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psychology
social influence
conformity to social roles - zimbardo
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karolina
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Cards (13)
social roles
:
individual adopts particular
belief
or
behaviour
while in a particular
situation
stanford prison experiment:
1970s
america
brutality
in prisons
are
guards
naturally brutal or does the
situation
create the
behaviour
?
stanford prison experiment procedure:
24
male participants who volunteered in response to newspaper advert - collected from
75
volunteers on basis of mental + physical ability, paid $15
randomly assigned to prisoner or guard roles
guard roles
:
uniforms, sunglasses, handcuffs + truncheon
instructed to run
prison
without
violence
prisoner roles
:
stripped
+ given a numbered smock, chains around ankles
fingerprinted
+ arrested
basement of stanford
turned into mock prison
standford prison experiment findings:
quickly identified roles - prisoners rebelled, crushed by guards who become more abusive + guards dehumanised prisoners, made them submissive
5 prisoners released early - set to run for 2 weeks
terminated after 5 days - christina maslach convinced zimbardo conditions were inhumane
zimbardo's conclusion
:
people quickly
conform
to roles even when theyre against moral
principles
situational
factors were
responsive
- no participants displayed behaviours
previously
social identity theory
:
people in group have a
collective
identity
EVALUATION: real world application to real life atrocities
Abu ghraib
- military prison in Iraq known for abuse + torture
2003/4
lack of training, unrelenting boredom, no accountability present in zimbardo + prison
understand situational influences
, apply findings to real life prevent brutality
EVALUATION: demand characteristics
Banuazizi
+
Mohavedi
- action =
consequences
of
demand characteristics
, presented evidence to large sample
unaware
of experiment - correctly guessed
purpose
guard
from experiment = based behaviour of
cool hand luke
behaviour is result of demand characteristics + not
environment
EVALUATION: lack of research support
reicher
+
haslam
contradictory findings - 15 men assigned to role of
prisoner/guard
, participants didnt conform automatically
refused to impose
authority
,
power shift
+
collapse
of prison system
social roles
may not be
automatic
, more down to
shared social identity
of group
EVALUATION: individual differences:
Fromm accused
zimbardo
of
exaggerating power
of situation to influence behaviour -
minimised
personality
behaviour of
guards
varied dramatically - 1/3 extremely sadistic, few helped prisoners
dispositional
factors e.g personality played a role - conclusion may be
overstated
EVALUATION: ethical issues
conditions
+
behaviour
=
sadistic
,
inhumane
-
prisoners
had mental breakdowns,
5
left within
6 days
Maslach
had to convince zmibardo to end experiment - meant to last
2 weeks
could be said that research failed to
outweigh
broken ethical
guidelines