Which of the following is NOT one of the ways people typically reduce cognitive dissonance?

Correct answer: By intentionally increasing the importance of the dissonant cognitions to face them directly.

Explanation

This question tests the understanding of the specific strategies people use to resolve the psychological discomfort of cognitive dissonance, as outlined by Festinger's theory.

Other questions

Question 1

What is the definition of an "attitude" as used by social psychologists?

Question 2

According to the table on the heritability of some attitudes, which of the following attitudes has the highest heritability score listed?

Question 3

What are the three components that make up our attitudes?

Question 4

In the context of attitude strength, what does cognitive accessibility refer to?

Question 5

According to the theory of planned behavior, what factor is a strong predictor of behavior?

Question 6

What is the phenomenon known as the 'sleeper effect' in the context of persuasion?

Question 7

What is the key difference between spontaneous and thoughtful message processing in persuasion?

Question 8

In the study by Petty, Cacioppo, and Goldman (1981) on persuasion, under which condition were students most influenced by the expertise of the source rather than the quality of the argument?

Question 9

What is psychological reactance?

Question 10

What does the principle of self-perception suggest about how we understand our own attitudes?

Question 11

What is the overjustification effect?

Question 12

In the classic cognitive dissonance study by Festinger and Carlsmith (1959), participants were paid either 1 dollar or 20 dollars to tell another person that a boring task was interesting. Which group of participants later rated the task as significantly more interesting?

Question 14

A salesperson first gets you to agree to a minor request, such as taking a car for a test drive, before asking for a larger commitment, like purchasing the car. This persuasion strategy is known as what?

Question 15

According to the table on attitude heritability in section 5.1, what is the heritability score provided for 'Roller coaster rides'?

Question 16

Russell Fazio and his colleagues had people either work on puzzles or watch others work on them. What did their findings indicate about the strength of the resulting attitudes?

Question 17

What does the 'principle of attitude consistency' predict about our behavior?

Question 18

Which characteristic is NOT mentioned as making a communicator more effective at persuasion?

Question 19

Fear appeals in advertising are most effective under what specific condition?

Question 20

The persuasion resistance technique that involves building up defenses against persuasion by mildly attacking an existing attitude is known as what?

Question 21

In the Aronson and Carlsmith (1963) study, children were threatened with either mild or severe punishment for playing with a forbidden toy. When later asked to rate the toy, which group rated it less positively?

Question 22

The discomfort that occurs when we behave in ways that we see as inappropriate, such as when we fail to live up to our own expectations, is called what?

Question 23

A car dealership advertises a car at a very low price, but when a customer arrives, they learn that car has been sold and are then shown a more expensive alternative. This is an example of what technique?

Question 24

Attitudes are stored primarily in which area of the brain, according to neuroimaging research mentioned in the text?

Question 25

Which of the following conditions is listed as creating a stronger attitude-behavior relationship?

Question 26

What is postdecisional dissonance?

Question 27

According to the study by Lepper, Greene, and Nisbett (1973) involving children and felt-tipped markers, which group of children played with the markers LEAST in the final free-play session?

Question 28

In the study by Wilson and Schooler (1991), participants tasted strawberry jams. Which group's attitude ratings correlated most highly with the expert ratings from Consumer Reports?

Question 29

What does the text suggest is generally the strongest and most important component of attitudes, particularly in decisions like voting?

Question 30

How can one make an attitude stronger according to the text?

Question 31

What is the primary reason that human beings hold attitudes?

Question 32

Communicators who speak quickly and confidently are often perceived as more what?

Question 33

Which condition was found to significantly increase male participants' willingness to engage in unprotected sex in the study by MacDonald, Zanna, and Fong (1996)?

Question 34

What is insufficient justification?

Question 35

In the Aronson and Mills (1959) study on group initiation, which group of women subsequently reported the most liking for the boring group discussion?

Question 36

What is the primary moral of finding the right balance between reinforcement and overreinforcement when trying to change a child's attitude?

Question 37

According to the research by Brehm (1956) on postdecisional dissonance, how did women's ratings of appliances change after they chose one to take home as a gift?

Question 38

What is the key takeaway from the research on subliminal advertising discussed in Section 5.2?

Question 39

According to the table on attitude heritability, what is the heritability of the attitude toward 'Doing athletic activities'?

Question 40

Low self-monitors are more likely than high self-monitors to have a strong attitude-behavior relationship because they...

Question 41

Which of the following scenarios best illustrates the low-ball technique?

Question 42

Positive self-esteem can reduce cognitive dissonance because...

Question 43

What type of processing are advertisers targeting when they use humorous commercials or feature attractive people in their ads?

Question 44

When are attitudes most likely to predict behavior according to the principle of specificity?

Question 45

How long does the text say it can take for attitudes to be activated after we see an attitude object?

Question 46

What are low-ball, bait-and-switch, and foot-in-the-door techniques all based on?

Question 47

The text suggests that to create genuine, lasting attitude change in a child, parents should use:

Question 48

What is the primary reason communicators who are perceived as trustworthy are effective persuaders?

Question 49

What percentage of men in Asch's conformity study gave at least one incorrect, conforming response on the critical trials?

Question 50

How can positive self-affirmation impact the experience of cognitive dissonance?