Social influence- psychology a-level

    Cards (75)

    • What are the three types of conformity?
      • Internalization: Changing beliefs or behaviors to fit a group genuinely.
      • Compliance: Aligning behavior to fit a group despite private doubts.
      • Identification: Changing behavior to fit social norms associated with a specific role.
    • What are the two main explanations for conformity?
      • Informational Social Influence (ISI): Conforming based on information from the group.
      • Normative Social Influence (NSI): Conforming based on social norms and expected behavior.
    • What year did Sherif conduct his research on conformity?
      1935
    • What was the design of Sherif's experiment?
      A repeated measures design
    • What optical illusion was used in Sherif's experiment?
      The autokinetic effect
    • How did participants respond when tested individually in Sherif's experiment?
      They arrived at their own answers called personal norms
    • What happened to participants' answers when they were tested in groups in Sherif's experiment?
      They converged towards a mean and conformed
    • What ethical issue was present in Sherif's experiment?
      Participants were deceived about the nature of the experiment
    • What year did Asch conduct his research on normative social influence?
      1951
    • What was the task participants had to perform in Asch's experiment?
      State which of three lines matched a standard line
    • What was the control group's error rate in Asch's experiment?
      About one percent
    • What percentage of the time did participants conform to the wrong answers given by confederates in Asch's experiment?
      32 percent
    • What are the situational factors that influence conformity?
      • Group size: Larger groups increase conformity up to a point.
      • Social support: Presence of dissenters reduces conformity.
      • Task difficulty: Harder tasks decrease dissent and increase conformity.
    • What are the dispositional factors that influence conformity?
      • Gender: Research is inconclusive on gender's effect on conformity.
      • Experience and expertise: More knowledgeable individuals are less likely to conform.
    • What is a social role?
      • A position within society with expected behaviors.
      • Can be voluntary (e.g., teacher) or involuntary (e.g., son).
      • Norms vary across cultures and time periods.
    • What was the Stanford Prison Experiment (SPE) designed to investigate?
      Conformity to social roles
    • Who led the Stanford Prison Experiment?
      Philip Zimbardo
    • What roles were participants assigned in the SPE?
      Guards or prisoners
    • What extreme behaviors did participants exhibit in the SPE?
      Rioting, violence, and aggression
    • What ethical issues were present in the SPE?
      Participants suffered severe mental and physical health problems
    • What year was the SPE conducted?
      1970s
    • What was the conclusion drawn from the SPE?
      Participants conformed to their expected social roles
    • What did Orlando's study in 1973 investigate?
      • Mock psychiatric ward set up in a real hospital.
      • Staff acted as patients and began to conform to expected behaviors.
      • Helped explain real patient behavior and improve treatment.
    • What historical event prompted psychologists to investigate obedience and conformity?
      The Holocaust
    • What was the design of the experiment filmed in 2006 regarding social roles?
      Volunteers were randomly assigned as prisoners or guards
    • What was a key difference between the 2006 experiment and the SPE?
      Neither prisoners nor guards conformed to expected behaviors
    • What was the conclusion about social roles from the 2006 experiment?
      Social roles are flexible and not everyone conforms
    • What year did Milgram conduct his landmark series of experiments on obedience?
      1963
    • What was the main task participants had to perform in Milgram's experiment?
      Deliver electric shocks to a learner for wrong answers
    • What was the maximum voltage participants believed they were delivering in Milgram's experiment?
      450 volts
    • What role did the confederate play in Milgram's experiment?
      The confederate acted as the learner receiving shocks
    • What was the participants' response when instructed to continue delivering shocks?
      Most participants continued to deliver shocks up to 450 volts
    • What was the point at which the fake learner would bang on the wall in Milgram's experiment?
      At 300 volts
    • What were participants instructed to do in Milgram's experiment?
      Deliver an electric shock to the learner for each wrong answer
    • Who was the learner in Milgram's experiment?
      A confederate working with the researcher
    • What was the range of electric shocks in Milgram's experiment?
      From 15 volts to 450 volts
    • What did the labeled buttons on the shock machine indicate?
      The severity of the shocks, with 450 volts marked as danger severe shock
    • What was the participants' belief regarding the shocks they delivered?
      They believed they were delivering real and harmful electric shocks
    • At what voltage did the fake learner bang on the wall?
      300 volts
    • What conclusion did Milgram draw from his experiment?
      People will obey orders that seem legitimate, even against their conscience