It includes:
Stereotyping means when we generalize. think of a social group which you may have come across. we often feel that all the members of the group are alike. This is stereotyping. The marketing application of this perceptual distortion is that the marketeer use umbrella branding. The benefit is that if one product of the brand does well then the others will too.
Halo effect - That is judging based on reputation and the image the other person projects. Even if a person may overcome a certain habit or trait, they may still project an image associated with it.
Physical appearance - This shouldn't matter since anyone can have good or bad values regardless of their physical features or what they are wearing. The founder of Gateway came to work in a t-shirt and wore an earring when men were expected not to wear them. Yet Gateway was a successful company for a number of years.
First impression - Someone might just be having a bad day, and it isn't fair to assume they are like that all the time.
Jumping to conclusion - This is reaching a conclusion before having all the information. For instance, a father came home and found a lot of beer bottles in the kitchen sink. He was ready to lay into his son about the dangers of drinking and how he wasn't going to tolerate drinking under his roof. But he restrained himself and asked his son to explain. The son said that he found all those in the yard and didn't want the neighbors to get the wrong impression of their family.
If your perceptions are inaccurate and your responses are unbalanced and inappropriate to situations, they are unclear and distorted perceptions.
Some common perceptual distortions are:
1. Stereotype: A stereotype is a set of beliefs about the characteristics of a group of people.
Example: Politicians are considered as manipulative and corrupt.
2. Halo: A rater forms an overall impression about an object and then uses the impression to bias ratings about the object.
3. Leniency: A personal characteristic that leads an individual to consistently evaluate other people or objects in an extremely positive fashion.
4. Central Tendency: The tendency to avoid all extreme judgments and rate people
and objects as average or neutral.
5. Recent Effects: The tendency to remember recent information. Most recent
information dominates perceptions. If the recent information is negative, the
person or object is evaluated negatively.
6. Contrast effect: The tendency to evaluate people or objects by comparing
them with characteristics of recently observed people or objects.
7. Primacy: First impressions.
8. Projection: Believing other people are similar to you.
distorted perception is meant by an imaginary fact. which is false & cannot be explained but still remains a fact. e.g. appearance of woman causes gender discrimination
perceptual
What is perceptual modalities
What *are* perceptual movements.
1. Perceptual Selection 2. Perceptual Organization 3. Perceptual Interpretation
Perceptual
a perceptual region is affected by human perception.
You need to explain what you mean by perceptual regions. What is that?
The cast of Distortions - 2009 includes: Linda Riseley
There always distortions on a map because a map is flat and a globe is round.
Perceptual - album - was created on 2000-04-11.
•Perceptual salience: information that is the focus of people's attention
if you are disoriented