Dictionary Definition
construal n : an interpretation of the meaning of
something; the act of construing
Extensive Definition
Construal is a social psychological term that
refers to the way in which people perceive, comprehend, and
interpret the world around them. We all need to interpret the world
around us so that we can make sense of the world and determine our
own actions and judgments. Construals are the way a person
comprehends the behavior or actions of others towards him or
herself.
A simple example of a construal:
Christopher has liked Samantha for a few months
now and wants to ask her out to the upcoming school prom. He is a
little shy and does not want to Samantha to respond negatively. As
a social psychologist, you would not only want to observe
Samantha's behavior towards Christopher, but also how he perceives
and interprets her behavior towards him. If she gives him a smile,
an observer may perceive it as her being nice, but if Christopher
is having a bad hair day he may think that she is laughing at his
hair. The way he interprets her behaviors, may come to conclusions
that she does not have any positive feelings towards him therefore
he will not end up asking her out.
Basic human motives are the reason people form
construals; some of the mains reasons are a person's need to be
accurate, and their need for self-esteem. Back to our prior
example, the reason for Christopher to form the construal that he
did was for his need to be accurate. He will want to make an
effective judgment based upon how he views her behavior, but in
fact he may base his decision on incomplete and inaccurate
interpreted information. Christopher's need for self-esteem may
prevent him from asking Samantha out because we human beings have a
need to feel good about ourselves. If Christopher does approach
her, and she responds negatively, his self-esteem would be damaged,
hence he may not do so.
=Research On Construals=
Lee D. Ross is a professor of social psychology
at Stanford University is currently working on his theory of a
special kind of construal which he calls "naïve realism." In a
simple experiment, Ross takes peace proposals created by Israeli
negotiators, labeled them as Palestinian proposals, and told
Israeli citizens that the ideas on the proposal were the ideas that
Palestinian wanted the Israeli to adopt. Then took the same
proposals and left them the same way and told the Israelis that
ideas on the proposal were the ideas that the Israelis wanted the
Palestinians to adopt. The Israeli citizens liked the proposals
from the Israelis to the Palestinians more than the proposal from
the Palestinians to the Israelis even though they were the same
proposal.
"Even when each side recognizes that the other
side perceives the issues differently, each thinks that the other
side is biased while they themselves are objective and that their
own perceptions of reality should provide the basis for
settlement."
=References=
Aronson, Wilson, & Akert. Social Psychology.
Pearson Education Inc. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey,
2007.