Conformity-Asch and Zimbardo

    Cards (35)

    • What is conformity
      A change in behaviour or belief as a result of real or imagined group pressure
    • What is compliance?

      Where an individual changes their behaviour to fit in with the group/avoid rejection
    • What is identification?

      Where an individual adopts the behaviour or beliefs of a group and accept the groups norms out of a desire for a relationship or association with the group
    • What is internalisation?

      Where an individual accepts the behaviour or belief of the majority privately and publicly
    • What is Normative social influence?

      conforming to the majority to avoid rejection
    • What is informational social influence?
      Conforming to the majority out of a desire to be correct in situations where the right action or belief is ambiguous
    • What was the main purpose of the Asch line experiment conducted in 1951?
      To investigate conformity in group settings
    • What was the setup of the Asch line experiment?
      • A group of 8 people
      • 7 were confederates, 1 was a true participant
      • Participants judged the length of lines
      • Shown a card with a single line, then a card with three lines (A, B, C)
    • How many people were in the group during the Asch line experiment?
      8 people
    • What was the role of the confederates in the Asch line experiment?
      They deliberately chose the wrong answer
    • Where was the true participant seated in the Asch line experiment?
      Second to last or last
    • What were the critical trials in the Asch line experiment?
      • Trials where all confederates chose the same wrong answer
      • Meant to test the influence of group consensus on the participant
    • What did Asch want to determine through his line experiment?
      If participants would conform to the group's incorrect response or stick to their own judgment
    • What are the different factors that influence conformity?

      -Group size
      -Task difficulty
      -Anonymity
      -Unanimity
    • What were the results of Aschs experiment?
      -74% of participants conformed at least once
      -Participants conformed on 32% of critical trials
      -26% of participants never conformed
    • What was the conformity rate in the variation where participants could privately write down their answers?

      12.5%
    • What were the conformity rates in each group size variation?

      1 confederate: 3%
      2 confederates: 13%
      3 confederates: 33%
      16 confederates: 31%
    • What effect on the conformity rates did increasing the difficulty of the task have?

      Increased
    • Strengths of Aschs experiment?

      -High internal validity due to use of standardised procedures
      -Very easy to replicate therefore high in reliability
    • Weaknesses of aschs experiment?

      -lacks temporal validity
      -Low ecological validity and mundane realism due to the unnatural task makes it not very applicable
      -Somewhat unethical due to use of deception and potential psychological impact on participants
    • What were the findings of Bond (1996)?

      Conformity is higher in collectivist cultures compared to individualistic cultures
    • What year was Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment conducted?
      1971
    • What was the purpose of the psychological evaluation of participants in Zimbardo's experiment?
      • To ensure participants were psychologically 'normal'
      • To select suitable candidates for the experiment
    • How many male college students volunteered for Zimbardo's Stanford prison experiment?
      24
    • How were participants assigned their roles in the Stanford prison experiment?
      Participants were randomly assigned roles of either guard or prisoner
    • How long was the planned duration of the Stanford prison experiment?
      1. 14 days
    • How much were participants paid for their involvement in the Stanford prison experiment?
      $15 a day
    • What happened to the prisoners upon their arrival in the Stanford prison experiment?
      • Arrested at home unexpectedly
      • Given prison uniforms
      • Placed in cells with 3 prisoners each
    • What were the restrictions placed on prisoners during the Stanford prison experiment?
      Prisoners were allowed 3 meals a day and supervised toilet trips
    • What items were given to guards to establish their authority in the Stanford prison experiment?
      • Uniforms
      • Reflective sunglasses
    • Who oversaw the Stanford prison experiment as the chief prison superintendent?
      Philip Zimbardo
    • What was Zimbardo's role in the Stanford prison experiment?
      Zimbardo was the chief prison superintendent and lead investigator
    • What were the findings of zimbardos stanford prison experiment (1971)?
      -Prisoners became submissive and obedient while guards became aggressive and authoritative
      -After failed attempts to resist prisoners suffered emotional breakdows and psychological distress leading to the experiment being halted after 6 days
      -People will conform to assigned social role
    • Strengths of Zimbardos study?
      -High internal validity
      -Provides valuable insight as to how situational factors affect conformity to social roles
    • Weaknesses of Zimbardos study?
      -In BBC replication participants resisted behaviours that conflicted with their identities making Zimbardos study unreliable
      -Highly unethical due to severe psychological distress suffered by 'prisoners'
      -Possible experimenter bias due to Zimbardo being involved with his dual role
      -Demand characteristics likely occurred due to participants possibly acting in ways they believed matched Zimbardos expectations