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Description:
AP Psychology 3.1 Social Psychology. What has Jeff exhibited in this situation?
Transcript
- 00:04
And here's your Shmoop du jour, brought to you by football, number [Football kicked into the air]
- 00:07
one in television programming, in terms of contributing to obesity in America.
- 00:13
Jeff tries out for the football team, he can't throw, or catch pass and is
- 00:17
subsequently cut right away. He decides football is a dumb sport. He just
- 00:22
exhibited what and here are your potential answers. So when Jeff was cut and
Full Transcript
- 00:29
proceeded to call the sport dumb, what was he actually doing? Was it a fundamental [man pouting on football field]
- 00:33
attribution error? No, because that would describe the tendency for people to
- 00:37
assume, that other people's action are due mostly to their internal feelings. As
- 00:41
opposed to external factors. If we saw Jeff eating dirt in the middle of the
- 00:45
field, we might incorrectly assume, he was doing so because he liked the taste of [Jeff eating dirt on a field]
- 00:49
dirt. When in actuality it was the external factor of the giant linebacker
- 00:53
having shoved his face into the ground, that was truly at work. And it's not self-
- 00:56
effacing either, which is actually a bias that assumes success is based on [man's silhouette with lightbulb inside]
- 01:00
external factors and failures based on internal factors. For example, we might
- 01:05
look at Justin Bieber's success and say that he was just lucky, or that other
- 01:08
people decided to make him famous. As opposed to, giving him the personal
- 01:13
credit for it. The opposite of that is a self-serving bias, the tendency we have
- 01:17
to attribute success to ourselves. But failure to external factors. This would be
- 01:22
Justin Bieber giving himself sole credit for his success, up until his career [Justin Bieber in hot tub]
- 01:25
eventually being to fade. At which point he'll blame everyone but, himself. This is
- 01:30
not what's happening with Jeff here however. An attitude is simply a
- 01:34
belief, or evaluation, of someone, or something. So while Jeff's attitude
- 01:37
towards football might be negative, that's not what we're asking. What we're
- 01:41
looking for here, is an explanation for why Jeff has suddenly decided, he thinks
- 01:45
football is dumb. Even though the fact that, he tried out for the team, clearly
- 01:49
suggests otherwise. That is called cognitive dissonance, it's the [man holding football]
- 01:53
uncomfortable conflict, a person experiences when their behaviors don't
- 01:56
match up with their feelings. Which forces them to reconsider their feelings, in order to
- 02:00
alleviate this conflict. Jeff felt uncomfortable about getting cut from the
- 02:03
team, for the sport he supposedly liked. So he decided to claim he didn't like the
- 02:08
sport anymore, in order to cure that tension. Which is great because Jeff
- 02:13
actually love hockey anyway. [man playing hockey]
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