Zusammenfassung der Ressource
Social Expertise 1
- Expertise as a social construct
- Experts have massive influence on interpersonal interactions + culture
- Overlap with research on authority, leadership, persuasion, politics
- Allows us to apply social psych to real world issue
- Defining expertise - 2 approaches:
- Absolute approach
- study of truly exceptional people
- focuses on measures of performance
- retrospective - eg no. of games/achievements
- eg Muhammed Ali - won heavyweight championship at 22yrs
- usually suggests a genetic approach
- Chi - assumption is that greatness/creativity from chance/ unique innate talent
- Relative approach
- expertise in comparison to novices
- chi - assumes expertise is a level of
proficiency novices can achieve
- implication: if relative,
there can be
movement. people can
go from novice to
expert, and can study
how they do this. See
Chi proficiency scale
- How do we distinguish expert from non-expert?
- markers of expertise
- knowledge
- clearly needed for expertise
- someone without knowledge wouldn't suit being called expert
- X isn't enough to just have knowledge. Must
know when knowledge relevant
- X expertise usually involves responding to novel info
- certification
- indicates degree of expertise, knowledge + ability to apply knowledge
- generally safe to say someone with qualification more
likely to become expert than someone without
- X usually tied to years of job
- X do qualifications reflect skills?
- X once certified, people are certified for life - 'ratchet up effect'
- experience
- Goldberg
- expert clinicians, mid-level clinicians, naïve group
- real patient data
- Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory - still one
of the most widely used standardized psychometric
tests of adult personality + psychopathology
- diagnose psychiatric cases
- no relship between experience + diagnostic
accuracy, but confidence did increase with
accuracy
- over 17 weeks received training: naïve
group increased in accuracy 52%-58%.
expert + mid-level stayed same at ~65%
- results of indivs is indicator of expertise
- we usually believe something when no. of indivs support it
- related to meaning of 'expert'
- one of most frequently used measures of expertise
- most experts will have considerable amount of experience
- X ignores experts with little experience
- X ignores many non-experts with years of experience
- Consensus: Groupthink
- Asch conformity experiment
- 3 lines
- 32% agreed on majority of trials.
75% conformed at least once.
<1% controls answered
incorrectly
- term first used in 1972 by social psych Janis
- people strive for consensus within a group
- people will set aside own beliefs + adopt
opinion of group
- don't want to disrupt uniformity of crowd
- good - allows group to make decisions quickly
- X suppression of indiv opinions can
lead to poor decision making
- tends to occur in situations where group
members similar + more likely when
charismatic leader commands group
- X who says experts can't be wrong
- to consider someone an expert, must think
they're more knowledgeable than non-experts
- X peer group effects - if you aren't
popular with group, unlikely to be
recommended as expert
- Suls, Lemos + Stewart
- ppts rate themselves, friends + generalised
others on +ve + -ve measures
- eg positive: sensible, neat, well-read, sophisticated
- eg negative: gullible, gossipy, insecure
- rated themselves highest, then friends, then generalised others
- Milton - many pioneering discoveries made by indivs who were ignored by peers
- Chi - proficiency scale - adapted from Hoffman
- Novice - new members. minimal exposure
- initiate - novice who's done initiation ceremony
- apprentice - learning at introductory level
- journeyman - can perform orders unsupervised
- expert - brilliant journeyman, regarded by peers, accurate judgements
- master - expert qualified to teach, of elite group of experts
- Farrington-Darby + Wilson
- review of expertise + its study
- source of confusion + conflicting findings in literature on
expertise comes from variety of investigator's disciplines +
perspectives -> has impact on method choice
- most recently, the attrition (falling short of
skills) of skilled performers in many industries
has motivated organisation to try understand
what distinguishes expert from rest
- own work on railways - interested in understanding expertise for 4 major purposes:
- 1) To develop better human factors tools + solutions for future
- 2) Future of rail network control will increasingly depend on
appropriate + useful intelligent decision support systems
- 3) Need to understand how 'expert' signallers + controllers deal with
network at present - eg in abnormal circumstances
- 4) Loss of expertise + opportunities to develop expertise has meant Network Rail must
take v serious look at what experts of future should be + how to develop them
- How many hours of practice to become expert?
- Watson - founder of behaviourism
- practicing more intensively than others
= probably most reasonable
explanation we have for success +
genius
- Simon + Chase
- investigated chess mastery
- no instant experts
- estimate v roughly that a master has
spent 10k-50k hours practice
- Hayes
- analysed music 1685-1900
- identified top 500 pieces by 76 composers
- in almost every case, greatest work not created until 10yrs experience composing
- Ericsson et al
- music academy, west berlin
- 10 students - best violinists.
10 students - good violinists.
10 students - future music
teachers.
- retrospective questionnaire
- best 2 groups had deliberate practice
- 'deliberate practice' - activities specially designed to improve performance
level. not performances, competitions, paid services, not enjoyable...
- as age increased + practice increased (diff between groups), performance level increased.
- cited more than 4200 times, confirmation bias. See Bacon
- 10k rule popularised by Gladwell (author)
- takes 10k hours to become an expert at anything. 'practice makes perfect'
- X Epstein - practice is important but eg Jamaicans dominate
sprinting, Kenyans dominate long distance - it's in the genes
- - Gladwell only applied rule to cognitively demanding activities
- Bacon - the confirmation bias
- when adopted an opinion, draws everything to
support it. although may be greater number of
instances proving wrong, neglects + rejects these.
- we see patterns we want to see, even if not actually there
- Problems with 10k rule
- most often cited studies rely on
historical analysis + self report
- number appeared plucked from thin air.
Ericsson maths doesn't make sense
- Heavy criticism from researchers - 'blindness
to decades of psych theorising'
- Hambrick - meta-analysis of effect of deliberate practice on
music + chess. in both, practice only made up ~30% of
variance in performance. leaves a lot unexplained
- other factors? starting age, intelligence (working mem capacity), personality?
- Are experts more persuasive than non-experts?
- Many companies think so - used in media a lot
- Kelman 1952
- expert vs attractive vs powerful
- when source attractive, ppts persuaded by identification. want to
establish/maintain satisfying relship to another person
- when source expert, ppts persuaded by internalisation.
behaviour adopted tends to be integrated with indiv's
existing values. satisfaction due to content of new beh
- Hovland + Weiss 1951
- Few studies consider effectiveness of
persuasion in attitude of the audience to communicator
- untrustworthy sources eg mass circulation magazine, controversh columnist, movie-gossip columnist
- trustworthy sources eg journal of bio + medicine, national boards, good rep magazine
- questionnaires 1-5 scale to evaluate ppt's attitudes of trustworthiness before study = not associated with experiment
- 2nd questionnaire on reactions to articles - gradually to opinion q's.
- ppts discounted material from untrustworthy sources. in time, tended to disassociate
content + source = original scepticism faded + untrustworthy material accepted
- changes in opinion sig related to trustworthiness of source
- we are persuaded by 'credible sources' - knowledgable, trustworthy
- X many ppts didn't complete study - not compulsory. only 61 students completed
- supports sleeper effect - psych phenomenon related to persuasion.
- when exposed normally to persuasive messages, attitudes supporting message increase
- over time, decay -> attitudes gravitate back to previous opinion
- contrast - low cred/distrust messages arouses suspicion + attitude
change to message. but when exposed to persuasive distrust
message, tend to be more persuaded over time = sleeper effect
- political campaings - undecided voters see negative
advert by opposite party. question trustworthiness, not
persuaded initially. but even though low cred, more
likely to be persuaded late + vote against party in ad
- Petty + Cacioppo
- Message -> audience factors -> processing approach -> persuasion outcome
- message -> high motivation -> deep processing focused on message quality -> lasting change that resists fading + counterattacks
- message -> low motivation -> superficial processing of surface features eg attractiveness -> temporary change susceptible to
- = expertise can influence attitudes, but can it really influence perception + beh?
- Crisci + Kassinove
- does explicit label signalling expertise influence beh in real world?
- 96 mother-child pairings. parents thought psych giving evaluation. offered card to redeem parenting guide book.
- when dressed as expert, 2/3rds took card, half redeemed. when non-expert, 3/8ths took card, 1/3rd redeemed
- Petty, Cacioppo + Goldman
- ppts heard argument for changes in uni policies. manipulated source. half heard report by high school class - low expertise.
half heard report by prof of ed - high expertise. actually, all heard same speaker. manipulated strength of argument.
- same results as petty + cacioppo. favoured expert source + strong arguments.
- X ofc, usually have pre-existing beliefs on topics. don't usually change beliefs just because expert suggested
- not a yes/no answer. persuasiveness of expert depends on situational + indiv diff
- Clark et al - if we anticipate argument will threaten beliefs, will process argument centrally rather than peripherally.
- how do our starting beliefs influence how persuasive we find expert's argument? Asked ppts in favour of 'fast food tax'. told source was
leading scholar / high school junior. argument strength manipulated. expert sources considered to elicit more persuasive processing cause
expectations of info to be valid/accurate. attitude increased (+ persuaded) when source expertise high + message strong.
- Expert. Counter-attitude - influenced by strength. Pro-attitude - not influenced by strength
- Non-Expert. Counter-attitude - not influenced by strength. Pro-attitude - influenced by strength.
- Perceive threat -> central processing -> influenced by argument strength
- Don't perceive threat -> peripheral processing -> not influenced by argument strength
- expectations can also work against experts - if we expect strong argument + they don't, we punish them
- tendency for experts to be more persuasive than non-experts