Obedience

    Cards (29)

    • Who conducted the obedience study in 1963?
      Stanley Milgram
    • What hypothesis did Milgram aim to test with his obedience study?
      The dispositional versus the situational hypothesis
    • What was the method used in Milgram's obedience study?
      • Volunteer sample of 40 Americans
      • Experiment on learning with deception
      • Rigged draw for roles (Teacher/Learner)
      • Learner strapped to electric shock machine
      • Mild shock was real
      • Experimenter used prompts like "You must continue"
    • What percentage of participants delivered the full 450-volt shock in Milgram's study?

      65%
    • What was the outcome for all subjects in Milgram's study regarding the 300-volt shock?
      All subjects went to 300 volts
    • What theory does Milgram's study support?
      Agentic state theory
    • What are the strengths of Milgram's study?
      • High population validity
      • Internal reliability (replicable)
      • Internal validity (control)
    • What are the weaknesses of Milgram's study?
      • Right to withdraw issues
      • Ethical concerns (mental harm and deception)
      • Internal validity concerns at the beginning
      • Demand characteristics (artificial setting)
      • Low ecological validity
      • Low population validity (only American men)
    • What situational variables did Milgram study that affect obedience?
      1. Proximity (same room: 40%, forced hand: 30%, orders over phone: 21%)
      2. Location (less prestigious setting: 48%)
      3. Uniform (member of the public: 20%)
    • What did Hofling et al. (1966) study regarding obedience?

      • 22 nurses in a psychiatric hospital
      • Phoned by 'Dr. Smith' to give a patient a 20mg dose of Astroten
      • 21/22 obeyed, giving twice the legal dose
    • What did Bickman (1974) find in his study on obedience?

      • Passers-by asked to pick up litter
      • 92% complied with security uniform
      • 42% complied with normal clothes
      • 47% complied with milkman uniform
    • What is a strength of Milgram's findings in terms of replication?

      • Findings replicated in a documentary with participants believing they were on a game show
      • Supported original findings about obedience to authority
    • What is a weakness regarding the internal validity of Milgram's study?

      • Low internal validity due to participants not believing in the setup
      • Demand characteristics may have influenced results
    • What evidence supports the internal validity of Milgram's study?

      • Real shocks given to puppies in a separate study
      • 54% of men believed they were giving a fatal shock
    • What ethical issues were present in Milgram's study?

      • Participants were deceived
      • Psychological harm was a concern
    • What is the agentic state in the context of obedience?

      • A state where individuals see themselves as agents of others' orders
      • They do not feel responsible for their actions
    • What is legitimate authority?

      • The social power held by an authority figure
      • Influences obedience through perceived power to punish
    • What is gradual commitment in the context of obedience?

      • Becoming locked into obedience through small increments
      • Example: Milgram's experimenter taking responsibility for the teacher
    • What did Rank and Jacobsen's study find regarding obedience?

      • 16/18 hospital nurses disobeyed a direct order from a doctor
      • Many remained autonomous, contrasting with Milgram's findings
    • What is the 'obedience alibi' as described by Handel?

      • Refers to incidents where individuals acted autonomously despite authority
      • Example: German Reserve Police Battalion 101 during WWII
    • How does legitimate authority explain cultural differences in obedience?

      • Some cultures are more likely to accept authority as legitimate
      • Example: Only 16% of Australian women went all the way in a Milgram-style study
    • What is a limitation of legitimate authority in explaining obedience?

      • Cannot explain all instances of disobedience
      • Some individuals may have innate tendencies to obey or disobey
    • What is the authoritarian personality according to Adorno?
      • Individuals with extreme respect for authority
      • Believe in strong leaders to enforce traditional values
    • What are the three personality variables identified by Altemeyer in right-wing authoritarianism?

      1. Conventionalism
      2. Authoritarian aggression
      3. Authoritarian submission
    • What did Elms and Milgram (1966) study regarding obedience?

      • Follow-up study on participants from Milgram's original study
      • Measured levels of authoritarianism using the California F-scale
    • What did Elms and Milgram find regarding obedient participants?

      Higher levels of authoritarianism
    • What are the strengths of Elms and Milgram's study?

      • High reliability due to standardized measures
      • Used the same California F-scale questionnaire
    • What are the weaknesses of Elms and Milgram's study?

      • Chance of demand characteristics (participants could lie)
      • No clear cause-and-effect relationship
      • Low population validity (only 40 American men)
    • What is a limitation of Adorno's theory on authoritarian personality?

      • Political bias in the F-scale
      • Does not account for obedience across the entire political spectrum