Comparison

Our self-knowledge can shift depending on the situation as well

E.g. if you’re the only man in a room full of women, your self-knowledge and awareness will change

You wouldn’t be as aware of being man in other contexts as you would be in a room of women

What motivates us to learn about ourselves?

In general, people are motivated to learn about themselves

Consider how many people have taken personality tests or hoped to gain information from horoscopes, etc.

There are 3 primary motivations:

1. Appraisal – to understand our abilities

E.g. You don’t want to try and lift something way too heavy or waste money/time applying to schools/jobs that are out of reach

2. Self-enhancement – we are motivated learn favorable

and flattering things about ourselves

We often dismiss/ignore/minimize unflattering things

3. Consistency – we want to learn things that are consistent with how we view ourselves

What motivates us to learn about ourselves?

Of those 3 motivations, Sedikides (1993), found that the motivations were not equal

1. Self-enhancement was strongest

2. Then consistency

3. Finally appraisal

We are motivated to protect our esteem/identity

And in general that’s a good thing, having some positive illusions is correlated with mental health

Self-handicapping

What we know about the order of motivations can explain self-handicapping

Self-handicapping

Doing something to impair your performance

E.g. drinking the night before an important test

Then, if the test goes well, great, if it goes badly, you can blame drinking

Thus, the need to self-enhance

trumps the need to appraise

Was also found that self-handicapping is more likely if the person already has a reputation to maintain, so consistency > appraisal as well

Self-handicapping

A cool example of self-handicapping can be seen when looking at this guy:

Deschapelles won mostly every game as a chess master

But he feared to lose to someone young/sharp as he got older

So, he insisted on only playing if he went second (a large disadvantage in chess)

Thus if he won, wow look how he still wins, but if he lost, oh well, he can just blame going 2nd

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