A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic

What difficulties will a person encounter, and what defenses will he use, if placed in a position where he must verbally attack a group with which he has strongly identified himself? In an attempt to gain some insight into this problem, two groups of people were selected. One group was made up of fi...

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Main Author: Jillings, Charles Robertson
Language:English
Published: University of British Columbia 2012
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2429/41303
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spelling ndltd-UBC-oai-circle.library.ubc.ca-2429-413032018-01-05T17:50:33Z A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic Jillings, Charles Robertson Attitude (Psychology) What difficulties will a person encounter, and what defenses will he use, if placed in a position where he must verbally attack a group with which he has strongly identified himself? In an attempt to gain some insight into this problem, two groups of people were selected. One group was made up of fifteen male university students who had strongly ego-involved attitudes toward the Christian Church. The second group, the controls, consisted of fifteen male students who scored in the neutral zone of the Thurstone-Chave scale of Attitudes Toward the Church. Both groups found it more difficult to attack the church than to support it. Also, when attacking the church, both groups tended more to weaken their arguments by qualifications and by making concessions to the opposing view-point. In terms of group differences, the religious group were much more effective (convincing) in their arguments in favor of the church than were the neutrals. There was no significant difference, however, in their relative abilities to attack the church in a convincing manner. The religious group showed the greatest disparity in terms of ratings gained when supporting the church, minus ratings gained when attacking it. This difference in disparity scores was not statistically significant. Therefore, our principal hypothesis was not supported. Continuous G.S.R. records were made while the subjects were engaged in the two tasks. From the data obtained, we are unable to say that either of the two activities is more tension-producing for either group. Arts, Faculty of Psychology, Department of Graduate 2012-03-09T17:05:27Z 2012-03-09T17:05:27Z 1951 Text Thesis/Dissertation http://hdl.handle.net/2429/41303 eng For non-commercial purposes only, such as research, private study and education. Additional conditions apply, see Terms of Use https://open.library.ubc.ca/terms_of_use. University of British Columbia
collection NDLTD
language English
sources NDLTD
topic Attitude (Psychology)
spellingShingle Attitude (Psychology)
Jillings, Charles Robertson
A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
description What difficulties will a person encounter, and what defenses will he use, if placed in a position where he must verbally attack a group with which he has strongly identified himself? In an attempt to gain some insight into this problem, two groups of people were selected. One group was made up of fifteen male university students who had strongly ego-involved attitudes toward the Christian Church. The second group, the controls, consisted of fifteen male students who scored in the neutral zone of the Thurstone-Chave scale of Attitudes Toward the Church. Both groups found it more difficult to attack the church than to support it. Also, when attacking the church, both groups tended more to weaken their arguments by qualifications and by making concessions to the opposing view-point. In terms of group differences, the religious group were much more effective (convincing) in their arguments in favor of the church than were the neutrals. There was no significant difference, however, in their relative abilities to attack the church in a convincing manner. The religious group showed the greatest disparity in terms of ratings gained when supporting the church, minus ratings gained when attacking it. This difference in disparity scores was not statistically significant. Therefore, our principal hypothesis was not supported. Continuous G.S.R. records were made while the subjects were engaged in the two tasks. From the data obtained, we are unable to say that either of the two activities is more tension-producing for either group. === Arts, Faculty of === Psychology, Department of === Graduate
author Jillings, Charles Robertson
author_facet Jillings, Charles Robertson
author_sort Jillings, Charles Robertson
title A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
title_short A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
title_full A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
title_fullStr A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
title_full_unstemmed A study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
title_sort study of the effects of ego-involvement on the ability of students to present contrary view-points to an affectively charged topic
publisher University of British Columbia
publishDate 2012
url http://hdl.handle.net/2429/41303
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