Zimbardo’s Stanford Prison Experiment

    Cards (14)

    • What was the aim of Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment conducted in 1973?
      To understand if prison brutality is due to sadistic personalities or situational factors.
    • What was the procedure followed in Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment?
      • Mock prison set up in Stanford University basement.
      • Volunteer sample of emotionally stable students.
      • Random assignment to guard or prisoner roles.
      • Prisoners were arrested, strip-searched, and deloused.
      • Guards had shifts of 3 and were given uniforms and clubs.
    • How were prisoners treated in Zimbardo's experiment?
      They were arrested, strip-searched, and deloused.
    • What items were issued to the guards in Zimbardo's experiment?
      Wooden clubs, handcuffs, and mirror sunglasses.
    • What were the findings regarding guard behavior in the Stanford Prison Experiment?
      • Guards exhibited tyrannical and abusive behavior.
      • They enjoyed the power they held over prisoners.
      • Prisoners were forced to clean toilets bare-handed.
    • How quickly did prisoners respond with rebellion in the experiment?
      Within 2 days.
    • What was the emotional state of prisoners after the rebellion?
      They became subdued, anxious, and depressed.
    • Why was the Stanford Prison Experiment terminated?
      It was terminated after 6 days due to ethical concerns.
    • What conclusion was drawn from Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment?
      • Participants conformed quickly to social roles.
      • Situational influences played a significant role in behavior.
    • What ethical issues were raised in Zimbardo's research?
      1. Right to withdraw: Participants were persuaded to stay.
      2. Protection from harm: Psychological distress was evident.
      3. Five prisoners left early due to distress.
    • What did Banuazizi and Movahedi argue regarding the participants' behavior?
      They argued that participants were play-acting and influenced by role expectations.
    • What did the study by Reicher & Haslam (2006) reveal about the reliability of Zimbardo's findings?
      It showed that guards lost control to prisoners, indicating inconsistent findings.
    • How do the findings of Zimbardo's experiment apply to modern events?
      • Similarities observed in the Abu Ghraib prison scandal.
      • Situational factors contributed to the abuse of prisoners by US soldiers.
      • Insight into conformity to social roles in real-world scenarios.
    • What was the year of Zimbardo's Stanford Prison Experiment?
      1973