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Perception
 
Nature and Importance of Perception Cognitive process involves the ways in which people process information. People’s individual differences and uniqueness are largely the result of the cognitive process. Perception is an important process in understanding OB.
DEFINITION Perception is a process/ by which individuals organize and interpret their sensory impressions/ in order to give  meaning to their environment. It is a unique interpretation of the situation not an exact recording of it.
 
 
 
 
External environment Sensory Stimulation Physical Environment Office Factory Floor Climate etc. Sociocultural Environment Management styles Management Values.  Consequences (e.g. reinforcement/ Punishment or  some org. outcome) Behavior (e.g. overt such as rushing off or covert such as  an attitude) Feedback For clarifications (e.g. kinesthetic or Psychological) Interpretation Of stimulus (e.g.  Motivation, learning and personality) Registration of stimulus (e.g. Sensory and neural mechanisms) Confrontation Of specific Stimulus (e.g. Supervisor or new  Procedure) STIMULUS OR SITUATION PERSON
PERCEPTUAL SELECTIVITY Numerous stimuli are constantly confronting everyone. The principles of perceptual selectivity explain how and why people select only a very few stimuli at a given time. The principles are  External Attention Factors Intensity Size Contrast
TURN OFF THE THE ENGINE Internal Set Factors Learned aspect of perceptual set Motivation Personality
PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION Once the information from the situation is received because of perceptual organization the person will perceive organized patterns of stimuli and identifiable whole objects. The person’s perceptual process organizes the incoming information into a meaningful whole.
Factors Influencing Perception:   1.) Perceiver    2.) Target   3.) Situation
FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE PERCEPTION Factors in the situation: Time Work setting social setting Factors in the target: Novelty Motion Sounds Size Background Proximity Similarity Factors in the perceiver: Attitudes Motives. Interests Experience Expectation Perception
 
Person Perception:  Making Judgments  About Others
Shortcuts in Judging Others: 1.) Selective Perception 2.) Halo Effect 3.) Contrast Effects 4.) Projection 5.) Stereotyping
Selective Perception Description We will tend to perceive things according to our beliefs more than as they really are, and react accordingly. This is how placebos work. We will also ‘become’ drunk when we drink what we believe is alcohol. Research Wilson and Abrams (1977) found that people’s heart rate changed in the same way as when drunk when talking to an attractive member of the opposite sex after taking what they had been told was alcohol (but was not). Example Any book which is published will have been read possibly hundreds of times, including by professional proof readers. And yet grammatical and other errors still get into print. Why? Because the mind is very kind and corrects the errors that our eyes see.
Halo Effect Description When we consider a person good (or bad) in one category, we are likely to make a similar evaluation in other categories. It is as if we cannot easily separate categories. It may also be connected with dissonance avoidance, as making them good at one thing and bad at another would make an overall evaluation (which we do anyway) difficult. Research Edward Thorndike found, in the 1920s, that when army officers were asked to rate their charges in terms of intelligence, physique, leadership and character, there was a high cross-correlation. Example Just because I dress like a rock star, it does not mean I can sing, dance or play the guitar (come to think of it, the same is true of some real rock stars!).
Contrast Effect Principle We notice difference  between  things, not absolute measures. Perceptual contrast Put your left hand in a bowl of cold water and your right in hot water. Leave them there for a while, then plunge both together into a bowl of lukewarm water. Surprise! The left feels hot whilst the right will feel cold.  This is the principle of  Perceptual Contrast  by which our senses work. Put light next to dark and it seems lighter. A stale smell will seem worse after a sweet smell. The same effect also applies to more our complex cognitive constructions.
Projection Description When a person has uncomfortable thoughts or feelings, they may project these onto other people, assigning the thoughts or feelings that they need to  repress  to a convenient alternative target. Example I do not like another person. But I have a value that says I should like everyone. So I project onto them that they do not like me. This allows me to avoid them and also to handle my own feelings of dislike. An unfaithful husband suspects his wife of infidelity. A woman who is attracted to a fellow worker accuses the person of sexual advances.
Stereotypes Description Stereotypes are generalizations about a group of people whereby we attribute a defined set of characteristics to this group. These classifications can be positive or negative, such as when various nationalities are stereotyped as friendly or unfriendly. It is easier to create stereotypes when there is a clearly visible and consistent attribute that can easily be recognized. This is why people of color, police and women are so easily stereotyped. Example Stereotyping goes way beyond race and gender. Consider conversations you have had about people from the next town, another department in your company, supporters of other football teams, and so on.  
Specific Applications in Organizations: 1.) Employment Interview 2.) Performance Expectations (Self  Fulfilling Prophecy) 3.) Performance Evaluation 4.) Employee Effort
Thank You
 

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Perception Jithu

  • 2.  
  • 3. Nature and Importance of Perception Cognitive process involves the ways in which people process information. People’s individual differences and uniqueness are largely the result of the cognitive process. Perception is an important process in understanding OB.
  • 4. DEFINITION Perception is a process/ by which individuals organize and interpret their sensory impressions/ in order to give meaning to their environment. It is a unique interpretation of the situation not an exact recording of it.
  • 5.  
  • 6.  
  • 7.  
  • 8.  
  • 9. External environment Sensory Stimulation Physical Environment Office Factory Floor Climate etc. Sociocultural Environment Management styles Management Values. Consequences (e.g. reinforcement/ Punishment or some org. outcome) Behavior (e.g. overt such as rushing off or covert such as an attitude) Feedback For clarifications (e.g. kinesthetic or Psychological) Interpretation Of stimulus (e.g. Motivation, learning and personality) Registration of stimulus (e.g. Sensory and neural mechanisms) Confrontation Of specific Stimulus (e.g. Supervisor or new Procedure) STIMULUS OR SITUATION PERSON
  • 10. PERCEPTUAL SELECTIVITY Numerous stimuli are constantly confronting everyone. The principles of perceptual selectivity explain how and why people select only a very few stimuli at a given time. The principles are External Attention Factors Intensity Size Contrast
  • 11. TURN OFF THE THE ENGINE Internal Set Factors Learned aspect of perceptual set Motivation Personality
  • 12. PERCEPTUAL ORGANIZATION Once the information from the situation is received because of perceptual organization the person will perceive organized patterns of stimuli and identifiable whole objects. The person’s perceptual process organizes the incoming information into a meaningful whole.
  • 13. Factors Influencing Perception: 1.) Perceiver 2.) Target 3.) Situation
  • 14. FACTORS THAT INFLUENCE PERCEPTION Factors in the situation: Time Work setting social setting Factors in the target: Novelty Motion Sounds Size Background Proximity Similarity Factors in the perceiver: Attitudes Motives. Interests Experience Expectation Perception
  • 15.  
  • 16. Person Perception: Making Judgments About Others
  • 17. Shortcuts in Judging Others: 1.) Selective Perception 2.) Halo Effect 3.) Contrast Effects 4.) Projection 5.) Stereotyping
  • 18. Selective Perception Description We will tend to perceive things according to our beliefs more than as they really are, and react accordingly. This is how placebos work. We will also ‘become’ drunk when we drink what we believe is alcohol. Research Wilson and Abrams (1977) found that people’s heart rate changed in the same way as when drunk when talking to an attractive member of the opposite sex after taking what they had been told was alcohol (but was not). Example Any book which is published will have been read possibly hundreds of times, including by professional proof readers. And yet grammatical and other errors still get into print. Why? Because the mind is very kind and corrects the errors that our eyes see.
  • 19. Halo Effect Description When we consider a person good (or bad) in one category, we are likely to make a similar evaluation in other categories. It is as if we cannot easily separate categories. It may also be connected with dissonance avoidance, as making them good at one thing and bad at another would make an overall evaluation (which we do anyway) difficult. Research Edward Thorndike found, in the 1920s, that when army officers were asked to rate their charges in terms of intelligence, physique, leadership and character, there was a high cross-correlation. Example Just because I dress like a rock star, it does not mean I can sing, dance or play the guitar (come to think of it, the same is true of some real rock stars!).
  • 20. Contrast Effect Principle We notice difference  between  things, not absolute measures. Perceptual contrast Put your left hand in a bowl of cold water and your right in hot water. Leave them there for a while, then plunge both together into a bowl of lukewarm water. Surprise! The left feels hot whilst the right will feel cold.  This is the principle of  Perceptual Contrast  by which our senses work. Put light next to dark and it seems lighter. A stale smell will seem worse after a sweet smell. The same effect also applies to more our complex cognitive constructions.
  • 21. Projection Description When a person has uncomfortable thoughts or feelings, they may project these onto other people, assigning the thoughts or feelings that they need to  repress  to a convenient alternative target. Example I do not like another person. But I have a value that says I should like everyone. So I project onto them that they do not like me. This allows me to avoid them and also to handle my own feelings of dislike. An unfaithful husband suspects his wife of infidelity. A woman who is attracted to a fellow worker accuses the person of sexual advances.
  • 22. Stereotypes Description Stereotypes are generalizations about a group of people whereby we attribute a defined set of characteristics to this group. These classifications can be positive or negative, such as when various nationalities are stereotyped as friendly or unfriendly. It is easier to create stereotypes when there is a clearly visible and consistent attribute that can easily be recognized. This is why people of color, police and women are so easily stereotyped. Example Stereotyping goes way beyond race and gender. Consider conversations you have had about people from the next town, another department in your company, supporters of other football teams, and so on.  
  • 23. Specific Applications in Organizations: 1.) Employment Interview 2.) Performance Expectations (Self Fulfilling Prophecy) 3.) Performance Evaluation 4.) Employee Effort
  • 25.