C. Weisz et Ee. Jones, EXPECTANCY DISCONFIRMATION AND DISPOSITIONAL INFERENCE - LATENT STRENGTH OF TARGET-BASED AND CATEGORY-BASED EXPECTANCIES, Personality & social psychology bulletin, 19(5), 1993, pp. 563-573
To explore differences between target-based expectancies, those based
on previous behavior, and category-based expectancies, those based on
membership in a social category, two studies tested the hypothesis tha
t target- and category-based expectancies of equal predictive strength
affect dispositional inference differently when disconfirming informa
tion is available. Subjects used either category- or target-based info
rmation to form expectancies of a nonaggressive child and then listene
d to a tape of the child behaving aggressively. In Experiment 1, targe
t-based expectancies influenced impresssions more than category-based
expectancies, and in both studies target-based subjects were less conf
ident of their impressions than category-based subjects. Experiment 2
also found that perceivers with target-based expectancies were more li
kely to attribute unexpected behavior to an unusual mood state than pe
rceivers with category-based expectancies. Results suggest differences
in the underlying structures of the two types of expectancies.