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Zajonc et al. (1969)

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  • About
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About the lecture

In this lecture, we think about Zajonc and colleagues’ 1969 study, focusing in particular on: (i) revisiting Zajonc’s drive theory, which proposes that it is the increased arousal brought about by an audience which increases performance, but that for those who are not an expert at the task, it can have the opposite effect; (ii) Zajonc’s 1969 study, which investigated social facilitation in cockroaches; (iii) Zajonc’s first findings that in the maze (difficult) condition, performance was impaired by a contender (pair) or audience, but in the runway (easy) condition, it was improved by the presence of a contender or audience; (iv) Zajonc’s second findings, that the partial presence condition (odour) had a distracting effect on performance; (v) Zajonc’s conclusion that the audience must be present to socially facilitate; (vi) limitations of this study, primarily being the fact that it isn’t directly applicable to humans.

About the lecturer

Dr Matthew Slater is associate professor in the School of Health, Science and Wellbeing at Staffordshire University. Dr Slater’s research interests include the social identity approach to leadership, team functioning and psychophysiological responses to stress. Some of Dr Slater’s recent publications include 'Cognitive appraisals and team performance under stress: A simulation study' (2020) and 'A brief mindfulness-based stress reduction (MBSR) intervention: investigating the effects with recreational runners' (2020).

Cite this Lecture

APA style

Slater, M. (2022, May 03). 4.2.2 Animal Research - Zajonc et al. (1969) [Video]. MASSOLIT. https://massolit.io/options/4-2-2-animal-research?auth=0&lesson=6654&option=2601&type=lesson

MLA style

Slater, M. "4.2.2 Animal Research – Zajonc et al. (1969)." MASSOLIT, uploaded by MASSOLIT, 03 May 2022, https://massolit.io/options/4-2-2-animal-research?auth=0&lesson=6654&option=2601&type=lesson